Jul 18 2012
30 years later, Honda evolves – The Detroit News
See on Scoop.it – lean manufacturing
This article discusses the “renowned lean manufacturing and ‘just-in-time’ production techniques of the Japanese manufacturers,” a wording that implies that all Japanese manufacturers use variants of the Toyota Production System (TPS). It is not the case, and it is particularly not true of Honda.
Honda is good at manufacturing, but uses methods developed in-house, based on the founder’s philosophy of self-reliance.Soichiro Honda was known for telling engineers: “Don’t try to find out what the other guy is doing, just solve your own problem!” He also got the company involved in racing early on so as to infuse the “racing spirit” in everything it did. The Honda Way isn’t just a rebranding of TPS or Lean, as so many companies’ “Production Systems” are; it is an original, autonomous development. The white uniform in the picture is part of it. Its purpose is to make stains stand out, so that their sources are identified and removed from production.
See on www.detroitnews.com
Jul 19 2012
ISO 9001: Conspicuous by Its Absence | Quality Digest
See on Scoop.it – lean manufacturing

To paraphrase the judge in My Cousin Vinny, this is a lucid, intelligent, well thought-out argument for the usefulness of ISO-9001: you don’t hear about its benefits because they come in the form of problem-prevention.
Levinson is persuasive, but I can’t help thinking that we should still be able to see before-and-after metrics of quality for companies that implement ISO-9001. The results don’t have to be immediate, but they have to exist.
See on www.qualitydigest.com
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By Michel Baudin • Press clippings • 3 • Tags: ISO, Quality