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Lean Terminology
Lean practitioners have their own terminology to communicate lean
concepts effectively, many of these are borrowed from japanese words as
a result of the development of the Toyota Productin System (TPS); below
is a list of terms you will encounter during your lean studies:
Andon
Kanbam
Kaizen
5S
Value Stream
Value Stream Mapping (VSM)
5 why's
Total Productive Maintenance (TPM)
Standardisation
Six Sigma
Push System
Pull System
Lean
Current State: The current or existing view of the workflow.
Product Family: A grouping of products using similar processing
methods.
Future State: A potential improved view of the workflow.
Workflow:
iT: Just-in-time means providing what is needed, when it is needed, in
the quantity it is needed.
One-piece Flow: A practice where product is moved from one workstation
to the next one piece at a time without allowing inventory to build up
in-between steps.
Takt Time: The rate at which the customer uses a product. It is
calculated by dividing the total daily operating time by the total
daily customer demand.
Bottlenecks: The step in a process line that limits the throughput of
the entire process line.
Pull vs. Push: Two diametrically opposite scheduling philosophies.
Push manufacturing schedules are dictated by a formal production
schedule where a new lot is pushed onto the first step of the process.
With pull manufacturing, a customer order triggers the start of a new
lot; typically empty kanbans pull new production from the prior process
step.
Monuments: Equipment that is too costly or disruptive to move is
considered a monument.
Kanbans: A visual signal, typically a re-order card or container that
triggers a pull manufacturing system.
Workplace Organization:
The 5S's: A formal approach to organizing the workplace.
Work Cell: A cross-functional process line typically including
equipment to process products (or product families) from start to
finish.
TPM: Total productive maintenance, an approach that leads to increased
equipment availability by reducing downtime due to failure and
unplanned (emergency) repairs.
Workplace Simplification:
Mistake-Proofing: A mistake prevention approach.
SMED: Literally "Single Minute Exchange of Dies." It stands for set-up
reduction, an approach that minimizes the time the process is down
being changed over from one product to another.
Visual Workplace: Use of visual controls and visual displays to help
employees maintain control of their work areas and assess performance
at a glance.
DFA/DFM: Design for Assembly and Design for Manufacturability
techniques that improve manufacturing productivity.
Kaizen: Continuous improvement on top of continuous improvement.
Process Improvement:
Problem-Solving Process: A formal, structured approach to solving a
problem such as the 8D Process or DMAIC.
Kaizen Event: A focused, short-term event to make immediate
improvements.
FMEA: Failure Mode and Effects Analysis, a technique used to assess
risk in a process or a product design.
QFD: Quality Function Deployment, a technique used to identify the
"Voice of the Customer" and match customer requirements and technical
requirements.
DOE: Design of Experiments, a family of statistical improvement
techniques.
Measures:
COQ: Cost of Quality, a quantification of the cost of poor quality.
Set-Up Time: The time it takes to set-up a process to produce the next
product, measured from the last good part of the prior lot to the first
good part of the new lot.
On-Time Delivery: A measure of the success rate of delivering (or
shipping) on the date promised.
Lead Time: The time quoted to customers (usually in days or weeks)
between the date of purchase and the shipment date.
Inventory Turns: the number of times the value of inventory is turned
over in a year; 12 turns means that the value of inventory is turned 12
times per year or once per month.
The number and extent of tools to help lean efforts is probably
unending but these four tools are vital.
Value Stream Mapping: A graphical representation of all tasks and
activities needed to transform input materials and information into an
output.
The 5S's: A structured approach to clean and organize the workplace.
Set-Up Reduction: Reducing the time to set-up or change-over a process.
TPM: Total Productive Maintenance: Techniques to improve equipment
reliability by reducing the frequency of breakdowns and failures.
Some of the major lean techniques include:
Workflow Analysis: Analyzing the physical layout of a process flow with
the intent of reducing travel distances, eliminating redundancies,
improving communication and quality.
Layouts & Work Cell Design: Using the results of value stream
mapping and workflow analysis to improve the macro and micro layout of
the process.
Simulated Continuous Flow: With a step-wise batch operation, simulating
a continuous process with small lot sizes (as small as a lot size of
1), elimination of WIP, and direct feed of each process step from its
prior step.
Pull Scheduling: Starting a new lot with an order from a customer.
Kanban: A visual signal, typically a re-order card or container that
triggers a pull manufacturing system.
Load Balancing: Matching or adjusting the throughput rate of all steps
in a workflow.
De-bottlenecking: Improving the throughput rate of the process
bottleneck.
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