jump to navigation

Continuous Improvement January 5, 2006

Posted by Lawrence Loucka in : Lean, Quality , trackback

Continuous ImprovementDefinition: The management discipline to constantly eliminate waste, improve response time, simplify the design of both products and processes, and thereby improve quality, customer service, and value. Continuous Improvement is a phrase suggesting that a process or product should always get better as knowledge about it and experience with it accumulates over time. It is specifically used in quality systems or management programs such as Total Quality Management, associated with the work of W. Edwards Deming, J, Juran, and Walter A. Shewhart, and is particularly evedent at Toyota. 

Lean Enterprise is a management philosophy focusing on reduction of the 7 wastes, or Muda in Japanese (Over-production, Waiting time, Transportation, Over-processing, Inventory, Motion and Scrap) in manufactured products. By eliminating waste, quality is improved, production time is reduced, and cost is reduced. Lean "tools" include constant process analysis (kaizen), "pull" production (by means of kanban), and mistake-proofing (poka yoke). One crucial insight is that most costs are assigned when a product is designed. Often an engineer will specify familiar, safe materials and processes rather than inexpensive, efficient ones. This reduces project risk, that is, the cost to the engineer, while increasing financial risks, and decreasing profits. Good organizations develop and review checklists to review product designs. The key lean manufacturing principles:

Lean is basically all about getting the right things, to the right place, at the right time, in the right quantity while minimizing waste and being flexible and open to change. Continuous Improvement is how you get Lean.

Comments»

no comments yet - be the first?