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Toyota Production System
                   “Lean Manufacturing”

          John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to
                  the United States: A Personal Perspective”
                            Included as Chapter 2 of:
            Becoming Lean: Inside Stories of U. S. Manufacturers
                             Jeffrey K. Liker, Editor
                    (Portland, OR: Productivity Press, 1998)



July 12                       jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                 1
Underlying Assumptions

 The concepts mass production and lean production reflect ways
  of thinking about production – the assumptions that underlie
  how people and institutions formulate solutions to the problems
  of organizing people, equipment, material, and capital to create
  and deliver products for customers.
 Mass and lean are paradigms that reflect and inform the
  thinking about production within particular cultures and eras.




                                                   John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                   System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                   jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                 2
Underlying Assumptions

 Lean manufacturing includes a set of techniques that
  comprise a system that derives from a philosophy.
 The tremendous benefits promised by the lean paradigm can be
  actualized only if we understand and implement accordingly.
 15 years after John Shook began his training in Japan, he was
  still struggling alongside much of U. S. Industry to understand
  what it was that he had been trained in and had also trained.




                                                  John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                  System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                  jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                 3
Lesson One: Learn by Doing

 Making a car: you stamp it, paint it, stuff it, and ship it. The
  process is deceptively simple. (Jim Womack)
 Taiichi Ohno had a small and diverse market in Japan, and he
  (and Nissan) had to meet all of that diversity, because the
  government closed the market (for 25 years, with U.S. approval)
 Originally Toyota copied Detroit, but Ohno had none of the
  economies of scale. In 1950 he was producing 1,000 vehicles a
  month – what a Ford assembly line was producing in a day.



                                                    John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                    System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                    jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                 4
Lesson Two: Economies of Scale

 You can attain greater overall system efficiency through
  concerted efforts to eliminate waste thoroughly (rather than
  through economies of scale).
 You can survive and thrive in low growth.
 The system from the early 1970’s is little changed today. The
  two most basic concepts are simple. One is to make what
  customers want when they want it, nothing more and nothing
  less. The other is to treat people with respect. This with
  15,000 parts per car and 5,000 people producing a quality car a
  minute.
                                                   John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                   System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                   jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                 5
Lesson Two: Economies of Scale
               The Two Pillars: Jidoka and Just-in-time

 Jidoka means – “autonomation” – built-in quality – the quality
  principle – respect for humans system – automation with a
  human touch (a coined term, even in Japan).
 Basically jidoka means building in quality and designing
  operations and equipment so that people are not tied to
  machines but are free to perform value-added work that is
  appropriate for humans. (If people are stuck watching
  machines, who is working for whom?)



                                                     John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                     System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                     jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                 6
Lesson Two: Economies of Scale
                The Two Pillars: Jidoka and Just-in-time

 Toyota defines just-in-time (JIT) as “the right part at the right
  time in the right amount” (“at the right place”).
 JIT is one of the most well-known and least understood
  buzzwords of modern manufacturing.
 Moving inventories around without reducing them or shortening
  lead times is not JIT.




                                                      John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                      System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                      jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                 7
Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies
                         Easier Said Than Done

 Transferring technologies around the world is easier said than
  done. JIT, more than any other of the system mechanics,
  visibly distinguishes TPS from conventional manufacturing.
 JIT is a solution to the nightmare of trying to coordinate all of the
  parts and materials that go into an automobile.
 Often, we fight complexity with complexity. JIT, however,
  instructs us to learn to respond quickly and to roll with the
  chaos.



                                                     John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                     System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                     jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                 8
Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies
                        Easier Said Than Done

 If you an understand the following two assumptions, you can
  understand JIT:
       Production plans always change.
       Production will never go according to plan, anyway.
 Toyota’s JIT is a system unto itself comprised of pull system,
  one-piece flow, and takt time, all of which are integrated with
  Toyota’s heijunka method of production scheduling.
 The rest of JIT just will not work well without heijunka.


