Title: Chapter Nineteen: Continual Improvement
1Chapter NineteenContinual Improvement
2Rationale for Continual Improvement
- The rationale for continual improvement is that
it is necessary in order to compete in the global
marketplace. - Just maintaining the status quo, even if the
status quo is high quality, is like standing
still in a race. - Customer needs are not static. They change
continually. - A typical example is the personal computer.
3Managements Role
- Managements role in continual improvement is
leadership. - Executive-level managers must be involved
personally and extensively. - The responsibility for continual improvement
cannot be delegated. - Moral support manifests itself as commitment
- Physical support comes in the form of the
resources needed to accomplish the quality
improvement objectives. - Building continual quality improvement into the
regular reward system including promotions and
pay increases
4Essential improvement activities
- Essential improvement activities include the
following - Maintaining communication
- Correcting obvious problems
- Looking upstream
- Documenting problems and progress
- Monitoring change
5Essential improvement activities
- Maintain Communication Communication is
essential to continual improvement. This cannot
be overemphasized. Communication with
improvement teams and between teams is a must. - Correct Obvious Problems Often process problems
are not obvious and a great deal of study is
required to isolate them and find solutions. - This is the typical case and it is why the
scientific approach is so important in a total
quality setting. - However, there will be times when there is a
problem with a process that is obvious. In such
cases, the problem should be corrected
immediately. - Spending days studying a problem for which the
solution is obvious just so that the scientific
approach is used will result in ten-dollar
solutions to ten-cent problems. - Look Upstream Look for causes, not symptoms.
- This is a difficult point to make with people who
are used to taking a cursory glance at a
situation and putting out the fire as quickly as
possible without taking time to determine what
caused it.
6Essential improvement activities
- Document Problems and Progress Take the time to
write it down. - It is not uncommon for an organization to
continue solving the same problem over and over
because nobody took the time to document the
problems that have been dealt with and how they
were solved. - A fundamental rule for any improvement project
team is document, document, document. - Monitor Changes Regardless of how well studied
a problem is, the solution eventually put in
place may not solve it or may only partially
solve it. - For this reason, it is important to monitor the
performance of a process after changes have been
implemented. - It is also important to ensure that pride of
ownership on the part of those who recommended
the changes do not interfere with objective
monitoring of the changes.
7Structure for Quality Improvement
- Structuring for quality improvement involves the
following - Establishing a quality council
- Developing a statement of responsibilities
- Establishing the necessary infrastructure
8The Scientific Approach
- Using the scientific approach means
- Collecting meaningful data
- Identifying root causes of problems
- Developing appropriate solutions
- Planning and making changes.
- The scientific approach makes decisions based on
data, looking for root causes of problems, and
seeking permanent solutions instead of relying on
quick fixes.
9Identification of Improvement Needs
- Ways of identifying improvement needs include the
following - Multivoting
- Seeing customer input
- Studying the use of time
- Localizing problems.
10Development of Improvement Plans
- Developing improvement plans involves the
following steps - Understanding the process
- Eliminating obvious errors
- Removing slack from processes
- Reducing variation in processes
- Planning for continual improvement.
11Development of Improvement Plans
- Understand the Process
- Before attempting to improve a process, make sure
every team member thoroughly understands it. How
does it work? What is it supposed to do? What
is the best practices known pertaining to the
process? The team should ask these questions and
pursue the answers together. This will give all
team members a common understanding, eliminate
ambiguity and inconsistencies, and point out any
obvious problems that must be dealt with before
proceeding to the next stage of planning. - Eliminate Errors
- The team may identify obvious errors that can be
quickly eliminated. Such errors should be
eliminated before proceeding to the next state.
This stage is sometimes referred to as
"error-proofing" the process. - Remove Slack
- This stage involves analyzing all of the steps in
the process to determine whether they serve any
purpose, and if so, what purpose they serve. In
any organization, processes exist that have grown
over the years with people continuing to operate
them without giving any thought to why things are
done a certain way or if they could be done
better another way, or if they need to be done at
all. There are few processes that cannot be
streamlined.
12- To effectively manage, measure and improve
something, it must first be understood
13Mapping Business Processes
An effective, simple way to improve understanding
of the business process is by developing a
graphic representation of all the activities and
relationships with thin the process
- Creates common understanding of the activities,
results and who performs the steps - Defines the boundaries of the process
- Can be a training tool
- Provides baseline to measure improvement
14Relationship Map
15Detailed Process Map
- Identifies the specific activities that make up
the process. Basic steps are - Identify the entity that will serve as your focal
point - Customer?
