Sep 7 2014
VSM Pitfall: unnecessary process | Chris Hohmann
Value Stream Mapping (VSM) is probably the main analysis tool and the most used in the lean toolbox. Easy to understand and handle, VSM is the starting point of improvement workshops and kaizen eve…
Source: hohmannchris.wordpress.com
Thoughtful comments, as usual from Chris Hohmann.
However, we need to go further and question the wisdom of reducing Lean implementation to Value-Stream Mapping and kaizen events when neither tool is central to the Toyota Production System.
“Value-Stream Mapping,” which is really materials and information flow mapping, is a minor tool at Toyota, used only with suppliers who have delivery problems. And “kaizen events” don’t exist at Toyota.
See on Scoop.it – lean manufacturing
Oct 3 2014
A summary of mistakes about Lean
In an invitation to the Lean Enterprise Academy ‘s Lean Summit 2014, David Brunt included the following summary of Lean since 1990:
It is a pretty accurate account of what happened — the only major omission being the omnipresent VSMs — and it goes a long way towards explaining why the vast majority of these efforts failed. They were limited at best to superficial details of TPS, included elements that were not part of TPS, and misjudged implementation priorities. Let’s us go through the list:
These efforts failed because the approach was simplistic. Both the technical and managerial content of TPS are deeper and take a while to learn. A successful implementation, particularly is a different industry, is not based on copying tools but on understanding underlying principles and deploying them as appropriate to the new context.
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By Michel Baudin • Management 0 • Tags: CI, Continuous improvement, Kaizen, Kanban, Lean, Lean implementation, SMED, SPC, Toyota, TPS