                                                    John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                    System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                    jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                 9
Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies
                                Heijunka

 Heijunka is a leveling of production (volume and variety).
 Production by heijunka:
       Creates a steady demand of resources,
       Shortens the lead time of individual product variation,
       Enables the leveling of the production process.
 Without heijunka, muda (waste) will build up increasingly from
  beginning to end.
 Toyota establishes heijunka production planning on a monthly
  basis, but does not lock in the actual production sequence.
                                                     John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                     System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                     jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                10
Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies
                   Pull System: The Kanban System

 “Production plans will always change; production will never go
  according to plan, anyway.”
 Usually we deal with the complexities of production scheduling
  with equally complex forecasting and scheduling systems.
 In TPS, internal “customers” pull orders from internal “suppliers”
  when they need it based on “sales” to their internal
  “customers”.
 TPS fights complexity with simplicity – no forecasting
  schedules for every process. No continuous reforecasting.

                                                    John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                    System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                    jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                11
Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies
                   Pull System: The Kanban System

 Kanban is the Japanese word for “sign”. Kanban cards travel
  with the parts and include part number, quantity, location, etc.
  Usually small containers of a predetermined number of parts.
 If everyone follows the handful of clear rules for proper usage,
  the kanban system is a foolproof way of making the right part
  at the right time in the right amount.
 With the entire material and information flow transparent to
  everyone, problems surface earlier and easier, and solutions
  and improvements are easier to discover and implement.

                                                    John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                    System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                    jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                12
Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies
                         One-Piece Flow

 Once we have a “customer pull”, we want simply to flow
  everything one piece at a time.
 One-piece flow gets material from point A to point B with the
  shortest lead time and least amount of work-in-process in
  between.
 True one-piece flow would have no waiting time, no
  queuing, and no batches.




                                                   John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                   System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                   jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                13
Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies
                           One-Piece Flow

 Ideally all operations would be one-piece flow, but technology
  sometimes won’t allow this.
 But it is always the goal and it is the philosophy.
 If we focus on how to reduce lead time, everything else will
  come along.
 The path to reducing lead time is one-piece flow.




                                                    John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                    System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                    jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                14
Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies
                               Takt Time

 Takt time is the tool to link production to the customer by
  matching the pace of production to the pace of actual final
  sales. Think musical meter and metronome.
 If blue Celicas are selling at a rate of one every half hour, we
  should build one every half hour. And if half of those are air-
  conditioned, then every other one on the line should have air.
 You calculate actual tact time for each product and part. That
  determines the number of seconds you need in each actual
  process in the entire production chain.
 Takt times are determined in the heijunka plan, once a month.
                                                    John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                    System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                    jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                15
Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies
                           Takt Time

 Determining the takt time is usually where to begin in
  establishing a JIT system.
 How many “supplier” parts are required by “customers”?
 How can we (then) create a process that can fulfill that
  need with a minimum of waste and in the shortest lead
  time?
 Minimum waste and shortest lead time should lead to
  the same solution.




                                                John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                16
Lesson Four: Begin From Need

 Producing according to takt time puts customer needs out in
  front of everyone all the time.
 People need to understand clearly the reasons for changing the
  way they do things.
 Ohno believed that without a crisis no company would be
  capable of successfully making the shift to lean
 At Toyota all proposals are challenged to demonstrate the need.
 “Never tell your staff what to do. Whenever you do that, you
  take the responsibility away from them.”

                                                  John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                  System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                  jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                17
Lesson Four: Begin From Need

 Lay out a problem. Ask for an analysis or a proposal, but
  always stop short of saying “Do this.”
 The employee develops the solution (also should be finding the
  problem, too).
 The manager is the “judge and jury” while the employee has the
  “burden of proof” to justify the solution proposal.
 Say “No” a lot – three times, five times, ten times if necessary.
 “Never tell your staff what to do. Whenever you do that, you
  take the responsibility away from them.”

                                                    John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                    System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                    jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                18
Lesson Four: Begin From Need
                Policy Management: As Revolutionary as TPS

 This is the famous “bottom-up decision making.” It isn’t decision
     making at all! It is solution proposal making!
 “Bottom- up” is not some kind of enlightened form of democratic
  self-management where the worker decides what to do.
 But nobody is telling anyone else what to do. It is a beautiful
  answer to the control-flexibility dilemma in all organizations.
 The company gets basic adherence to corporate direction, and
  the workers are free to explore best possible real solutions to
  problems they themselves know best.

