|
Insights on Excellence | "Insights" Archive
Just what is a lean enterprise?
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
|
Stephen
Hawley Martin is
a former principal of The Martin Agency
in Richmond and the author of more than
half a dozen books including his newest,
Lean Enterprise Leader: How to Get Things
Done Without Doing It All Yourself.
He is editor and
publisher of The
Oaklea Press, a book publishing business
dedicated primarily to helping business
executives increase productivity.
He can be reached at shmartin@oakleapress.com
|
|
|
|
by Stephen
Hawley Martin
for Virginia Business
February 21, 2006
People who don't know about the lean movement and what
it entails often assume it simply means doing more
with less. They think this is accomplished by having
everyone work harder. They are wrong. More is done
with less by having everyone work smarter. According
to published data, people who work in true lean enterprises
are significantly happier with their jobs on average
than those who work in traditional businesses. Why?
A fundamental reason is they are empowered to make
decisions rather than having to wait for someone higher
up to pronounce judgment on the course of action to
be taken. So people have more control over their jobs
and their destinies. Lean enterprises are distinguished by six key attributes:
1.) The workplace is safe,
brightly lit, orderly and immaculately clean.
Ever seen a "clean room" in a computer chip
factory or hospital surgical supply company? That's
what lean manufacturers strive for. The grease and
oil drippings have to go because a clean environment
is not only more pleasant to work in, it helps produce
a mind set that results in top quality products.
2.)
Products are produced on a just-in-time basis,
only to customer demand (not to forecast). Products are made
in continuous flow production lines which are scheduled
according to customer demand using pull-scheduling techniques.
This means it must be possible to convert lines quickly
from one product to another or to easily change configurations
based on output requirements that can change daily or
even hourly. This means the ability to perform quick
setups and line conversions is a must.
3.) The
highest quality possible (Six Sigma) is built into
products and processes. Equipment
is programmed
to detect defects. Mistake proofing is used extensively.
Root-cause problem solving skills are finely honed. Each
person is responsible for his or her own work, making
quality inspectors obsolete. They aren't needed because
every employee is an "inspector." Also, design
and process engineers build quality into the design of
a product and into the process that makes it.
4.) The
organization operates via empowered teams, not traditional
management hierarchy. Teams on the shop floor
and throughout a lean enterprise are empowered to make
key decisions. When a problem is spotted, the team decides
how to fix it. If a worker calls in sick, the production
team decides how that job will be covered. There is no
need to call in management. In an assembly operation,
for example, workers are obligated to stop the line if
they see a quality defect problem. The line remains shut
until the problem is fixed. This would be unthinkable
in most assembly plants where only the general manager
could authorize such action.
5.) Feedback
and other information are provided visually and intelligence
is freely shared. A baseball player
can look up at the scoreboard at any time and see exactly
how the team is doing and what needs to be done to win
the game. The same is true for a production team in a
lean factory. Scoreboards positioned in easy view display
goals for the day, and progress toward them is posted
hourly. Intelligence on overall company performance is
freely shared in meetings from boardroom to shop floor.
The reason? If people don't have the foggiest notion
how they are doing, how can they be expected to improve?
6.) The
pursuit of waste reduction is never ending. "Simplify,
simplify, simplify!" is the battle cry. The quest
for improvement never ends. The core idea is that any
and every activity or expense is to be eliminated that
does not, in the view of the end user, add value. This
includes all functions and processes wherever they may
be, not just unnecessary or redundant work on the factory
floor. Elimination of inventory, for example, is especially
critical because inventory tends to hide manufacturing
and distribution bottlenecks that need to be identified
and opened up. Moving goods, parts and components in
and out of storage is considered a waste of time and
money.
Lean enterprises enjoy a number of strategic advantages
over their mass manufacturing competitors. First, a lean
producer is typically the low-cost producer in its industry.
This allows it to set the market price, as lean-producer
Dell Computer has done in the PC world. What makes a
lean producer low cost? Lean manufacturing often requires
half the space and 25 to 40 percent less direct labor
than mass manufacturing. Inventory is often cut to two
or three days supply, freeing up huge sums of money that
would otherwise be tied up, along with enormous amounts
of space previously required for storage. In the high-tech
arena in particular, inventory that sits in a warehouse
for any length of time before it is sold may end up being
a worth a lot less than it was the day it was made.
The biggest strategic advantage of lean is speed. Speed
is the hallmark of a lean enterprise in several ways:
speed of delivery of product that's configured as customers
want it, speed with new product introductions, speed
in management decision-making because the organization
is flat and bureaucracy almost nonexistent. Speed can
be a critical factor in success because a nimble organization
unburdened by inventory can take full advantage of changes
in the marketplace as they occur. Meanwhile, non-lean
competitors will be scratching their heads, wondering
what happened.
-----------------------------------------------------
Stephen Hawley Martin is a former principal of The Martin Agency in Richmond
and the author of more than half a dozen books including his newest, Lean Enterprise
Leader: How to Get Things Done Without Doing It All Yourself. He is editor and
publisher of The Oaklea Press, a book publishing business dedicated primarily
to helping business executives increase productivity.
|