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Expanded edition of Seeing the Whole.
In response to feedback asking for examples in other sectors and
questions about how to understand costs more accurately, five
essays have been added to the book for this new edition. These
essays demonstrate how real companies have taken on the challenge
of improving their extended value streams working in collaboration
with their suppliers and customers.
The new essays for the book are:
Spreading value-stream thinking from manufacturers to final
customers through service providers—extending the wiper example.
This extends the value-stream analysis in the first edition—using
the same example of a windshield wiper—through the auto service
system to the end customer.
Applying extended value-stream thinking to retail—a look at the
Tesco story. This follows the path of an individual product through
a complex retail channel from manufacturer to end customer.
Learning to use value-stream thinking collaboratively with
suppliers and customers. This essay demonstrates how a second-tier
supplier convinced much larger partners to embrace collaborative
thinking about their shared value stream.
Product costing in value-stream analysis. An essay on adding
realistic costing to value streams to more accurately understand
total cost.
Seeing and configuring the global value stream. This essays shows
how a manufacturer can analyze all of the value streams in a
complex supply network
When the first edition of Seeing the Whole was published in 2003,
the world was in a mad rush to outsource and offshore in pursuit of
suppliers with drastically lower piece prices. Today the situation
is very different; currencies have shifted, labor costs in many
low-wage countries have risen, and the potential for squeezing
further price reductions from suppliers is largely exhausted.
What’s more, high product quality and rapid response to changing
customer demands have proved elusive along unwieldy, opaque supply
streams. Seeing the Whole Value Stream provides managers with a
proven method for understanding and improving the value-creating
process that suppliers share with customers.
By identifying all the steps and time required to move a typical
product from raw materials to finished goods, the authors show that
nearly 90 percent of the actions and 99.9 percent of the time
required for the value stream’s current state create no value. In
addition, the method clearly shows demand amplification of orders
as they travel up the value stream, steadily growing quality
problems, and steadily deteriorating shipping performance at every
point up stream from the customer.
Applying the method to a realistic example, the authors show how
four firms sharing a value stream can create a win-win-win-win
future in which everyone, including the end consumer, can be better
off.
The workbook goes step-by-step through an improvement process that
converts the traditional value stream of isolated,
compartmentalized operations into an ideal future-state value
stream in which value flows from raw materials to customer in just
6 percent of the time previously needed. The dramatically improved
value stream also eliminates unnecessary transport links,
inventories, and handoffs, the key drivers of hidden connectivity
costs.
Perspectives on Extended Value Streams: 5 essays
| Product Code |
Description |
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Price |
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| AU2500 |
Seeing the Whole Value Stream |
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$66.00
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