                                                       John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                       System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                       jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                19
Lesson Four: Begin From Need
             Policy Management: As Revolutionary as TPS

 This is policy management – a management system or decision
  making process that is probably as revolutionary as TPS itself.
 It is a system that is flexible and changes continuously, yet does
  not accept change lightly or without strong justification.
 Policy deployment on a yearly basis and PDCA (plan, do, check,
  action) on a daily basis.
 Policy management is not policy deployment (a prioritization
  process in which the objectives are “deployed” into the
  organization), but it should evolve from policy deployment.

                                                    John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                    System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                    jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                20
Lesson Five: Ask the 5 Whys, Not the 5 Whos
 “The ability to focus on solving problems without pointing fingers
  and looking to place the blame on someone.”
                                 (Takeaway of NUMMI Americans at Toyota City)

 “No problem” sounds-out like “Monday night” in Japanese.
 “No problem” is a problem because there are always issues that
  require some kind of “countermeasusure”; or at least there are
  always better ways to accomplish a given task. Always.
 Standardized work, kaizen, and placing as much responsibility
  as possible at as “low” a level as possible. This is what makes it
  possible for a Toyota worksite to essentially run itself.
                                                    John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                    System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                    jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                21
Lesson Five: Ask the 5 Whys, Not the 5 Whos
                   Standardized Work Alters Roles

 With standardized work, best practice is assured and becomes
  the baseline for further improvement, or kaizen.
 No deviation from current standards is allowed, but if someone
  has a better idea, that idea is easily proposed, approved, and
  implemented (and rewarded), and becomes the new standard.
 Workers give a suggestion every 3 days or so. Also, takt time
  changes every month (heijunka plan), and the standardized
  work has to match the takt times. Change is good.
 Workers continually redesign their jobs; workers are engineers;
  engineers are managers; and managers are psychologists.
                                                   John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                   System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                   jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                22
Lesson Six: Don’t Confuse T’sPS with the TPS
 However unrealistic the implementation of TPS may be in a
  particular instance, the ideals of TPS are still the ideals. “You
  maybe can’t do one-piece flow out of stamping…yet.”
 Even 13 years after the birth of the joint GM-Toyota venture
  NUMMI (New United Motors Manufacturing, Inc.) in Fremont,
  CA, employees were wholly supportive…but…
 NUMMI had high quality Corollas and trucks, and a totally new
  human resources system and a sense of membership…
 “What is the nature of our company-employee relationship?
 Commitment from management and trust from the employees.
                                                    John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                    System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                    jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                23
Lesson Seven: Employee Motivation
 Employee motivation comes from (management) assuring
  membership (to the employee) in the organization, whatever the
  price tag.
 Toyota, even in Japan, does not guarantee lifetime employment.
 What an employer can do is make lay-offs (clearly) a last resort.
 Then real trust can develop between the company and
  employees, along with the motivation for employees to accept
  responsibility and ownership.
 “Never tell your staff what to do. Whenever you do that, you
  take the responsibility away from them.”
                                                   John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                   System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                   jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                24
TPS Debate
 TPS Authority 1: “We’ll focus almost entirely on the plant floor,
  just demonstrating how to implement. As companies implement
  and begin to understand, they can do their own training.”
 TPS Authority 2: “But Americans need a rulebook. They don’t
  like to play a game when they don’t know the rules. So we have
  to give them the rules.”
 TPS Authority 1: “But there is no rulebook for TPS. If there is,
  please give it to me; I want it, too. If you try to simplify it and
  carve it in stone, it will lose its essence. All we can do is teach
  guidelines and principles and demonstrate how to use the tools.”

                                                    John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                    System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                    jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                25
Lesson Seven: Employee Motivation
                                    Kaizen Workshop

 The kaizen workshop is a way to bring TPS to the shop floor.
 These are events of intensive team involvement for 4-5 days.
         Day 1 – training and explanation of the kaizen goals (not just “kaizen for
          kaizen’s sake,” which becomes “change for change’s sake”).
         Day 2 – developing a kaizen plan from a given detailed current state analysis.
         Day 3 – implementing the plan (moving equipment, changing operator
          movement, revising material and information flow).
         Day 4 – fix what didn’t work from Day 3.
         Day 5 – reporting to management and have confirmation of follow-up items.
 What’s good about kaizen workshops is their action focus. It’s
  not so good if they’re not used as a strategic part of a larger plan
  to get from here to there, and knowing where there is.
                                                             John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                             System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                             jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                26
Lean Off the Plant Floor
 The thinking of TPS (or lean) applies to any function. It works
  because it is a way of thinking; a whole systems philosophy.
 Lean thinking gives a broad perspective on providing goods and
  services that goes beyond the bottom line and the stodgy
  principles of mass-producing capitalism.
 It is a human system – customer focused, customer driven – in
  which employees are also customers.
 Lean asks: “What adds value for my customer?” and reveals a
  transparency that allows any work situation to be easily
  understood at a glance, and always open for improvement.

