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BSBFLM409B IMPLEMENT CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT

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Title: BSBFLM409B IMPLEMENT CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT


1
BSBFLM409BIMPLEMENT CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT
2
WORKSHOP STRUCTURE
  • SECTION 1 IMPLEMENT CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT
    SYSTEMS AND PROCESSES
  • SECTION 2 MONITOR AND REVIEW PERFORMANCE
  • SECTION 3 IMPLEMENT OPPORTUNITIES FOR FURTHER
    IMPROVEMENT

3
ASSESSMENT
  • Assessment for this unit will be based on
  • Your workshop participation and contribution
    levels.
  • The completion of the learning activities during
    the workshop.
  • Completion of a final assessment task which will
    be explained at the end of the training.

4
UNIT OVERVIEW
  • Definitions and descriptions of continuous
    improvement the processes, systems and
    philosophies
  • Planning for continuous improvement
  • Management processes and activities which support
    and encourage employee involvement in continuous
    improvement activities
  • Communicating continuous improvement goals
    objectives and targets to all involved personnel
  • Providing mentoring and coaching to improve
    productivity
  • Using technology and organisational systems to
    monitor operations and identify improvement needs
    - data collection and information analysis
    tools
  • The relationship between continuous improvement
    and customer service
  • The need to accurately record and store
    continuous improvement information
  • Using continuous improvement procedures to
    maximise productivity, minimise wastage, minimise
    errors and increase profits

5
SECTION 1IMPLEMENT CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT
SYSTEMS AND PROCESSES
  • In this section we will discuss the methods you
    can use to
  • Actively involve team members in decision making
    processes
  • Encourage team members to assume responsibility
    and authority
  • Communicate the organisations continuous
    improvement processes to individuals and teams
  • Initiate mentoring and coaching support for
    individuals/teams so that the organisations
    continuous improvement processes are supported by
    all employees.

6
CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT
  • Continuous improvement means
  • Managing people not labour
  • Developing a quality-oriented culture
  • Supporting employee development
  • Encouraging creativity and innovation
  • Promoting change.

7
E. DEMINGS PDCA CYCLE
8
QUALITY REQUIREMENTS
  • Quality is not determined or defined by the
    producing company
  • Quality is determined by the customer

9
QUALITY APPROACHES
  • Quality control
  • Quality assurance
  • Total quality management (TQM)
  • Lean manufacturing.

10
INVOLVEMENT IN QUALITY MANAGEMENT
  • Increases organisational effectiveness
  • Reduces costs due to less waste and rework
  • Offers the potential to charge higher prices
  • Increases profitability
  • Enables the organisation to maintain a
    competitive advantage.

11
FOR INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION
  • What makes your company different from the one
    down the street?
  • Why should a client choose to do business with
    your company rather than your competitor?
  • Why do organisations need a point of difference?
  • How does this relate to quality and continuous
    improvement?

12
ACTIVITY 1
  • In groups
  • Discuss 
  • Record
  • Present 
  • 15 minutes

13
QUALITY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
  • Management activities that will contribute to
    continuous improvement are
  • Manage time and set priorities
  • Lead from the front, by example
  • Involve employees in decision-making processes
    and process design
  • Be prepared to negotiate
  • Audit organisational culture
  • Develop teams
  • Improve communication within your business
  • Identify, manage and encourage conflict/ new
    ideas and creativity
  • Recognise and reward employee contribution
  • Develop effective control systems
  • Manage, monitor and appraise performance

14
FOR INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION
  • What does the phrase higher discretionary input
    mean in terms of workplace contribution?
  • Under what circumstances do employees choose to
    increase their discretionary input?
  • How does this affect organisational success

15
FOR INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION
  • Transpose the body system concept into an
    organisational situation. What happens if one of
    the systems does not work efficiently? What if
    one breaks down or they do not communicate with
    each other? What if you make changes to one
    aspect of the system?

16
FOR INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION
  • What are the advantages and disadvantages of
    teams in the workplace?

17
ACTIVITY 2
  • Individually
  • Discuss with whole group
  • 10 minutes

18
SECTION 2MONITOR AND REVIEW PERFORMANCE
  • In this section we will discuss strategies for
  • Using the organisations systems and technology
    to monitor progress and identify potential
    improvements
  • Strengthening customer service through the use of
    continuous improvement techniques and processes
  • Adjusting plans and communicating changes to
    those who have a role in development and
    implementation.

19
PROCESSES
The central elements of continuous improvement
are
  • all work is a processes or part of a process
  • all processes exhibit variation
  • variation contributes to waste.
  • Processes can and should constantly be improved.
  • Stable, capable processes will meet customer
    requirements.

20
WASTE REDUCTION
  • Waste products and wasted time contribute to an
    organisations overheads.
  • Waste can be reduced by using the skills and
    knowledge of everybody in the organisation,
    especially those who work in the process and who
    know most about it.

21
ACTIVITY 3
  • In groups
  • Respond
  • Record
  • Present 
  • 25 minutes

22
PROCESS VARIATION
  • In nature no two things are absolutely identical.
  • Processes are subject to variation - common cause
    variation and special cause variation.

23
ACTIVITY 4
  • The Red Bead exercise 
  • 20-30 minutes

24
THE SIMPLE SIPOCC MODEL
Feed- forward/feed- back/concurrent control
25
PROCESS CONTROLS
  • Three basic methods of control are
  • Feedback post event
  • Feedforward preventative or preliminary
  • Concurrent continuous screening.

26
FOR INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION
  • What do you consider are the advantages and
    disadvantages of each of the control processes
    described above?
  • Which control processes are used in your
    organisation?
  • Are these sufficient or could improvements be
    made?
  • What sorts of improvements could be made to your
    control processes?

