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Lean Manufacturing

This document provides an introduction to operations strategy and lean manufacturing. It discusses examining operations philosophies like Lean and Agile before developing a coherent manufacturing strategy. Lean manufacturing aims to combine the advantages of craft and mass production using less of everything. The Toyota Production System seeks to eliminate waste through continuous improvement and involvement of people. Implementing lean requires choosing the appropriate tools from a large toolbox to balance predictability and responsiveness while eliminating waste.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
394 views5 pages

Lean Manufacturing

This document provides an introduction to operations strategy and lean manufacturing. It discusses examining operations philosophies like Lean and Agile before developing a coherent manufacturing strategy. Lean manufacturing aims to combine the advantages of craft and mass production using less of everything. The Toyota Production System seeks to eliminate waste through continuous improvement and involvement of people. Implementing lean requires choosing the appropriate tools from a large toolbox to balance predictability and responsiveness while eliminating waste.

Uploaded by

ruturraj
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Operations Strategy

An Introduction to Lean
Manufacturing

1 Doug Love/Aston University

Operations Strategy

Operations Planning & Control


Levelled Scheduling
Examples of strategy elements: Push
MRP2/ERP2
Business Analysis Tools (other tools in later sections) OPT
Process Charts, Pareto, I-O, string diagrams DMRP
Value Stream Mapping Pull
Process Mapping 2-Bin (traditional)
Value Chain analysis Kanban
Benchmarking Visual workplace instructions
Standard work practices
Monitoring systems
Design Techniques/Principles - Product & MSD Balanced scorecard
MSD methodologies Visual Controls
Cell organisation SPC
GT Cells Supply Chain Mgt
PFA Lean? ABC
Coding & Classification
Product cells Agile?
Negare Cells (&Agile?)
Process Cells Strategy? Improvement Techniques
Concurrent design/development
Continuous Improvement
Product FMEA
Quality Circles/Improvement Groups
Process FMEA
Capability Studies
Foolproofing
TPM
SMED
Organisation/Human Aspects 5 S's
Virtual enterprise organisation Supplier Development
Teamworking Supplier Partnerships
Worker operational flexibility Supplier Assocs
Worker empowerment (job enlargement) Vendor managed inventory/Integrated supply
Change Management
Motivation
Payment systems (modern v traditional)

2 Doug Love/Aston University


Operations Strategy, how to get to World Class performance

How to be competitive (‘world class’)


ƒ Apply an ‘off the shelf’ philosophy?
ƒ i.e. Lean, Agile etc. ‘I want to be like Toyota’

ƒ Develop a coherent Manufacturing/Operations Strategy


ƒ match the market requirements to the factory’s
capabilities

?
Market Requirements: Factory Capabilities
Competitive Price Low cost
Reliable Delivery Line based dedicated
automation
Responsive to changing
requirements Reliable delivery to firm
schedules
Wide product range, short
life Change-overs expensive
Performance
….. Specification …..

Operations Strategy

ƒ Examine ‘Philosophies’ first

3 Doug Love/Aston University

Operations Strategy: Philosophies

Operations Philosophies
ƒ Philosophies are prescriptive
ƒ Lean (Toyota/JIT)
ƒ Agile (QRM, Adaptable)
ƒ Prescriptive & Comprehensive
ƒ this is why you should do it
ƒ this is what you should do

ƒ May degenerate into an ad-hoc approach, e.g.


ƒ Good Practice/Benchmarking
ƒ Factory visits, competitor analysis
ƒ Apply good/accepted ideas
ƒ e.g we must have Kanban or ERP
ƒ Forgets the ‘why’
ƒ may not be coherent, co-ordinated or best use of
resources

4 Doug Love/Aston University


Operations Strategy: TPS/Lean/JIT

Lean Manufacturing
ƒ Womack, Jones & Roos1 define Lean as:
ƒ ‘combines the advantages of craft & mass
production’
ƒ ‘is “lean” because it uses less of everything
compared to mass production’
ƒ ‘Lean producers … set their sights explicitly on
perfection’ in contrast to mass who are content
with ‘good enough’
ƒ and say companies achieve this through:
ƒ ‘teams of multi-skilled workers’
ƒ ‘highly flexible, increasingly automated machines’

1 The machine that changed the world


5 Doug Love/Aston University

Operations Strategy: TPS/Lean/JIT

Lean, JIT & Toyota Production System (TPS)


ƒ ‘leanness’ is doing more with less,
less e.g. hrs/car
ƒ Just-In-Time (JIT) was defined by operations
academics (see Slack et al) as a target + the means
to achieve it:
ƒ eliminate waste by involvement of people + continuous
improvement
ƒ ‘waste’ = using less: people, plant, materials, money
ƒ See Ohno’s 7 “wastes” (TPS)
ƒ Overproduction , Over-processing (unnecessary op’s or
actions), Waiting,
ƒ Transport (handling materials), Movement (people, plant that
does not add value)
ƒ Defective units including rework
ƒ Inventory

6 Doug Love/Aston University


Operations Strategy: TPS/Lean/JIT Implementation

Implementation of Lean (the ‘How’)


ƒ The JIT-like explanation is a mixture of objectives and means
ƒ Everyone wants to eliminate waste, they just disagree about how
it should be done!
ƒ Lean/TPS/JIT prescribes how the objective should be attained
ƒ this is fine if the recipe is universally applicable
ƒ But, the JIT toolbox is rather large!
ƒ see the Bicheno Toolbox2
ƒ Some actions that don’t fall too obviously into the involvement +
continuous improvement categories
ƒ levelled scheduling, kanban, concurrent design
ƒ Do we use all of them, or just some?
ƒ Recasting the objective(s) might help to clarify matters

2 another reference text


7 Doug Love/Aston University

Operations Strategy: Predictability & Responsiveness

Lean/JIT aims for Predictability and Responsiveness


ƒ Predictability removes need for excess resource
ƒ resources (waste) reduced: stock, people, capacity etc
ƒ SPC, TPM, levelled scheduling, supplier development ….
remove sources of uncertainty

ƒ Responsiveness actions needed to cope with the sources of


variability (external or internal) that remain
ƒ team work, SMED (setup reduction), cells, …. improve
responsiveness (but within limits)

ƒ Actual implementation focus depends on conditions in the


company
ƒ The TPS/JIT/Lean set of actions can be seen to arise from their
application context, in particular the repetitious nature of volume
manufacturing
ƒ We will look at other types of industry later in the year
ƒ Each company must decide on their implementation plan

8 Doug Love/Aston University


Implementation Techniques

‘Bricks’ in the Wall


ƒ e.g. This was the view of an automotive parts company:

9 Doug Love/Aston University

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