BSides Seattle 2024 - Stopping Ethan Hunt From Taking Your Data.pptx
5 Steps to implementing Lean
1. | | 1
by Julian Kalac, P.Eng
Lean Six Sigma Master Black Belt
2. “Lean” is a Japanese methodology that focuses on
producing high quality products faster, better and at
lowest cost.
Lean is about eliminating waste (scrap, rework) and
doing things right the 1st time.
Lean is NOT ELIMINATING JOBS, it’s about creating jobs
by becoming more productive!
It’s NOT about work harder, but rather smarter”
3. Single Piece Flow Just-In-Time Eliminate Waste
•Process parts one-at-a-
time or in small lots
instead of in large
batches or economies of
scale
•Quick changeovers
•Balanced and
continuous flows instead
of stop and start
processing
•Have just the right
amount of inventory you
need, when you need it,
where you need it
•Optimize the amount
of inventory required
•Ensure that your
resources are ready to
support the flow
•Never knowingly pass
on a defect
•Improve the capability
of your processes
•Fix failure modes
when they occur
•Determine and resolve
the deeper root causes
= =
The Toyota Production System
“Classic Lean”
Strength
“Supply Chain
Management” Strength
“Classic Six
Sigma” Strength
4. | | 4
Customers demand shorter lead times,
improved quality & reduced prices
Increase through-put and quality and reduce
time wasted and frustration by working on non-
value add activities.
Gain new business
5. | | 5
INSANITY “Doing the
same thing over and
over again and expecting
different results”
Albert Einstein
6. | | 6 6
How people feel
Keep momentum
moving
MOST CRITICAL
TIME IN CHANGES
After results from
changes are seen
7. The systematic elimination of waste and re-alignment of resources to
deliver value to the customer faster, better, & more consistently
Lean also is:
◦ Pursuit of excellence
◦ Continuous Improvement of performance and quality
◦ .
◦ Increasing inventory “turns” and throughput
◦ Simplifying and redefining processes
◦ Measuring & monitoring processes
◦ Empowering the workforce (80%)
Leading to Leading to
Eliminate
Waste
Reduced Cycle
Times
Increased
Capacity
Focus: Eliminate waste, non-value add steps, process
constraints and bottle necks that cause problems in work
8. | | 8
1. Define Customer requirement—TAKT TIME (demand/time)
2. Map out the Current process (Value Stream Map) and identify
Value-Add vs Non-Value-Add activity
3. Get the stream to “flow” by Reducing/Eliminating the 7+1 Sins
Waste, i.e. material handling, setup time, downtime, walking
4. Line balance the Cycle Times & implement internal customer
“PULL” system, (continuous flow)
5. Manage the Bottleneck process by implementing Flexible Work
Cells with Cross Functionally trained operators who help do
each others job and to keep the “flow going”
9. Takt Time
◦ Drum beat of production
◦ Based on actual internal or external
demand
Available production time
customer demand
Takt Time =
10. | | 10
1. Producing Defects (SCRAP)
2. Reworking parts due to process problems
3. OVER-TIME to make up lost time (In-efficiencies)
4. Time Waiting i.e. Set-Up/Change-Over time, delivery
of supplier materials
5. Wasting time walking around and looking for tools,
material, people,
6. Moving parts from one area to another & staging
them into (WIP)
7. Carrying excess Inventories of parts more than
needed ($$ tied up)
11. | | 11
Not utilizing operators to their full potential
Over relying on a select few while others are
Inadequately trained
Operators are unable to rotate and help each
other out to balanance the work-load
High overtime increasing pressure and stress
12. Elements of Lead Time
◦ Lead Time = total process time from
initiation to design to build to ship to
payment
◦ Batch & Queue – Accumulate orders, then
wait to be processed
◦ Setup time – prepare to process next job
◦ Run time – processing time per unit
Often less than 1% of cycle time
Only value added step of Lead time
13. Mistake proofing
◦ Eliminate/minimize chance for human error
◦ Poka yoke =
to avoid (yokeru) inadvertent errors (poka)
◦ Detection Poka yoke
Notifies of imminent process failure but requires
operator interaction to avoid mistakes
◦ Prevention Poka Yoke
Stops the process before failures occur
Does not allow defects to pass through the process
14. Pull Systems
Production scheduling method used to link downstream
activities to upstream activities
Work begins based upon a demand signal (kanban) from a
downstream customer, either internal or external
Avoids overproduction, work backlog, and disconnects within a
process
Nothing is produced until the downstream customer signals a
need
15. Cycle Time is the actual production rate – It is the time
between two successive finished items coming out of your
production cell.
