Value Stream Mapping Flashcards
Five Principles of Lean Thinking
Value- Specify value from the standpoint of the customer
Value stream- identify the value stream for each product
Flow- make value flow without interuptions
Pull- let the customer pull value from the next upstream activity
Perfection- pursue perfection
Definition of Lean
The identification and elimination of waste
Definition of waste
Any part of the process that adds no value
What is value stream?
All steps, value added and non value added, required to bring the product from raw material to customer
Value Stream mapping
Follow a product’s production path from beginning to end, and draw a visual representation of every process material and information flow
Allows to see and understand the flow of material and information as a product makes its way through the value stream
VSM- Advantages
- Helps to visualise flow
- Allows to identify sources of waste easier
- shows links of information and material flow
- provides a common language for talking about manufacturing processes
- allows to describe in detail how the plant should operate in order to create flow
- forms the basis of an implementation plan
Value Stream Manager
- required for value stream
- for product ownership beyond functions
- value stream manager should make their progress reports to the top manager on site
What is waste?
Elements of production that add no value to product.
Things to remember about waste
- waste is really a symptom not a root cause
- waste point to problems in the system
- to eliminate waste find and address the root causes
Japanese define waste as:
- Muda (unproductive)
- Mura (unevenness)
- Muri (overburden)
Overproduction
1 cause of waste
- making more than is required by the next process
- making it earlier than is required by the next process
- making it faster than is required by the next process
Takt Time
-synchronises pace of production to match pace of sales
Takt = Available working time/ customer demand
Takt time production impact
Producing faster:
- requires more operators
- generates inventories
- results in increased waste
Producing slower
-failing to achieve customer demand
Supermarket pull systems
- customer process goes to supermarket and withdraws what they need when they need it
- supplying process produces to replenish what was withdrawn
Standardised work
-established precise procedures (working sequence) for each operator’s work in a production process