Introduction To Lean and Value Stream Mapping
Introduction To Lean and Value Stream Mapping
Standards Process
And Lean Office
Excellence
Compliance
Lean
Lean Six Sigma Manufacturing
Henry Ford
1926
History of Lean
Lean was Born in the U.S.A.
– Time & Motion Studies (1900s)
– Ford production system established (1913)
Visual
Just In 5S
Controls
Kanban Jidoka
Time •
Built-in quality
•
Takt Time •
Pokayoke
SMED TPM 3P •
5 Why
•
One-piece Flow
•
Downstream Pull •
Harmony of
Creative Idea man & machine
Suggestion System
Heijunka
Standard •
Averaged daily volume & mix Kaizen
Work •
Smooth production schedule
The Lean Journey
Value
Muda (waste) and non value added activities.
Added
Added
Make value
Value
Muda (waste) and non value added activities. added work
twice as fast
Transportation
•Facility layout
Inventory
Motion
•Poor workplace organization
Processing
Waiting
•Imbalanced work loads
Call
‘
Marketing
silos’
Initial Contact
Sales Order
Quote
Order Processing
Engineering
Drawing
or departmental boundaries
Procurement
Inventory Control
Receiving
Scheduling
Taking a Value Stream View
Production
Shipping
Invoicing / AR
Cash
Functional Departments
Initial Contact
Engineering
Production
Order Entry
•Functional departments work independently
•Little inter-departmental communication
•Work sits in queue
•Information is batch processed
‘
B
A
D
C
Call
Marketing
Initial Contact
Sales Order
Quote
Order Processing
Inventory Control
Receiving
Scheduling
How to be a “Flow Thinker”
Production
Shipping
Invoicing / AR
or cross-departmental process flows
Cash
Start the Journey with a Map
Value Stream Mapping Definitions
A Value Stream is the flow of all of the activity, value
added and otherwise, needed to fulfill a request.
= process Demand
Request
Enterprise “
multi-site”
Factory or site “
door to door”
Process level
Fulfillment
Supply
VSM Team Activity
Customer Demand:
45000pieces per Month
(Takt Time 25.6
seconds)
Tuesday &
Thursday 1 x daily
Daily
Production Daily Shipping
Orders requests
21 days Turn 1 Mill Turn 2 Heat Treat Grind Assembly Paint Shipping
1 1 1 3 1 1 2 5
376 pcs 275 pcs 340 pcs 375 pcs 355 pcs Parts P: 950 Parts P: 2700
Total C/T = 45 secs. Total C/T = 45 secs. Total C/T = 55 secs. Total C/T = 160 secs. Total C/T = 40 secs. Total C/T = 200 secs. Parts NP: 500Total C/T = 30 secs. Parts NP: 1440Total C/T = 120 secs.
Defect = 27% Defect = 27% Defect = 27% Defect = 26% Defect = 27% Defect = 27% Defect = 41% Defect = 0%
NVA = 55 secs. NVA = 55 secs. NVA = 65 secs. NVA = 39160 secs. NVA = 60 secs. NVA = 175 secs. NVA = 85 secs. C/O = 0 mins.
C/O = 0 mins. C/O = 90 mins. C/O = 90 mins. C/O = 60 mins. C/O = 0 mins. C/O = 0 mins. C/O = 30 mins. Uptime = 90%
Uptime = 90% Uptime = 90% Uptime = 90% Uptime = 90% Uptime = 90% Uptime = 90% Uptime = 90%
Automatic C/T: 55 seconds Automatic C/T: 55 seconds Automatic C/T: 45 seconds Automatic C/T: 54000 seconds Automatic C/T: 55 seconds Automatic C/T: 60 seconds
21 days 0.00174 days 0.167 days 0.00174 days 0.122 days 0.00174 days 0.151 days 0.94 days 0.167 days 0.00165 days 0.158 days 0.00347 days 0.644 days 0.00156 days 1.84 days Lead Time = 25.2 days
45 secs. 45 secs. 35 secs. 15000 secs. 35 secs. 25 secs. 5 secs. 120 secs. Processing Time = 15310 secs.
PCE = 1.05%
Future State Maps
The Future State Map represents the “ ideal”condition
which will be achieved in 2 to 3 months.
Production Control
Steel Supplier
Information flow
Electronic Value Stream Map
Material flow
VSM: Pencil vs. Computer?
“Ideal”
Future State
Current
State Original State
Improving Towards the Ideal
“Ideal”
Future State
New Current
State
Original
State
Summary