Title: Lean Manufacturing
1Lean Manufacturing
- Andrew W. Dalziel
- Product Director - SCM
- Intentia International
- andrew.w.dalziel_at_intentia.co.uk
2Agenda Lean Manufacturing
- Introduction The Challenge
- Why Lean Manufacturing Makes Sense
- What is Lean Manufacturing?
- How Does Technology Support Lean?
- Intentia and Lean Manufacturing
- The Benefits of Lean Manufacturing
- Example of Where to Start the Lean Journey
- Summary
3The Challenge Low Cost Competition
Companies Increased Competition on Costs
of respondents facing competitive challenges
- gt70 facing some or significant low cost
competition - 95 of customers demanding lower prices
- 50 say competitors are producing higher valued
added goods
4The Challenge Manufacturing Costs
Manufacturers Look Abroad
of companies employing competitiveness strategy
- 45 planning to or have outsourced manufacturing
abroad - 30 planning to or have invested abroad to
replace capacity
5Why Lean Manufacturing Makes Sense
- Western manufacturers under cost pressure from
low-cost countries - Customers are demanding greater product variety
and highly customized products - Customers are demand more new products
- Customers demanding shorter delivery lead-times
and lower prices - Increasing transactional volumes
- Worker motivational issues
- Stricter Health Safety rules
- Cash flow issues with working capital tied up in
inventory - Competitive global environment - advantage
through delivering greater added value - .
Lean Manufacturing Makes a Lot of Sense
6Adoption of Lean Manufacturing
An ARC Group strategy report written by Simon
Bragg (2004) suggests that Today 36 percent of
US manufacturers and 70 percent of UK
manufacturers are using lean as their primary
improvement methodology.
7Defining Lean Manufacturing
- Lean manufacturing is essentially a philosophy
that focuses on customer value-adding activities
and the systematic identification and elimination
of waste, as well as continuous improvement in
flow manufacturing environments to increase
productivity.
8Five Core Elements of Lean Thinking
1. Value Identify and deliver value to the customer
2. Value stream Identify the value stream to see what is necessary
3. Flow Make value flow
4. Pull Make as needed. Customer demand driven manufacturing
5. Perfection Continuous improvement in pursuit of perfection
9How Technology Can Support Lean Manufacturing
- Product data management for managing exploding
product variety - Electronic kanban offers many advantages over
physical kanbans - Avoids problems of loss or sabotage of physical
kanbans - Quicker transfer of information between
production areas and partners - Faster and easier to resize kanbans
- Easier to phase in new products
- Supplier and customer portals for kanban control
or JIT call-offs - Ability to support complex algorithms for Theory
of Constraints planning - Databases and powerful analytics tools to
identify customer value and support continuous
improvement - Elimination of waste in administration, such as
order entry, order management, invoicing, etc.
10Intentia Support for Lean Manufacturing
Lean Manufacturing
EDIElectronic Data Interchange
11Value Enterprise Performance Management
In competitive terms, value is the amount buyers
are willing to pay for what the firm provides
them. Value is measured by total revenue, a
reflection of the price a firms product commands,
and the units it can sell. Michael Porter
12Flow Total Productive Maintenance (TPM)
- Advanced enterprise asset management options
increase equipment reliability and thus - Improve availability
- Reduce downtime
- Reduce product scrap and wasted time managing
that scrap - Increase machine tolerances and thereby increase
quality - Diagnostics management features automatically
identify situations where the current maintenance
strategy is not working and trigger a continuous
improvement review. - Support for reliability centered maintenance
(RCM), which can underpin the TPM strategy - Synchronized maintenance and production planning
maximizes the available production time - Contributes towards throughput and OEE and
supports simulation
Ultimately, provides focused support for reducing
the big six TPM losses.
13Pull Product Configurator
- Enables customers to configure their perfect
order - Added value for the customer
- Web-enabled
14Pull Kanban
- Support physical and electronic kanban systems
- One-card and two-card systems production and
transportation kanbans - External kanban requirements from customers and
for call-offs to suppliers - Manual or automatic dimensioning of kanban chain
(number of cards in system)
Physical Kanban System
Electronic Kanban System
15Pull Theory of Constraints Production Planning
- Makes value flow through the bottleneck (and
factory) - Easy to communicate and intuitive for the planner
to use - Does not require high data quality
- 50 of the time and effort to implement of an
advanced production planning solution - Can result in less inventory overall than when
using kanban
Remaining buffer on a non-bottleneck resource
16Some Benefits of a Lean Manufacturing Philosophy
- For the CEO
- Focus on customer value-adding activities
- Elimination of activities that do not contribute
directly to customer value and built-in quality - Support or pull-based manufacturing with quick
response to customer orders - For the CFO
- Reduced waste -gt removal of unnecessary
activities and cost - Removal of stock and work in progress (WIP) -gt
improved inventory turns and less working capital
employed in the business - Improved return on capital employed (ROCE)
- For the Operations Director
- Shorter production cycle times and greater
agility - Productivity and quality improvements
- Increased employee motivation (through teams and
empowerment) - Promotes continuous improvement
17Example Lean Manufacturing in FB Where to
Start?
18Summary Whats the Issue?
19Thank You for Your Time and Questions