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Reengineering, PokaYoke Process Improvement

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Title: Reengineering, PokaYoke Process Improvement


1
Reengineering, Poka-Yoke Process Improvement
Kaizen Events
Douglas M. Stewart, Ph.D. Anderson Schools of
Management University of New Mexico
2
Reengineering
3
What is Reengineering?
  • Radical change
  • Starting over from scratch, rethinking how things
    have always been done
  • Possible because computer technology allows us to
    do things in new, more efficient ways

4
Impact of Info Tech on Process
  • Automational
  • Eliminating human labor from a process
  • Informational
  • Capturing process information for purposes of
    understanding
  • Sequential
  • Changing process sequence or enabling parallelism
  • Tracking
  • Closely monitoring process status and objects

5
Impact of Info Tech on Process
  • Analytical
  • Improving analysis of information and decision
    making
  • Geographical
  • Coordinating processes across distances
  • Integrative
  • Coordination between tasks and processes
  • Intellectual
  • Capturing and distributing intellectual assets
  • Disintermediating
  • Eliminating intermediaries from a process

6
Caveat
  • Dont automate Obliterate
  • Then automate what is left

7
Rules of Reengineering (1)
  • Organize around outcomes not tasks.
  • Case team rather than silos.
  • Have those who use the output of the process
    perform the process.
  • Purchase what you need vs. purchasing dept.
  • Merge information processing into the real work
    that produces the information.
  • EDI receipt of material automatically generates
    invoice.

8
Rules of Reengineering (2)
  • Treat geographically dispersed resources as
    though they were centralized.
  • Economies of scale from central database used by
    field employees due to telecommunciations.
  • Link parallel activities instead of integrating
    their results.
  • Concurrent engineering.

9
Rules of Reengineering (3)
  • Put the decision point where the work is
    performed, and build control into the process.
  • Decisions make of front line with support when
    needed.
  • Capture information once at the source.
  • Sales takes customer info, it automatically goes
    o accounting when the sale is made.

10
Steps to a Reengineered Organization
  • State a case for action
  • Identify the process for reengineering
  • Evaluate enablers of reengineering
  • Understand the current process
  • Create a new process design
  • Implement the reengineered process

11
Keys to Success
  • Set an aggressive performance target
  • Commit 20-50 of CEOs time to project
  • Conduct comprehensive review of
  • Customer needs
  • Economic leverage points
  • Market trends
  • Assign an additional senior executive to
    implementation
  • Conduct a comprehensive pilot

12
Traps for Failure
  • Assign average performers to the project
  • Measure only the plan and not the actual process
    implemented
  • Settle for the status quo, rather than pursue
    radical change
  • Overlook communication, rather than implement
    ongoing communications program

13
Techniques and Tools
  • Inductive thinking
  • Flowcharting
  • Creative process redesign
  • Process benchmarking
  • Simulation
  • Reengineering software

14
Cultural Changes
  • Overcoming the resistance to change
  • Customer focus
  • Contribution value added
  • Empowerment
  • Teamwork
  • Continuous learning

15
Enabling Info Technologies
  • Voice systems
  • Voice mail
  • Interactive voice response
  • Fax-back
  • Voice recognition
  • Automated input
  • Magnetic strip readers
  • Scanners
  • OCR
  • Magnetic ink character readers
  • Voice activated systems

16
Enabling Info Technologies (2)
  • Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and GPS
  • FEMA
  • Market research
  • Distribution
  • Document imaging and management
  • Email
  • Electronic calendars and scheduling
  • Task tracking
  • Remote access
  • Filtering agents

17
Enabling Info Technologies (3)
  • Groupware
  • Shared information bases
  • Meetingware
  • Video conferencing
  • Group scheduling
  • EDI and Electronic commerce
  • Mobile and remote (telecommuting) computing
  • Wireless communication WiFi
  • Cellular
  • Bluetooth

18
Enabling Info Technologies (4)
  • Knowledge bases
  • Professional Lexus, DowJones
  • Personal AOL, MSN
  • Electronic agents
  • Internet
  • Multimedia

19
Poka-Yoke Process Improvement
  • 5 necessary components for a fail-safe process
    improvement
  • 1. Customer knowledge
  • 2. Process knowledge
  • 3. Metrics
  • 4. FUT
  • 5. A well structured method