27
CONSTRAINTS
Every workplace experiences circumstances in
which there are disruptions to workflow, due to
  • organisational structure
  • work culture
  • management attitudes
  • process variation
  • ineffective or inappropriate systems or
    procedures
  • changes in the external environment
  • supplier inefficiencies
  • poor customer feedback and complaint management
    systems etc

28
DESIGN QUALITY
  • Continuous improvement should be applied to
    processes, process design and to the systems used
    to manage and support people in the workplace.

29
ACTIVITY 5
  • In groups
  • Respond 
  • Record
  • Present 
  • 30 minutes

30
ACTIVITY 6
  • How sharp are you?
  • Individually
  • 5-10 minutes

31
HOW SHARP ARE YOU?
  • Being very tired, a child went to bed at 700
    oclock at night. The child had a morning piano
    lesson, therefore wound and set the alarm clock
    to ring at 845. How many hours and minutes of
    sleep could the child get?
  • Some months (like October) have 31 days. Only
    February has precisely 28 (except in a leap
    year). How many months have 30 days?
  • A farmer has 18 pigs, all but 7 died. How many
    were left?
  • Divide 50 by 1/3, and add 7. What is the answer?
  • What is the number of active cricket players on
    the playing field during any part of an inning?
  • What four words appear on every denomination of
    US currency?
  • If a physician gave you 5 pills, and asked you to
    take one every half hour, how long would your
    supply last?
  • If you had only one match, and entered a cold,
    dimly-lit room where there was a kerosene lamp,
    an oil heater, and a wood burning stove, which
    one would you light first?
  • Two women play checkers. They play five games
    without a draw game and each woman wins the same
    number of games. How can this be?
  • What word is mispelled in this test?

32
ACTIVITY 7
  • Count the fs
  • Individually
  • 4-5 minutes

33
ACTIVITY 8
  • Individually
  • Discuss after recording
  • 15 minutes

34
PROBLEM SOLVING
35
FOR INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION
  • What systems and procedures are there in your
    workplace that make it easy to document and to
    use information?
  • How does technology assist you in managing
    information?
  • Is your technological support
  • up to date
  • user friendly
  • accessible to all?

How can, or should it be improved?
36
SECTION 3IMPLEMENT OPPORTUNITIES FOR FURTHER
IMPROVEMENT
  • In this section we will discuss
  • Savings, cost reductions, service improvements
    and methods of communicating them to team members
  • Documenting performance and using relevant
    information
  • Managing records, reports and recommendations.

37
FLOW CHARTS
38
FOR INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION
  • How can flow charts assist you in your work
    practice?
  • Do you currently use flow charts? Why/why not?

39
ACTIVITY 9
  • Individually and with partner 
  • 40 minutes

40
OTHER MEASUREMENT TOOLS
41
  • Example
  • Problem Customer complaints re having to wait in
    the phone queue for more than 3 minutes.

42
PARETO CHART
Figure 3 Pareto chart
43
(No Transcript)
44
AFFINITY DIAGRAM
45
LEWINS FORCE FIELD ANALYSIS
46
QUALITY CIRCLES
  • The concept of Quality Circles, as a continuous
    improvement and innovation tool, originated in
    Japan.
  • They are, effectively, action or results oriented
    discussion groups.

47
CONSISTENCY
  • Quality means getting it right the first time.
  • However, it does not mean getting it right once,
  • it means reliably and consistently getting it
    right over an extended period of time.

48
VISIBILITY
  • Simple, visible measures of what is important
    should be posted where all employees can see
    them.
  • Emphasise measures associated with revenue
    generation.

49
MEASUREMENTS
  • Measure what is important.
  • Measure the right things.
  • Keep it simple.

50
ACTIVITY 10
  • Individually
  • Record
  • Discuss with group
  • 15 minutes

51
CRITICAL EVALUATION
  • Try asking whether this job, task or process is
    even necessary.

52
FOR INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION
  • What problems are likely to arise when a
    significant part of the workforce is replaced by
    external suppliers of previously internally
    produced goods and services?
  • To what degree can the use of external suppliers
    increase the risk of security leaks at difficult
    times, such as when the launch of a new product
    or service is being considered?
  • Do managers risk losing control when dependent on
    external suppliers for essential tasks such as
    computer and payroll services?
  • Are there tasks, activities or processes in your
    organisation which would be more cost effective
    if they were outsourced?
  • How could this improve performance in your
    organisation?

53
ACTIVITY 11
  • Discuss in groups
  • Respond
  • Record
  • Present 
  • 35 minutes

54
SUMMARY
  • Quality can be defined in a range of ways but it
    is the customer's view that is paramount
  • The costs of poor quality are often hidden but
    data collection, process monitoring and effective
    record keeping can assist with identification
  • Poor quality means loss of competitive advantage
  • Quality improvements increase profitability
  • A range of quality management tools can be used
    to monitor and control processes

55
SUMMARY
  • Products/service processes and process design
    must meet customer quality expectations
  • Productivity improvement stems from the
    involvement of all personnel in continuous
    improvement activities
  • Systems, technology, leadership styles, the
    management of workplace relationships and
    organisational awareness of employee needs will
    have a positive impact on employee support for
    continuous improvement
  • Improvements, changes and the results of changes
    must be communicated to all employees
  • Quality and continuous improvement are essential
    to business success

56
ASSESSMENT
  • Assessment for this unit will be based on
  • Your workshop participation and contribution
    levels.
  • The completion of the learning activities during
    the workshop.
  • Completion of a final assessment task which will
    be explained at the end of the training.
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