Lean Manufacturing

(noun)

A production practice that considers the expenditure of resources for any goal other than the creation of value for the end customer to be wasteful, and thus a target for elimination.

Related Terms

  • Six Sigma

Examples of Lean Manufacturing in the following topics:

  • Six Sigma and Lean

    • Six Sigma and Lean Manufacturing are production processes that help produce minimal errors and generate the most value for the customer.
    • Lean Manufacturing is a management philosophy derived mostly from the Toyota Production System (TPS) (hence the term "Toyotism" is also prevalent) and identified as "Lean" only in the 1990s.
    • The espoused goals of Lean Manufacturing differ between authors.
    • The following steps should be implemented to create the ideal lean manufacturing system:
    • Explain how Six Sigma and Lean Manufacturing optimize the manufacturing process
  • The origins of lean thinking

    • Lean manufacturing goes back a long way.
    • The longer a product takes to manufacture, and the more it's moved about, he said, the greater the cost.
    • TPS concepts and techniques have since been reintroduced back into America under the umbrella of lean thinking or lean manufacturing.
    • (Alukal, George, and Manos, Anthony, ‘How Lean Manufacturing Can Help Your Mold Shop') In service firms such as banks, restaurants, hospitals and offices, lean-thinking concepts are referred to as ‘lean enterprise'.
    • (Lean Enterprise Institute, ‘What is Lean Thinking?
  • Why does lean thinking elicit strong emotions?

    • Lean thinking contradicts a number of established production theories taught in business schools because it advocates making a shift from conventional batch and queue' production practices (i.e. the mass production of large lots of a product based on anticipated demand) to a ‘one-piece flow' system that produces products in a smooth, continuous stream based on customer demand.
    • (Environmental Protection Agency, ‘Lean Thinking and Methods', Lean Manufacturing and the Environment) This means that customer wants must first be identified before manufacturing begins.
    • Customer demand then ‘pulls' a product or service through the manufacturing process rather than having the business push its mass-produced goods onto the market.
  • Typical forms of waste

    • Today, the nine forms of waste that lean manufacturing seeks to reduce or eliminate are:
    • (Lean Enterprise Institute, ‘What is Lean Thinking?
  • Starting the journey

    • Lean thinking is based on fi ve principles that must be thoroughly understood and agreed upon before work can begin.
    • Place tools, equipment, supplies and materials in logical sequences where they are needed rather than in off-to-the-side areas (in lean-thinking terminology this is called Point-Of-Use-Storage or POUS).
    • Remember, the point of lean thinking is to create an enterprise that is responsive solely to providing what paying customers want, when they want it.
    • Just as with quality and efficiency, there is no finish line associatedwith lean thinking.
    • (Friedman, Thomas, The World is Flat, Alukal, George, and Manos, Anthony, ‘How Lean Manufacturing Can Help Your Mold Shop', Environmental Protection Agency, ‘Lean Thinking and Methods', Lean Manufacturing and the Environment)
  • Introduction to Lean Thinking

    • Lean thinking (also known as lean manufacturing) is a business philosophy that demands the total and systematic elimination of waste from every process, every department and every aspect of an organization.
    • With lean thinking, however, waste is not defined as ‘not obtaining 100% from purchases and investments'.
    • The Dell Computer Company is a classic example of a company that embraces the lean-thinking concept.
    • Dell became a computer-manufacturing powerhouse by allowing customers to personalize their purchase before a sale was made.
    • From the onset, one of Dell's major production expenses involved maintaining a supply of parts to manufacture its products, but since these parts are designed for use in a variety of configurations every single one is always used sooner or later.
  • Productivity Gains in Manufacturing

    • Employment in manufacturing was its lowest since July 1950.
    • The days of huge factories employing thousands upon thousands of men and women have been replaced with modern factories using lean manufacturing with better design, processes, and automation.
    • As such, returning a manufacturing operation to the United States may cost a thousand workers in a low-cost country their jobs, but it won't create a thousand new manufacturing jobs in the U.S.
    • While the United States service sector has grown, so has the manufacturing sector.
    • De Rugy's data shows an increase in manufacturing output since 1975 and a decrease in employment in the manufacturing sector.
  • JIT manufacturing principles

    • The JIT philosophy has evolved from a manufacturing-focused management approach to a set of management principles that can be applied to any organization.
    • "Lean operations" is a term that is replacing JIT, especially in service environments.
    • "Lean operations" captures the true essence and power of how a culture built around continuous improvement and the pursuit of value-added activities leads directly to competitive advantage in the marketplace.
    • Lean operations is a management philosophy for any organization to achieve higher quality, increased productivity, improved delivery speed, greater responsiveness to changing markets, and increased customer satisfaction.
  • Special topic: just-in-time and lean systems

    • Taiichi Ohno is credited with developing JIT and perfected it for Toyota's manufacturing plants in Japan.
    • In a manufacturing setting, there are six major ways to pursue JIT goals: inventory reduction to expose waste, use of a "demand-pull" production system, quick setups to reduce lot sizes, uniform plant loading, flexible resources, and cellular flow layouts.
  • Lean thinking summarized into ten concise steps

    • (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), ‘Overview: What is Lean Thinking?
    • For more information about lean thinking visit the Lean Thinking Institute at www.lean.org. updated formattingThe international arm of the Lean Thinking Institute is located at www.leanglobal.org.
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