Cycle Time is dictated by the slowest (longest) operation
in the cell.
40
min
20
min
25
min
15
min
30
min
1
54
3
2
•What operation controls the
cycle?
•What is the Critical Path?
•How can you relieve or shift the
bottleneck?
16. | | 16
High-Level Process Map
Suppliers, Departments,
Customers
Mid-Level Process Map
Specific Area ex Production
Detail-Level Process Map
Specific process/operation
(most commonly used)
Stop
Start
Stop
Start
Start
Stop
Stop
18. | | 18
15 coils/shift 8 20 26 39 31 10 20
4
13
19
20 8 40 20 20 20
20 20 20 20
Start Loop coils
180 deg
twist & prep
Skin Electric
Press
Coil form
Model
check
M/C tapePre-tape
Final Tape
Apply
Mylar
Micalast
Load
Micalastic
Impregnation
Final
Press &
Cure
Remove
Mylar
Final
gauge
ECP
Tape
ECP
oven
cure
Strand &
Final testPack &
Ship
Stop
Rotation schedule:
Based on the cycle times above every 2Hrs, Rotate Final Taping operators
with operators from “Skinning”, Electric Pressing. Coil forming & Model-
checking.
This will increase productivity from 28 Coils/Day to 40 Coils/Day and
ensure max exposure to F/T not more then 2hrs/day.
Needed: Cross-functional training and ~ 1 week
learning curve to achieve 85% operator efficiency
19. Increased Coil Productivity by 30% from 28 to 40
Coils/day = $420K/Year
Increased direct labour utilization by 26%
=$240K/Year
Reduced in-process scrap from 20% to under 4%
OEE improvement of 24% (from 62% to 84%)
Flexible work Cells & cross functionally trained
workers able to help manage bottleneck efficiently
MOL order on Final Tape exposure complied with
Total Operational Savings = $ 800K
20. Workers can do each others work, help out when
someone is sick, on holidays, quit
Workers help improve bottleneck operations by
helping out each other
Variety in work making it more full-filling
Training new workers
| | 20
23. | | 23
Setup Time
◦ Starts when last piece of previous job is complete; ends when
first good piece of next job is complete
Internal set-up: While machine is shut-down
◦ Strive to minimize this as process is not producing parts
External set-up: While machine is working
◦ Prepare for set-up, get all tools/parts needed ready and
beside the press before starting set-up
24. Level 1 (Workstation Achievements)
◦ Data and reports (hard & soft) are sorted into piles,
sections, drawers and multiple file locations: Cluttered
Level 2 (Workstation Achievements)
◦ Data & reports are sorted into files, binders and single
locations
◦ Metrics, basic labelling, some visual controls
◦ Appearance is cleaner and more organized
Level 3 (Workstation Achievements)
◦ All files, data and reports are organize and labelled
◦ Metrics, information and 5S maps are available and
posted
◦ Maintenance of 5S activities, audits of 5S performance
Level 4 (Work Group Achievements)
◦ Common standards for metrics, filing, labelling, file
naming
◦ Simple, clear and effective Visual Controls & Driver
Measure Boards
◦ Maintenance of Work Group 5S activities, audits of 5S
performance
Level 5 (Site and Business Unit (BU) Achievements)
◦ Common standards for metrics, filing, labelling, file
naming
◦ Simple, clear and effective Visual Controls
◦ Maintenance of 5S activities, 5S audits
Can usually find
things
Can find things in
a reasonable
amount of time
Can find any file
or doc. In 30
seconds
Close colleagues
can find any file
or doc. In 30
seconds
Any colleague
can find any file
or doc. In 30
seconds