Dec 27 2011
IndustryWeek survey on Continuous Improvement
Via Scoop.it – Cellular manufacturing
According to this article, the survey shows that continuous improvement separates the winners from the losers and drives financial gains. The body of the article, however, contains no information about the survey method. We know neither how many companies responded nor the positions of the people who responded. I assume that survey questionnaires were sent to a selected group of executives, and that some among the recipients opted to answer. I am not sure what such a sample is supposed to represent.
The article says that more respondents with continuous improvement programs expect revenue and income growth >3% in 2012 than respondents without such programs. So it is about what this self-selected sample believes will happen next year. The only statement about actual results is a similar one about cash flow for this year. Based on the article, I fail to see how the survey supports the claims in the title and subtitle.
Via www.industryweek.com
Jan 2 2012
What is an A3?
Many discussions of A3 reports in Lean omit one basic fact: A3 is a paper format. In millimeters, a A3 sheet is 297X420, roughly equivalent to 11×17 in inches. It is the size of two A4 sheets side-by-side, and half of an A2 sheet. The A-series of paper sizes is used all over the world, except in the US…
An A3 report is not just a story on one sheet of paper, but on one sheet of paper of this particular size, which has been found right to tell a manufacturing story with just enough details without turning into a victorian novel.
It can be posted on bulletin boards or above operator workstations. Operator instruction sheets are actually supposed to be on A3 paper.
Size does matter. If you shrink an A3 to A4 or letter size, it is no longer works as an A3, because the print will be too small for viewing on a board. If you show it on a PowerPoint slide, it is not an A3 either, because it does not have the permanence of hardcopy and, unless you have really advanced IT, you cannot annotate it manually.
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By Michel Baudin • Management • 36 • Tags: Lean, Lean manufacturing, Management