                                                   John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                   System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                   jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                27
Lesson Eight: There Are No Experts
 Yes, we’ve improved quality, but at what cost? How much better
  is our in-plant, first-time-through performance?
 We’ve moved inventories around, but have we scrapped batch
  and queue for flow? Have we trashed our complex push
  scheduling systems for customer demand-based pull?
 Are we focusing on shortening lead times through eliminating
  waste and its sources?
 Have we built human resource systems that make people
  integral members of the enterprise?
 Have we adopted the philosophy and the way of thinking?
                                                  John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production
                                                  System to the United States: A Personal Perspective”


July 12                  jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                28
Veritas




July 12   jpgillis@umd.umich.edu   29
Thank You!




July 12   jpgillis@umd.umich.edu   30
 Managing to Learn: Using the A3 Management Process
     Managing to Learn by Toyota veteran John Shook, reveals the thinking underlying the vital A3 management process
     at the heart of lean management and lean leadership. Constructed as a dialogue between a manager and his boss,
     the book explains how A3 thinking helps managers and executives identify, frame, and then act on problems and
     challenges. Shook calls this approach, which is captured in the simple structure of an A3 report, the key to Toyota's
     entire system of developing talent and continually deepening its knowledge and capabilities. The A3 Report is a
     Toyota-pioneered practice of getting the problem, the analysis, the corrective actions, and the action plan down on a
     single sheet of large (A3) paper, often with the use of graphics. A3 paper is the international term for a large sheet of
     paper, roughly equivalent to the 11-by-17-inch U.S. sheet. The widespread adoption of the A3 process standardizes
     a methodology for innovating, planning, problem-solving, and building foundational structures for sharing a broader
     and deeper form of thinking that produces organizational learning deeply rooted in the work itself, says Shook.
     Management expert James Womack predicts Managing to Learn will have a deep impact on the way lean companies
     manage people. He believes readers will learn an underlying way of thinking that reframes all activities as learning
     activities at every level of the organization, whether it's standardized work and kaizen at the individual level, system
     kaizen at the managerial level, or fundamental strategic decisions at the corporate level. A unique layout puts the
     thoughts of a lean manager struggling to apply the A3 process to a key project on one side of the page and the
     probing questions of the boss who is coaching him through the process on the other side. As a result, readers learn
     how to write a powerful A3 - while learning why the technique is at the core of lean management and lean leadership.


    Paperback: 138 pages
    Publisher: Lean Enterprise Institute, Inc.; 1 edition (January 2008)




July 12                                          jpgillis@umd.umich.edu                                                    31

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Becoming lean john shook lean manufacturing