20
Customer
  • Internal
  • External
  • Intermediate customers
  • Consumers
  • Cannot delight every customer
  • Agree on Critical Customer

21
Process
  • Be an order
  • Direct observation
  • Spot the overlooked

22
Metrics
  • Verifiable
  • Relates to a standard
  • Past experience
  • External standard

23
FUT
  • Focus (bounds of analysis)
  • Urgency (full-time task)
  • Time compression (deadlines)

24
Well structured method
  • (1)  Identify the key customers.
  • (2)  Describe what constitutes value.
  • (order winners, order qualifiers, order losers).
  • (3)  Convert attributes into metrics.
  • (4)  Identify important/critical traits of the
    product.
  • (5)  Identify the critical processes.

25
Well structured method
  • (6)  Document the process as is
  • (7)  Evaluate the process using the metrics
    (8)  Determine how to improve the process.
  • (9)  Implement the changes.
  • (10)  Generate an action list.
  • (11)  Repeat the process.

26
The New Approach
  • Merge
  • Kaizen perspective
  • Regular short-cycle workshops (events)
  • Called
  • Kaizen Event
  • Rapid Kaizen
  • Rapid BPR
  • Kaikaku
  • Compass
  • Short Cycle Kaizen

27
Ready, Fire, Aim
  • Kaizen Events Are
  • Very Short-Term/Finite in Life
  • Highly Focused
  • Creativity Before Capital
  • Team-Oriented
  • Action-Oriented
  • Verifiable Metrics
  • Repetitive
  • Results
  • Significant benefits from their regular use
  • Used to change corporate culture
  • Not confined to the shop floor

28
Kaizen Events in Use
  • Toyota (originator)
  • Honda.
  • General Motors.
  • Chrysler.
  • Lear Corporation.
  • Moore Plastic Products.
  • Rubbermaid.
  • Masco Corporation/MascoTech

29
Strategic Level
  • Top management buy-in
  • Accept the validity of approach
  • Participate in a Kaizen Event
  • Public kaizen event
  • Work with another firm

30
Strategic Level
  • Assessment of current processes
  • Work with key customers
  • Their needs
  • Perceptions of current system
  • Map current processes
  • Identify the critical processes
  • bottlenecks
  • obvious to the customers consume disproportionate
    resources

31
  • These become the subjects for initial Kaizen
    Events
  • Develop the metrics
  • assess current performance
  • describing the level of improvement
  • provides the resources, in the form of people,
    time and facilitators

32
The Main Event
  • Usually takes place within a 3 ½ day time period
  • begin on a Tuesday morning
  • end Friday afternoon
  • Formal training
  • Completed within a six-hour time span
  • Introduce concepts
  • Kaizen
  • Just-in-Time Manufacturing
  • Processes Knowledge
  • Kaizen Event Tools

33
  • Kaizen
  • For next two days
  • Analyze existing processes
  • Identify problem areas
  • Propose changes
  • Predict the impact of changes
  • Implement changes
  • any change approved by the group is immediately
    implemented.
  • changes must not require any major funding or
    capital requests.

34
  • New system is run and documented
  • Floor space occupied by the process
  • Operators required per day
  • Distance traveled by an order
  • Work-in-Process Inventory (in piece count)
  • Setup, as measured in minutes
  • Quality
  • Recommendations generated
  • Safety improvements implemented
  • Prepare presentation to top management
  • Friday morning
  • Describe projects
  • Identify the changes introduced
  • Improvements achieved
  • Present Action List
  • issues that the team could not address but which
    should be considered to improve the overall
    performance of the process
  • other

35
Tools of the Trade
  • Traditional Quality Tools

36
Tools of the Trade
  • Takt Time
  • Calculate net available operating time (NAOT)
  • Converting customer requirements from units to
    TAKT time
  • Calculate operating cycle time and machine cycle
    times
  • Adjust process capacity to achieve balance
    between rate of demand and rate of supply

37
Tools of the Trade
  • 5S program
  • Seiri (Sort) Segregate and Discard
  • Seiton (Straighten) Arrange and Identify for
    Ease of Use
  • Seiso (Scrub) Clean Daily
  • Seiketsu (Systematize) Revisit Fequently
  • Shitsuki (Standardize) Motivate to Sustain

38
One Firms Experience
Impact of Kaizen Events Overall
Benefits(January 1, 1996 through December 31,
1996)
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