Symbiosis International University
Symbiosis International University
Symbiosis International University
MANUFACTURING MANAGEMENT
LEAN PRODUCTION
Karan Puri
TY-E
3245
Introduction
lean production, often simply, "Lean," is a production practice that
considers the expenditure of resources for any goal other than the
creation of value for the end customer to be wasteful, and thus a target
for elimination. Working from the perspective of the customer who
consumes a product or service, "value" is defined as any action or
process that a customer would be willing to pay for. Basically, lean is
centered on preserving value with less work. Lean manufacturing is a
generic process management philosophy derived mostly from the Toyota
Production System (TPS) (hence the term Toyotism is also prevalent)
and identified as "Lean" only in the 1990s.[1][2] It is renowned for its
focus on reduction of the original Toyota seven wastes to improve
overall customer value, but there are varying perspectives on how this is
best achieved. The steady growth of Toyota, from a small company to
the world's largest automaker,[3] has focused attention on how it has
achieved this.
For many, Lean is the set of "tools" that assist in the identification and
steady elimination of waste (muda). As waste is eliminated quality
improves while production time and cost are reduced. Examples of such
"tools" are Value Stream Mapping, Five S, Kanban (pull systems), and
poka-yoke (error-proofing).
The difference between these two approaches is not the goal itself, but
rather the prime approach to achieving it. The implementation of
smooth flow exposes quality problems that already existed, and thus
waste reduction naturally happens as a consequence. The advantage
claim
for this approach is that it naturally takes a system-wide perspective,
whereas a waste focus sometimes wrongly assumes this perspective.
Both Lean and TPS can be seen as a loosely connected set of potentially
competing principles whose goal is cost reduction by the elimination of
waste.[5] These principles include: Pull processing, Perfect first-time
quality, Waste minimization, Continuous improvement, Flexibility,
Building and maintaining a long term relationship with suppliers,
Autonomation, Load leveling and Production flow and Visual control.
The disconnected nature of some of these principles perhaps springs
from the fact that the TPS has grown pragmatically since 1948 as it
responded to the problems it saw within its own production facilities.
Thus what one sees today is the result of a 'need' driven learning to
improve where each step has built on previous ideas and not something
based upon a theoretical framework.
Toyota's view is that the main method of Lean is not the tools, but the
reduction of three types of waste: muda ("non-value-adding work"),
muri ("overburden"), and mura ("unevenness"), to expose problems
systematically and to use the tools where the ideal cannot be achieved.
From this perspective, the tools are workarounds adapted to different
situations, which explains any apparent incoherence of the principles
above.
A brief history of waste reduction thinking
20th century
Toyota's development of ideas that later became Lean may have started
at the turn of the 20th century with Sakichi Toyoda, in a textile factory
with looms that stopped themselves when a thread broke, this became
the seed of autonomation and Jidoka. Toyota's journey with JIT may
have started back in 1934 when it moved from textiles to produce its
first car. Kiichiro Toyoda, founder of Toyota, directed the engine
casting work and discovered many problems in their manufacture. He
decided he must stop the repairing of poor quality by intense study of
each stage of the process. In 1936, when Toyota won its first truck
contract with the Japanese government, his processes hit new problems
and he developed the "Kaizen" improvement teams.
Levels of demand in the Post War economy of Japan were low and the
focus of mass production on lowest cost per item via economies of scale
therefore had little application. Having visited and seen supermarkets in
the USA, Taiichi Ohno recognised the scheduling of work should not be
driven by sales or production targets but by actual sales. Given the
financial situation during this period, over-production had to be
avoided and thus the notion of Pull (build to order rather than target
driven Push) came to underpin production scheduling.
It was with Taiichi Ohno at Toyota that these themes came together. He
built on the already existing internal schools of thought and spread their
breadth and use into what has now become the Toyota Production
System (TPS). It is principally from the TPS, but now including many
other sources, that Lean production is developing. Norman Bodek wrote
the following in his foreword to a reprint of Ford's Today and
Tomorrow:
Types of waste:
While the elimination of waste may seem like a simple and clear subject
it is noticeable that waste is often very conservatively identified. This
then hugely reduces the potential of such an aim. The elimination of
waste is the goal of Lean, and Toyota defined three broad types of
waste: muda, muri and mura; it should be noted that for many Lean
implementations this list shrinks to the first waste type only with
corresponding benefits decrease. To illustrate the state of this thinking
Shigeo Shingo observed that only the last turn of a bolt tightens it—the
rest is just movement. This ever finer clarification of waste is key to
establishing distinctions between value-adding activity, waste and non-
value-adding work.[16] Non-value adding work is waste that must be
done under the present work conditions. One key is to measure, or
estimate, the size of these wastes, to demonstrate the effect of the
changes achieved and therefore the movement toward the goal.
To link these three concepts is simple in TPS and thus Lean. Firstly,
muri focuses on the preparation and planning of the process, or what
work can be avoided proactively by design. Next, mura then focuses on
how the work design is implemented and the elimination of fluctuation
at the scheduling or operations level, such as quality and volume. Muda
is then discovered after the process is in place and is dealt with
reactively. It is seen through variation in output. It is the role of
management to examine the muda, in the processes and eliminate the
deeper causes by considering the connections to the muri and mura of
the system. The muda and mura inconsistencies must be fed back to the
muri, or planning, stage for the next project.
Some of these definitions may seem rather idealistic, but this tough
definition is seen as important and they drove the success of TPS. The
clear identification of non-value-adding work, as distinct from wasted
work, is critical to identifying the assumptions behind the current work
process and to challenging them in due course.[19] Breakthroughs in
SMED and other process changing techniques rely upon clear
identification of where untapped opportunities may lie if the processing
assumptions are challenged.
Lean leadership
Taking the first letter of each waste, the acronym "TIM WOOD" is
formed. This is a common way to remember the wastes.