  • 1. Toyota Production System “Lean Manufacturing” John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” Included as Chapter 2 of: Becoming Lean: Inside Stories of U. S. Manufacturers Jeffrey K. Liker, Editor (Portland, OR: Productivity Press, 1998) July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 1
  • 2. Underlying Assumptions  The concepts mass production and lean production reflect ways of thinking about production – the assumptions that underlie how people and institutions formulate solutions to the problems of organizing people, equipment, material, and capital to create and deliver products for customers.  Mass and lean are paradigms that reflect and inform the thinking about production within particular cultures and eras. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 2
  • 3. Underlying Assumptions  Lean manufacturing includes a set of techniques that comprise a system that derives from a philosophy.  The tremendous benefits promised by the lean paradigm can be actualized only if we understand and implement accordingly.  15 years after John Shook began his training in Japan, he was still struggling alongside much of U. S. Industry to understand what it was that he had been trained in and had also trained. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 3
  • 4. Lesson One: Learn by Doing  Making a car: you stamp it, paint it, stuff it, and ship it. The process is deceptively simple. (Jim Womack)  Taiichi Ohno had a small and diverse market in Japan, and he (and Nissan) had to meet all of that diversity, because the government closed the market (for 25 years, with U.S. approval)  Originally Toyota copied Detroit, but Ohno had none of the economies of scale. In 1950 he was producing 1,000 vehicles a month – what a Ford assembly line was producing in a day. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 4
  • 5. Lesson Two: Economies of Scale  You can attain greater overall system efficiency through concerted efforts to eliminate waste thoroughly (rather than through economies of scale).  You can survive and thrive in low growth.  The system from the early 1970’s is little changed today. The two most basic concepts are simple. One is to make what customers want when they want it, nothing more and nothing less. The other is to treat people with respect. This with 15,000 parts per car and 5,000 people producing a quality car a minute. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 5
  • 6. Lesson Two: Economies of Scale The Two Pillars: Jidoka and Just-in-time  Jidoka means – “autonomation” – built-in quality – the quality principle – respect for humans system – automation with a human touch (a coined term, even in Japan).  Basically jidoka means building in quality and designing operations and equipment so that people are not tied to machines but are free to perform value-added work that is appropriate for humans. (If people are stuck watching machines, who is working for whom?) John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 6
  • 7. Lesson Two: Economies of Scale The Two Pillars: Jidoka and Just-in-time  Toyota defines just-in-time (JIT) as “the right part at the right time in the right amount” (“at the right place”).  JIT is one of the most well-known and least understood buzzwords of modern manufacturing.  Moving inventories around without reducing them or shortening lead times is not JIT. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 7
  • 8. Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies Easier Said Than Done  Transferring technologies around the world is easier said than done. JIT, more than any other of the system mechanics, visibly distinguishes TPS from conventional manufacturing.  JIT is a solution to the nightmare of trying to coordinate all of the parts and materials that go into an automobile.  Often, we fight complexity with complexity. JIT, however, instructs us to learn to respond quickly and to roll with the chaos. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 8
  • 9. Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies Easier Said Than Done  If you an understand the following two assumptions, you can understand JIT:  Production plans always change.  Production will never go according to plan, anyway.  Toyota’s JIT is a system unto itself comprised of pull system, one-piece flow, and takt time, all of which are integrated with Toyota’s heijunka method of production scheduling.  The rest of JIT just will not work well without heijunka. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 9
  • 10. Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies Heijunka  Heijunka is a leveling of production (volume and variety).  Production by heijunka:  Creates a steady demand of resources,  Shortens the lead time of individual product variation,  Enables the leveling of the production process.  Without heijunka, muda (waste) will build up increasingly from beginning to end.  Toyota establishes heijunka production planning on a monthly basis, but does not lock in the actual production sequence. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 10
  • 11. Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies Pull System: The Kanban System  “Production plans will always change; production will never go according to plan, anyway.”  Usually we deal with the complexities of production scheduling with equally complex forecasting and scheduling systems.  In TPS, internal “customers” pull orders from internal “suppliers” when they need it based on “sales” to their internal “customers”.  TPS fights complexity with simplicity – no forecasting schedules for every process. No continuous reforecasting. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 11
  • 12. Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies Pull System: The Kanban System  Kanban is the Japanese word for “sign”. Kanban cards travel with the parts and include part number, quantity, location, etc. Usually small containers of a predetermined number of parts.  If everyone follows the handful of clear rules for proper usage, the kanban system is a foolproof way of making the right part at the right time in the right amount.  With the entire material and information flow transparent to everyone, problems surface earlier and easier, and solutions and improvements are easier to discover and implement. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 12
