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May 9 2012

It’s Time to Rethink Continuous Improvement – blogs.hbr.org (blog)

See on Scoop.it – lean manufacturing

Who else is shocked by a phrase like “Six Sigma, Kaizen, Lean, and other variations on continuous improvement…”?

Since when is Lean a variation on continuous improvement? Instead, continuous improvement is a component of Lean, which includes many features that are not continuous improvement.

Kaizen does not belong in a list in parallel with Lean. It literally means “improvement” and is used in Japan to mean continuous improvement. In other words, this entry in the list refers to the list itself.

Six Sigma is a method developed at Motorola in the US to solve process capability issues and is not continuous improvement.

Is it one more list patterned after Borges’s classification of animals?

See on blogs.hbr.org

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By Michel Baudin • Blog clippings • 2 • Tags: Continuous improvement, Kaizen, Lean, Six Sigma

May 9 2012

Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co: Fayetteville – Business Excellence Magazine

See on Scoop.it – lean manufacturing

A case study, presented by the plant manager.

See on www.bus-ex.com

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By Michel Baudin • Press clippings • 0 • Tags: Lean, Lean manufacturing, Management, TPM

May 3 2012

Manufacturing: Offshore Out; Lean In

See on Scoop.it – Cellular manufacturing

When companies implement lean manufacturing correctly they achieve necessary cost improvements and increase productivity while maintaining operational control that only on-shore, in-sourced production offers.

See on d2pnews.com

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By Michel Baudin • Blog clippings • 0 • Tags: Lean, Lean manufacturing, Management, Strategy

May 3 2012

IndustryWeek : So You Want to Reduce Your Costs? Don’t Focus on Cost Reductions

See on Scoop.it – lean manufacturing

A great article by Lonnie Wilson, pen-pal of over 10 years.

Focus on lean and get those cost reductions, and more.

See on www.industryweek.com

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By Michel Baudin • Press clippings • 0 • Tags: Cellular manufacturing, Lean manufacturing, Metrics

May 2 2012

Kaizen events versus Continuous Improvement

See on Scoop.it – lean manufacturing

I don’t agree with everything this blogger says, particularly when he describes the establishment of the Roman empire as a “short term” fix. In my book, 400 years of peace and prosperity is beyond the short term…

On the other hand, I think he is right when he says that “Kaizen events” are not performing continuous improvement. As an oxymoron, “Kaizen Blitz” is even better: it mixes Japanese and German in a concoction that literally means “lightning strike of continuous improvement.”

The so-called “Kaizen event” is a good tool when applied to the right opportunities, but there are two problems with it:

  1. Its promise of instant gratification has made it so popular in the US that all other means of implementing change are forgotten. It is a problem because it leads organizations to ignore opportunities that are too small or too large. Wrapping the feet of a welding fixture with aluminum foil to make it easier to clean is too small; redesigning the layout of a machine shop, too large.
  2. It has misled particularly Americans about the meaning of Kaizen, on which there is an abundant Japanese literature that makes no reference to anything resembling Kaizen Events. In fact, the improvements that are called Kaizen are too small for Kaizen events and the two implementation methods for them are individual suggestions and small-group/circle activity. As a consequence, there is no actual Kaizen activity going on even in plants that run dozens of “Kaizen events” every year, and it is a lost opportunity.

The French did even worse by calling the same method “Hoshin Events,” literally meaning “compass needle event.” The equally unfortunate consequence is that it makes it impossible to discuss Hoshin Planning with them.

See on www.impomag.com

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By Michel Baudin • Blog clippings • 2 • Tags: Continuous improvement, Kaizen, Management

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