Mar 12 2013
A "Kaizen" Improvement at a Wine Bar – Is it "Lazy" or Smart? | Mark Graban
See on Scoop.it – lean manufacturing
“Progress isn’t made by early risers. It’s made by lazy men trying to find easier ways to do something.” – Robert Heinlein, American science fiction writer (July 7, 1907
With “kaizen,” the Japanese word meaning “change for the better” (and an improvement methodology), it often seems like a fine line between “lazy” and “efficient.”
The word “lazy,” has negative connotations, while “efficient” is positive. But one of the primary directions in the kaizen approach is to make improvements that make your own work easier.
In healthcare, making ones work easier might translate into rearranging supplies to reduce the amount of walking required. This frees up more time for patient care, which leads to better quality outcomes and shorter hospital stays – meaning a cost savings. So is “laziness” really that bad if applied in a good way?…
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Mar 12 2013
The baton-touch approach
The following question came this morning from Diogo Cardoso:
Your researched the wrong sources. You could have found your answer in Working with Machines, pp. 140-142. Baton-touch is one of three approaches used to design operator jobs in cells, the other two being the caravan/rabbit-chase and bucket-brigades. The key differences are as follows:
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By Michel Baudin • Answers to reader questions 0 • Tags: Cellular manufacturing, industrial engineering, Lean manufacturing, Manufacturing engineering, Operator job design