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In the Lean Six Sigma methodology is Level Scheduling an important concept.

In the Lean Six Sigma methodology is Level Scheduling an important concept;

‘ The process of smoothing production volume and model mix over a given time period.’

This major component of the Lean philosophy is to smooth out the flow of value so that minimal waste inventory and waiting are incurred. To be able to provide a smooth flow when many product types are produced on the same lines it is necessary to even out the schedule, so Level Scheduling is often used. Benefits to be gained from employing level scheduling include; reduces inventory of raw materials, reduced quantity of finished goods and reduced lead times.

Not only the scheduling will do the job, with Lean Six Sigma, it will also require implementing other process improvements, e.i.;

• replacing the existing order entry process with an online system

• cross-training engineering / operations
• automating the BOM
• standardising parts where possible to allow suppliers to build-to-stock
• developing blanket orders to reduce the work involved in the purchasing
• initiating purchasing in parallel with the customer approval process
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Lean Six Sigma implementation have a first look at the Traditional Layouts

During your Lean Six Sigma implementation, have a first look at the Traditional Layoutsof the area, which are often complex and bottlenecks affect the flow of materials, information and value adding capability. Common disadvantages are

•Complex flows of material.
•Reduced vision and ownership of the
•Total value chain.
•Operators concentrate on islands of efficiency.

Better try out Cell Layouts, which are typically U shaped, operations are combined and single piece flow is adopted. Bottlenecks are eliminated by the use of multiple operators or machines. Immediate advantages are usually

•The flow of materials becomes smoother.
•There is no queuing between machines.
•Throughput time is reduced.
•Operators are trained in more than one task.
•Value stream visibility is much high.
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Standard Work and Multi-skilling during Lean Six Sigma

Standard Work and Multi-skilling during Lean Six Sigma is also important;

  • Value adding steps are broken down into standard work ‘packages’.
  • Standard Operating procedures are written for each package.
  • A skill matrix for a team can then be produced by showing team members vs. work packages that the team need to perform.
  • The skill matrix naturally leads to thinking about training to develop people and fill gaps in team capabilities.

This helps

  • Achieve CONSISTENCY in operations (reduce variation) which leads to robustness and better flow.
  • Process Management.
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lean six sigma and Parallel Processing

To save Lead time (calendar time) we can, through Lean Six Sigma or Lean engineering the process steps that are currently being completed in series.

Another possibility is to take out some process steps from the series and do them in parallel to other process steps.

This is often called concurrent engineering; the idea being that you can design the different parts of a product at the same time. Unless concurrent or parallel processing is carefully planned and coordinated, it results in chaos.

Two things are required for Parallel processing:

  • The customer (or the business) would value the reduction in lead time
  • Only process steps which are independent of each other can be done in parallel
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Lean and Value Streams.

The key to Lead Time & Waste (Lean) is thinking about Value Add form a customer perspective.

  • This leads us to think in terms of categories for all other activity; either it is Value Add or it isn’t.
  • If it isn’t then it is something we have to do to “enable” Value Add (like deal with regulators) or it’s waste.
  • Waste comes in many different forms and the 7 wastes shown here are usually found in all operations.

But there are other forms of waste which we also should be aware of particularly the waste of human potential.

Once we understand the value add we then think in terms of ‘streams’ of value (a type of process mapping) and we think in terms of ‘families’ of products/services that have the same value streams.

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Lean for Production and Services

A popular misconception is that lean is suited only for manufacturing. Not true. Lean applies in every business and every process. It is not a tactic or a cost reduction program, but a way of thinking and acting for an entire organization.

The core idea is to maximize customer value while minimizing waste. Simply, lean means creating more value for customers with fewer resources.

A lean organization understands customer value and focuses its key processes to continuously increase it. The ultimate goal is to provide perfect value to the customer through a perfect value creation process that has zero waste.

To accomplish this, lean thinking changes the focus of management from optimizing separate technologies, assets, and vertical departments to optimizing the flow of products and services through entire value streams that flow horizontally across technologies, assets, and departments to customers.

Eliminating waste along entire value streams, instead of at isolated points, creates processes that need less human effort, less space, less capital, and less time to make products and services at far less costs and with much fewer defects, compared with traditional business systems. Companies are able to respond to changing customer desires with high variety, high quality, low cost, and with very fast throughput times. Also, information management becomes much simpler and more accurate.

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The word is, lean transformation !

Businesses in all industries and services, including healthcare and governments, are using lean principles as the way they think and do. Many organizations choose not to use the word lean, but to label what they do as their own system, such as the Toyota Production System or the Danaher Business System. Why? To drive home the point that lean is not a program or short term cost reduction program, but the way the company operates. The word transformation or lean transformation is often used to characterize a company moving from an old way of thinking to lean thinking. It requires a complete transformation on how a company conducts business. This takes a long-term perspective and perseverance. A client of PEEC doing just that, it’s the new word! lean transformation.

Lean for Production and Services A popular misconception is that lean is suited only for manufacturing. Not true. Lean applies in every business and every process. It is not a tactic or a cost reduction program, but a way of thinking and acting for an entire organization.

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Looking for new types of waste in Lean

As Lean concepts have been developed over the years some other wastes have been added to the original 7 (TIM WOOD).

  • The waste of Untapped Human Potential

This relates to intellectual capacity not just physical labour

 

  • The waste of Inappropriate Control Systems

This relates to minimising complexity (Push ERP/MRP/SAP vs Pull JIT and Kanban)

 

  • Wasted Energy and Water
  • Waste of Customer Time and Defecting Customers
  • Service and Office Wastes

 

  • The waste of Human Capacity

This relates to physical capacity during meetings, decision making

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Starting from 20th March '12; monthly PMP certification training in Hamburg.

Starting from 20th March; monthly PMP certification training in Hamburg.

Obtaining PMP certification means that you have taken the necessary steps to prove that you are an expert at managing projects.

All-in price of € 2.150 excl. VAT

  • 3 days-Module 1:  focuses on all the vital components of a professional management.
  • + 2 days- Module 2 : focuses on the Exam Simulation (4 hrs) and the preparation for the test.

PMP training helps you prepare for a more lucrative career. This exam is required for individuals to earn Project Management Professional certification (or PMP certification). To be permitted to even take the exam, you must apply to the Project Management Institute. The application requires a detailed listing that shows the applicant has completed all prerequisites, including thousands of hours of project management experience. Even when you have been managing projects for decades you can benefit from enrolling in the PMP training, before taking the exam at PMI.

 

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