  • 13. Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies One-Piece Flow  Once we have a “customer pull”, we want simply to flow everything one piece at a time.  One-piece flow gets material from point A to point B with the shortest lead time and least amount of work-in-process in between.  True one-piece flow would have no waiting time, no queuing, and no batches. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 13
  • 14. Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies One-Piece Flow  Ideally all operations would be one-piece flow, but technology sometimes won’t allow this.  But it is always the goal and it is the philosophy.  If we focus on how to reduce lead time, everything else will come along.  The path to reducing lead time is one-piece flow. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 14
  • 15. Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies Takt Time  Takt time is the tool to link production to the customer by matching the pace of production to the pace of actual final sales. Think musical meter and metronome.  If blue Celicas are selling at a rate of one every half hour, we should build one every half hour. And if half of those are air- conditioned, then every other one on the line should have air.  You calculate actual tact time for each product and part. That determines the number of seconds you need in each actual process in the entire production chain.  Takt times are determined in the heijunka plan, once a month. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 15
  • 16. Lesson Three: Transferring Technologies Takt Time  Determining the takt time is usually where to begin in establishing a JIT system.  How many “supplier” parts are required by “customers”?  How can we (then) create a process that can fulfill that need with a minimum of waste and in the shortest lead time?  Minimum waste and shortest lead time should lead to the same solution. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 16
  • 17. Lesson Four: Begin From Need  Producing according to takt time puts customer needs out in front of everyone all the time.  People need to understand clearly the reasons for changing the way they do things.  Ohno believed that without a crisis no company would be capable of successfully making the shift to lean  At Toyota all proposals are challenged to demonstrate the need.  “Never tell your staff what to do. Whenever you do that, you take the responsibility away from them.” John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 17
  • 18. Lesson Four: Begin From Need  Lay out a problem. Ask for an analysis or a proposal, but always stop short of saying “Do this.”  The employee develops the solution (also should be finding the problem, too).  The manager is the “judge and jury” while the employee has the “burden of proof” to justify the solution proposal.  Say “No” a lot – three times, five times, ten times if necessary.  “Never tell your staff what to do. Whenever you do that, you take the responsibility away from them.” John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 18
  • 19. Lesson Four: Begin From Need Policy Management: As Revolutionary as TPS  This is the famous “bottom-up decision making.” It isn’t decision making at all! It is solution proposal making!  “Bottom- up” is not some kind of enlightened form of democratic self-management where the worker decides what to do.  But nobody is telling anyone else what to do. It is a beautiful answer to the control-flexibility dilemma in all organizations.  The company gets basic adherence to corporate direction, and the workers are free to explore best possible real solutions to problems they themselves know best. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 19
  • 20. Lesson Four: Begin From Need Policy Management: As Revolutionary as TPS  This is policy management – a management system or decision making process that is probably as revolutionary as TPS itself.  It is a system that is flexible and changes continuously, yet does not accept change lightly or without strong justification.  Policy deployment on a yearly basis and PDCA (plan, do, check, action) on a daily basis.  Policy management is not policy deployment (a prioritization process in which the objectives are “deployed” into the organization), but it should evolve from policy deployment. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 20
  • 21. Lesson Five: Ask the 5 Whys, Not the 5 Whos  “The ability to focus on solving problems without pointing fingers and looking to place the blame on someone.” (Takeaway of NUMMI Americans at Toyota City)  “No problem” sounds-out like “Monday night” in Japanese.  “No problem” is a problem because there are always issues that require some kind of “countermeasusure”; or at least there are always better ways to accomplish a given task. Always.  Standardized work, kaizen, and placing as much responsibility as possible at as “low” a level as possible. This is what makes it possible for a Toyota worksite to essentially run itself. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 21
  • 22. Lesson Five: Ask the 5 Whys, Not the 5 Whos Standardized Work Alters Roles  With standardized work, best practice is assured and becomes the baseline for further improvement, or kaizen.  No deviation from current standards is allowed, but if someone has a better idea, that idea is easily proposed, approved, and implemented (and rewarded), and becomes the new standard.  Workers give a suggestion every 3 days or so. Also, takt time changes every month (heijunka plan), and the standardized work has to match the takt times. Change is good.  Workers continually redesign their jobs; workers are engineers; engineers are managers; and managers are psychologists. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 22
