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Nov 17 2011

Why people don’t learn Lean management

Nicolas Stampf, from BNP Paribas, posted the following question on LinkedIn: “How come that despite being showed and coached into doing continuous improvement the Lean way, people don’t learn. I mean that when you stop coaching them and come back some months later, although they’re doing performance management and problem solving, improvements are absent? When you re-show them, they say they forgot having done that previously.”

Following is my response:

  1. You might as well ask why people keep behaving in self-destructive ways when they know better, for example overeating and not exercising. The rewards of changing behavior are obvious and they know them, yet they don’t do it until a significant event happens. Getting seriously ill will do it, but so will running for president.
  2. In  your question, you also treat the adoption of Lean as an personal choice. It’s not. Organizations choose to implement Lean, not individuals. It is a decision made by top managers, and they must communicate to all levels why they are doing it and that they are dead serious, which means that participation in the effort is a condition for continued membership in the organization.
  3. Also, as Tom Berghan put it “Lean isn’t Feng Shui on the business, it is the business.” In other words, if you want to be successful in implementing Lean, you cannot cherry-pick elements of it. Your question is centered on continuous improvement, performance management, and problem-solving, , which won’t make much of a difference if they are all you do. In manufacturing, the core of Lean includes specific approaches to production line design, operator job design, production control and logistics, quality assurance, maintenance, human resources, accounting, strategy deployment, etc.  I understand your work in Banking, where many of these approaches are not directly relevant, which means that you have to invent their equivalent for banking operations.

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By Michel Baudin • Management • 1 • Tags: Continuous improvement, Lean, Lean manufacturing, Management, Strategy

Shooting video from stepladder for blog

Nov 15 2011

Sports video analysis software used for motion studies in manufacturing

From the press:

The adoption of video technology in the improvement of manufacturing operations proceeds at a glacial pace. A recent article from the Financial Times describes the application of video analysis developed for sports to motion studies in manufacturing.
Via Scoop.it – lean manufacturing
Dave Westphal’s 13-year-old daughter, Rachel, is a competitive figure skater. She is also the inspiration for a manufacturing improvement initiative at Nexteer Automotive, a leading US-based maker of steering and driveline systems for the car industry, where her father is director of lean manufacturing.
Via www.ft.com (You have to register on the Financial Times site to retrieve it, but a free registration will do.)

My comments:

Video technology is now so pervasive that it is nearly impossible to buy a phone that does not include a camera capable or recording footage that is good enough for broadcast news. Journalists use amateur videos to show storm damage or expose human brutality. We use it to identify improvement opportunities in business operations.

Motion pictures have a long history in manufacturing:
  • In 1895, the first film ever publicly projected onto a screen showed women leaving the Lumière Brothers factory in Lyon.
  • In 1904, the American Mutoscope and Biograph Company shot several scenes in Westinghouse factories.
  • In 1913, Frank and Lillian Gilbreth were probably the first to use this new technology to analyze operations, and a compilation of their films is available on line, which shows that, from the very beginning, the camera was much more than a substitute for the stopwatches used by Taylor.

As is obvious from watching the Gilbreth films, where Taylor measured in order to control, the Gilbreths observed in order to improve. Taylor’s greater fame or notoriety, however, obscured this fundamental difference in the public mind, and made workers as wary of cameras as of stopwatches.

According to psychologist Arlie Belliveau,”The Gilbreths used workers’ interest in film to their advantage, and encouraged employees to participate in the production and study of work through film. Participants could learn to use the equipment, star in a film, and evaluate any resulting changes to work practices by viewing the projected films in the labs or at foremen’s meetings. Time measurements were made public, and decisions regarding best methods were negotiated. By engaging the workers as participants, the Gilbreths overcame some of the doubt that followed Taylor’s time studies.” In other words, these pioneers already understood that, unlike the stopwatch, this technology enabled the operators to participate in the analysis and improvement of their own operations.

Until recently, however, the process of recording motion was too cumbersome and expensive, and required too much skill, to be massively practiced either in manufacturing or in other types of business operations. In addition, most managements failed to use it in as enlightened a way as the Gilbreths, and manufacturing workers had a frequently well-founded fear that recordings would be used against them. As a consequence, they were less than enthusiastic in their support of such efforts.
Setup time reduction is probably the first type of project in which it was systematically used, first because the high stakes justified the cost, even in the 1950s and second because its objective was clearly to make drastic changes in activities that were not production and not to nibble a few seconds out of a repetitive task by pressuring a worker to move faster.

