Lean Concepts Study Guide Flashcards
1
Q
Kaizen
A
- Improvement on a continuous basis.
- Originated in Japan, Kai means change and zen means for good
- Per concept, everything can be improved
- Applied in operations helps improve and increase efficiency of different processes in an organization
- Minimize waste, improve customer satisfaction, augment the business procedures and maximize operational efficiency, implementing and speed up the change process
2
Q
Kaizen Philosophy
A
- Not any specific tool but a philosophy which is rooted in many different process improvement methods like Total Quality Management (TQM), just-in-time(JIT) or as simple as employee suggestion boxes.
- Implementation is not the responsibility of top management or any specialized time, but the role is vested with each and every employee of the organization, who should look for gaps and inefficiencies in the existing processes and procedures, suggest changes for improvement and finally, helps in implementing those changes for continuous and sustained improvement.
3
Q
Implementing Kaizen Steps
A
- Define the problem/issue
- Document the current situation
- Visualize the optimum situation
- Measurement targets to be defined
- Brainstorm about the possible solutions to the issue
- Develop the plan
- Implement the plan
- Measure and compare the actual results with the targets to learn about variances, if any
- Prepare documents to summarize
- Create action plans and sustaining plans
4
Q
Benefits of Kaizen
A
-When the organization works towards continuous improvement, it can reap the benefits of improved efficiency and effectiveness in all domains of the organization.
- Reduction in waste (muda)
- Enhances satisfaction - customers, employees, stakeholders
- Increases employee commitment
- Retention rates increase - employee and customer
- Competitive edge
- Working teams in the organization work more efficiently, the problem solving skills of the employees enhances and finally, the organization is able to recap the benefits of synergy by maintaining a work-culture that is improvement-oriented and innovative
5
Q
Kaizen Events
A
- The word kaizen recognizes the philosophy of kaizen and differs when we talk about Kaizen events.
- Kaizen events denotes the action which aims at improving the output of an existing process
- Aim is to achieve improvements
Process:
- Generally a leader is appointed who identified the opportunity for improvement and/or plan and lead these changes.
- The event leader integrates and gathers the operators and other employees attached to the particular process at one place.
- They then map the existing process, and then suggest and implement the improvement process.
6
Q
Differences between Kaizen Philosophy and Kaizen Event
A
- Kaizen is an continuous improvement philosophy while kaizen events are undertaken for short term tasks to improve any particular process
- The responsibility for kaizen is vested with each and every employee of the organization but kaizen events are facilitated by an appointed facilitator
7
Q
Running a Kaizen Event
A
- A Kaizen event can be conducted for a short term, can last from one day to a few weeks, depending on the event and identified issue.
- There should be a pre-planning and tentative schedule of the event should be framed before actually getting into implementing an event.
Planning steps to consider:
- Train or hire a facilitator
- Gain understanding and commitment from management
- Establish the boundaries of the event
- Define the purpose of the event
- Communicate about the event to everyone in organization
- Select the team for implementation
- Identify the measures of improvement in performance
- Implement the improvement measures
8
Q
5S Workplace Organization
A
- 5S’s detail how to create a workplace that is visibly organized, free of clutter, neatly arranged, and sparkling clean. The 5S system is often a starting place for implementing lean operations.
- Visual system and Kaizen event
- Sort
- Set in order/Straighten
- Shine
- Standardize (Hard)
- Sustain (Hard)
9
Q
5S Workplace Organization Breakdown
A
- Sort: Remove unneeded items
- Set in order/Straightening: Arrange the required and rarely required items for ease of accessibility
- Shine: This involves cleaning the work area and equipment
- Standardize: This involves developing checklists, standards, and work instructions to keep the area in a clean and orderly condition
- Sustain: Most difficult of the 5S, management should empower the employees by allowing them to take ownership of their work areas
10
Q
Classic Wastes/3M of Wastages
A
- Blockage against the productivity
- Muda, Muri, and Mura
Literal Meanings:
- Muda: waste
- Muri: overburden
- Mura: unevenness
11
Q
Muda
A
Wastage of unnecessary activities
7 Basic Types:
- Transportation
- Inventory
- Motion
- Bending
- Reaching
- Searching
- Waiting
- Over-processing
- Overproducing
- Defects
12
Q
Muri
A
- Wastage caused due to overburdening your machines and stress
- Causes stress and pressure on your resources - both human and physical by placing unnecessary and unreasonable demands on them.
- Muri leads to Muda by adding non-value adding steps within the process
Instances:
- Working on processes without proper training
- Unclear instructions
- Lack of proper tools and equipment
- Poor communication tools
13
Q
Mura
A
- Type of inconsistency or irregularity
- This inconsistency can be witnessed in many parts of a production system like material flows, uneven demands of the customer, fluctuating inventory, inconsistend quality of goods produced, uneven training of staff, uneven distribution of workflow and erratic work schedules
14
Q
Process Mapping Symbols
A
15
Q
Main Object of Lean System
A
- Is to augment effectiveness and efficiency of various processes in the organization by reducing waste in operations like long lead times, defects and bottlenecks in material, and information flows.
- Tool used to do so is Value Stream Mapping