  • 23. Lesson Six: Don’t Confuse T’sPS with the TPS  However unrealistic the implementation of TPS may be in a particular instance, the ideals of TPS are still the ideals. “You maybe can’t do one-piece flow out of stamping…yet.”  Even 13 years after the birth of the joint GM-Toyota venture NUMMI (New United Motors Manufacturing, Inc.) in Fremont, CA, employees were wholly supportive…but…  NUMMI had high quality Corollas and trucks, and a totally new human resources system and a sense of membership…  “What is the nature of our company-employee relationship?  Commitment from management and trust from the employees. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 23
  • 24. Lesson Seven: Employee Motivation  Employee motivation comes from (management) assuring membership (to the employee) in the organization, whatever the price tag.  Toyota, even in Japan, does not guarantee lifetime employment.  What an employer can do is make lay-offs (clearly) a last resort.  Then real trust can develop between the company and employees, along with the motivation for employees to accept responsibility and ownership.  “Never tell your staff what to do. Whenever you do that, you take the responsibility away from them.” John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 24
  • 25. TPS Debate  TPS Authority 1: “We’ll focus almost entirely on the plant floor, just demonstrating how to implement. As companies implement and begin to understand, they can do their own training.”  TPS Authority 2: “But Americans need a rulebook. They don’t like to play a game when they don’t know the rules. So we have to give them the rules.”  TPS Authority 1: “But there is no rulebook for TPS. If there is, please give it to me; I want it, too. If you try to simplify it and carve it in stone, it will lose its essence. All we can do is teach guidelines and principles and demonstrate how to use the tools.” John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 25
  • 26. Lesson Seven: Employee Motivation Kaizen Workshop  The kaizen workshop is a way to bring TPS to the shop floor.  These are events of intensive team involvement for 4-5 days.  Day 1 – training and explanation of the kaizen goals (not just “kaizen for kaizen’s sake,” which becomes “change for change’s sake”).  Day 2 – developing a kaizen plan from a given detailed current state analysis.  Day 3 – implementing the plan (moving equipment, changing operator movement, revising material and information flow).  Day 4 – fix what didn’t work from Day 3.  Day 5 – reporting to management and have confirmation of follow-up items.  What’s good about kaizen workshops is their action focus. It’s not so good if they’re not used as a strategic part of a larger plan to get from here to there, and knowing where there is. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 26
  • 27. Lean Off the Plant Floor  The thinking of TPS (or lean) applies to any function. It works because it is a way of thinking; a whole systems philosophy.  Lean thinking gives a broad perspective on providing goods and services that goes beyond the bottom line and the stodgy principles of mass-producing capitalism.  It is a human system – customer focused, customer driven – in which employees are also customers.  Lean asks: “What adds value for my customer?” and reveals a transparency that allows any work situation to be easily understood at a glance, and always open for improvement. John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 27
  • 28. Lesson Eight: There Are No Experts  Yes, we’ve improved quality, but at what cost? How much better is our in-plant, first-time-through performance?  We’ve moved inventories around, but have we scrapped batch and queue for flow? Have we trashed our complex push scheduling systems for customer demand-based pull?  Are we focusing on shortening lead times through eliminating waste and its sources?  Have we built human resource systems that make people integral members of the enterprise?  Have we adopted the philosophy and the way of thinking? John Y. Shook. “Bringing the Toyota Production System to the United States: A Personal Perspective” July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 28
  • 29. Veritas July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 29
  • 30. Thank You! July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 30
  • 31.  Managing to Learn: Using the A3 Management Process Managing to Learn by Toyota veteran John Shook, reveals the thinking underlying the vital A3 management process at the heart of lean management and lean leadership. Constructed as a dialogue between a manager and his boss, the book explains how A3 thinking helps managers and executives identify, frame, and then act on problems and challenges. Shook calls this approach, which is captured in the simple structure of an A3 report, the key to Toyota's entire system of developing talent and continually deepening its knowledge and capabilities. The A3 Report is a Toyota-pioneered practice of getting the problem, the analysis, the corrective actions, and the action plan down on a single sheet of large (A3) paper, often with the use of graphics. A3 paper is the international term for a large sheet of paper, roughly equivalent to the 11-by-17-inch U.S. sheet. The widespread adoption of the A3 process standardizes a methodology for innovating, planning, problem-solving, and building foundational structures for sharing a broader and deeper form of thinking that produces organizational learning deeply rooted in the work itself, says Shook. Management expert James Womack predicts Managing to Learn will have a deep impact on the way lean companies manage people. He believes readers will learn an underlying way of thinking that reframes all activities as learning activities at every level of the organization, whether it's standardized work and kaizen at the individual level, system kaizen at the managerial level, or fundamental strategic decisions at the corporate level. A unique layout puts the thoughts of a lean manager struggling to apply the A3 process to a key project on one side of the page and the probing questions of the boss who is coaching him through the process on the other side. As a result, readers learn how to write a powerful A3 - while learning why the technique is at the core of lean management and lean leadership.  Paperback: 138 pages  Publisher: Lean Enterprise Institute, Inc.; 1 edition (January 2008) July 12 jpgillis@umd.umich.edu 31

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