Technically, the cost of shooting videos has not been an issue since the advent of the VCR in the 1980s. Analyzing a video by moving forward and backwards on a cassette tape, while it appears cumbersome today, was far easier than dealing with film. The collection of data on electronic spreadsheets also eliminated the need to use counterintuitive time units like “decimal minutes.” Adding columns of times in hours, minutes and seconds was impractical manually but not a problem for the electronic spreadsheet.

With videos now recorded on and played back from flash memory, and free media-players as software, not only is moving back and forth in a video recording is easier, but the software maps video frames to the time elapsed since the beginning. We could manually transfer timestamps read from the bottom of the video player software window into electronic spreadsheets and have the spreadsheet software automatically calculate task times as the differences between consecutive timestamps.

While this approach has been a common practice for the past 15 years, video annotation software is available today, which helps break down the video into segments for steps, label them, categorize them, and analyze them.
You can also use it to structure the data and generate a variety of analytics to drive improvements or document the improved process through, for example, work instructions. Over the previous approach, video annotation has the following advantages:

  1. It automates the collection of timestamps. Reading times on the video screen and typing hem into an Excel spreadsheet is tedious and error-prone. Plowing through the details of a 30-minute is tedious enough already.
  2. Within the annotation software, each video segment remains attached to the text, numeric or categorical data you attach to it. One click on the data brings up the matching video segment.
  3. Using parallel tracks, you can simultaneously record what several people and machines do. Of course, you can do that without annotation software too, but it is more difficult.
  4. You can still export the data you collect and analyze it in Excel, but you can also take advantage of the software’s built-in analytics.

“Video time studies” is too restrictive a name for what we do with videos. It implies that they are just a replacement for a stopwatch in setting time standards. But what we really do with videos is analyze processes for the purpose of improving them, and this involves more than just capturing times. The primary pupose of the measurements is to quantify the improvement potential to justify changes, and to validate that they have actually occurred.

Putting this technology to use is not without challenges. Video files are larger than just about any other type we may use, be they rich text, databases, or photographs. And they come in a variety of formats and compression methods that make the old VHS versus Betamax dilemma of the VCR age look simple. More standardization would help, and will eventually come but, in the meantime, we have to learn more than we want to know about these issues. Functionally, the next technical challenge is the organization of libraries or databases for storage and retrieval of data captured in the form of videos. The human issues of video recording and analysis of business operations, on the other hand, remain as thorny as ever.

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By Michel Baudin • Press clippings, Technology • 1 • Tags: industrial engineering, Lean manufacturing, Motion study, Time study, Video analysis, Video annotation

Nov 14 2011

Last Call! Manufacturing Data Mining and

Last Call! Manufacturing Data Mining and Beyond 6σ: 2 Webinars on 11/15-16/11 http://ow.ly/7sIFi, #lean, #datamining, #sixsigma

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By Michel Baudin • Events • 0 • Tags: Data mining, Information systems, Lean, Quality, Six Sigma

Nov 13 2011

Another case of blaming Lean for headcutting

Via Scoop.it – lean manufacturing

This article, called “When Lean Cuts Too Deep” fingers Kellog’s Lean program for weakening  the company by cutting too many people.  We must remind manufacturing professionals that Lean is a specific approach based on the results of over 60 years of development at Toyota, and cannot be blamed for the failings of any half-baked, hare-brained head-cutting scheme hatched by managers who choose to call it “Lean.”
Via www.manufacturing-executive.com

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By Michel Baudin • Press clippings • 1 • Tags: Continuous improvement, Lean manufacturing, Management

Nov 13 2011

Kevin Meyers feels strongly about Lean at Whirlpool

Via Scoop.it – lean manufacturing

Kevin Meyers feels strongly about Lean at Whirlpool
Via superfactory.typepad.com

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

Nov 13 2011

Lean Manufacturing in aerospace composites in Abu Dhabi

Via Scoop.it – lean manufacturing

Aviation International NewsStrata Aims For Leadership In CompositesAviation International NewsA factory tour last Thursday underscored Strata’s lean manufacturing approach.
Via www.ainonline.com

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

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