Standardised Work: The Foundation for Kaizen
Next Workshop:
Location - to be advised
Date - to be advised
Start 8.30 am. Finish 5.00 pm.
Coffee served from 8.00 am
Prerequisites:
This workshop assumes you are familiar with basic lean terms and
concepts as described in Lean
Thinking by Jim Womack and Dan Jones. For maximum benefit,
we strongly recommend that you read Learning to
See by Mike Rother and John Shook to develop a
value-stream perspective before attending the workshop. A good
article to read prior to attending is "Decoding
the DNA of the Toyota Production System" (Harvard
Business Review).
Description:
Standardized work is one of the most powerful but least used
lean tools. By documenting the current best practice, standardized
work forms the baseline for kaizen or continuous improvement. As
the standard is improved, the new standard becomes the baseline for
further improvements, and so on. Improving standardized work is a
never-ending process.
Basically, standardized work consists of three elements:
- Takt time, which is the rate at which products must be made in
a process to meet customer demand.
- The precise work sequence in which an operator performs tasks
within takt time.
- The standard inventory, including units in machines, required
to keep the process operating smoothly.
Establishing standardized work relies on collecting and
recording data on a few forms. These forms are used by engineers
and front-line supervisors to design the process and by operators
to make improvements in their own jobs. In this workshop, you'll
learn how to use these forms and why it will be difficult to make
your lean implementations “stick” without standardized work.
Benefits:
The benefits of standardized work include documentation of the
current process for all shifts, reductions in variability, easier
training of new operators, reductions in injuries and strain, and a
baseline for improvement activities.
Standardizing the work adds discipline to the culture, an
element that is frequently neglected but essential for lean to
take root. Standardized work is also a learning tool that
supports audits, promotes problem solving, and involves team
members in developing poka-yokes.
Course Outline:
This workshop is based on a “hear-see-do” format, so you'll
learn the key concepts through instruction, discussion, simulation,
and small-group exercise. You'll learn:
- Standardized work basic concepts and examples from various
industries.
- The difference between work standardization and standardized
work.
- The three elements of standardized work (takt time, work
sequence, standard in-process inventory).
- The three documents for establishing standardized work
(production capacity sheet, combination table, work chart).
- The three requirements for standardized work (work, equipment
and line, quality)
- >Standardization techniques: poka-yoke, visual management,
SWIS, checking and auditing.
- How to choose the standardization techniques suitable for your
environment so that you can effectively ensure your process is
consistent and your results are predictable.
- The Toyota approach to kaizen.
- How to observe work before you standardize it.
Who Should Attend:
Those who would benefit from this workshop include:
- Operators (by understanding the importance of following
standardized work rigorously and how they can make improvements
through kaizen)
- Line supervisors (by learning how to observe people's cycle
times, movements, and process steps)
- Engineers and lean leaders (by understanding how to introduce,
support, and teach standardization)
- Managers (by understanding how to audit for adherence)
- Organizations at any stage in a lean transformation that are
struggling with:
o Failures to sustain the results from past kaizen events
o Problems training new employees
o Inability to work within takt time or consistent cycle times
Learning Objectives:
At the end of this workshop, you will be able to:
- Understand the fundamentals of standardization and its
importance in the foundation of a lean system.
- Prepare standardized work forms.
- Introduce standardization techniques to improve:
o Training
o Waste elimination
o Sustainability of improvements
o Predictability of results
Price:
$1,000 per participant, payable in advance.
Registration:
Email Peter
Walsh to register interest. |