- Order?
- Item?
- Identify clear boundaries, starting and ending
points - Segment of the process?
- Keep it simple
- Does this detail add any insight?
- Do we need to map every exception condition?
16Detailed Process Map
- Document the process as is, not how it should
be or how it is remembered - May be necessary to observe, monitor /or follow
the process - Need to map in manageable, logical segments
- Keep the focus relatively small
- Only areas which you have managerial control
17Mapping Symbols
Typical, but others may be used as appropriate
18Detailed Process Map Example
19Facts of the Case I
- Process
- Dealer faxes order to DC. One out of 25 orders
lost because of paper jams. - Fax sits in In Box around 2 hours (up to 4)
until internal mail picks it up. - Internal mail takes about one hour (up to 1.5
hours) to deliver to the picking area. One out
of 100 faxes are delivered to the wrong place. - Order sits in clerks in-box until it is
processed (0 to 2 hours). Processing time takes
5 minutes.
20Facts of the Case II
- If item is in stock, worker picks and packs order
(average 20 minutes, but up to 45 minutes). - Inspector takes 2 minutes to check order. Still,
one out of 200 orders are completed incorrectly. - Transport firm delivers order (1 to 3 hours).
21One Possible Solution
22Is there room for improvement?
- Order spends 6.45 hrs in process
- 3 hrs is waiting
- 5 of orders are lost before picking
- 1 out of 200 will be shipped with wrong items or
amounts
23Development of Improvement Plans
- Reduce Variation Variation in a process results
from either common causes or special causes. - Common causes result in slight variations and are
almost always present. - Special causes typically result in greater
variation in performance and are not always
present. - Plan for Continual Improvement By the time this
step has been reached, the process in question
should be in good shape. - The key now is to incorporate the types of
improvements made on a continual basis so that
continual improvement becomes a normal part of
doing business. - The Plan-Do-Check-Act cycle applies here. With
this cycle, each time a problem or potential
improvement is identified, an improvement plan is
developed (Plan), implemented (Do), monitored
(Check), and refined as needed (Act).
24Common Improvement Strategies
- Commonly used improvement strategies include the
following - Describing the process
- Standardizing the process
- Eliminating errors in the process
- Streamlining the process
- Reducing sources of variation
- Bringing the process under statistical control
- Improving the design of the process.
25Common Improvement Strategies
- Describe the Process
- make sure that everyone involved in improving a
process has a detailed knowledge of the process.
Usually this requires some investigation and
study. - The steps involved are establish boundaries for
the process flowchart the process make a
diagram of how the work flows verify your work
and correct immediately any obvious problems
identified. - Standardize the Process
- In order to continually improve a process, all
people involved in its operation must be using
the same procedures. - The steps involved in standardizing a process
are identify the current best known practices
and write them down test the best practices to
determine if they are, in fact, the best, and
improve them if there is room for improvement
make sure that the newly standardized process is
being used by everyone keep records of process
performance, update them continually, and use
them to identify ways to improve the process even
further on a continual basis. - Streamline the Process
- The strategy of streamlining the process is used
to take the slack out of a process. - This can be done by reducing inventory, reducing
cycle times, and eliminating unnecessary steps. - After a process has been streamlined, every step
in it has significance, contributes to the
desired end, and adds value.
26Common Improvement Strategies
- Reduce Sources of Variation The first step in
the strategy of reducing sources of variation is
identifying sources of variation. - Such sources can often be traced to differences
among people, machines, measurement instruments,
material, and sources of material, operating
conditions, and times of day. - Regardless of the source of variation, after a
source has been identified, this information
should be used to reduce the amount of variation
to the absolute minimum. - Improve the Design of the Process There are many
different ways to design and layout a process.
Most designs can be improved on. - The best way to improve the design of a process
is through an active program of experimentation.
In order to produce the best results, an
experiment must be properly designed.
27The Kaizen Approach
- Kaizen is the name given by the Japanese to the
concept of continual incremental improvement. It
is a broad concept that encompasses all of the
many strategies for achieving continual
improvement and entails the following five
elements - Straighten up
- Put things in order
- Clean up
- Personal cleanliness
- Discipline
28Goldratts Theory of Constraints
- Goldratts theory of Constraints is another
approach used to achieve continual improvement in
the workplace. It involves the following steps - Identify
- Exploit
- Subordinate
- Eliminate restraints
- Overcome inertia
29Goldratts Theory of Constraints
- The following tools are used in applying
Goldratts Theory of Constraints - Effect-cause-effect
- Evaporating clouds
- Prerequisite trees
- The Socratic Method