Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

50
Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive

Transcript of Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Page 1: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Improving Your Bottom Line

Making Kentucky manufacturers more

competitive

Page 2: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Why Manufacturing?

13% of the nation’s total Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

Nearly 14.3 million employees Average annual wage of $45,916 Conducts two-thirds of all private sector R&D Every $1 in manufactured goods generates an

additional $1.43 worth of economic activity

Page 3: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Competitiveness Challenges

Rapidly advancing technology Customer demands – faster, better, cheaper Offshore competition from low wage countries

– China’s average wages are: 25% of Mexico’s 10% of Hong Kong & Taiwan’s 3% of U.S.’

Page 4: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

How Will Firms Compete?

It’s all about

... Innovation

…Productivity

…Speed

Page 5: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

2 Key Tools for Competitiveness

Lean Manufacturing / Lean Office

Six Sigma

Page 6: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

KMAC

Mission: Increase the competitiveness of Kentucky manufacturers

Private, not-for-profit corporation Statewide operations Industry-driven Board of Directors Kentucky affiliate of the national Manufacturing

Extension Partnership (MEP) program

Page 7: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Productivity Improvement

Lean Manufacturing / Lean for the Office Facilities Planning & Layout Process Improvement Problem Solving Training Employee Development Team Building & Team Leader Development

Page 8: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Quality Improvement

Quality Systems ISO and QS/TS Standards Six Sigma Statistical Process Control Poka-Yoke / Error Proofing

Page 9: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Product Improvement

New Product Development– Accelerate to Market for Small & Medium Enterprises

(ATOM-SME)

Value Engineering / Design for Manufacturability

Page 10: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Business Improvement

Strategic Planning Meeting Facilitation Performance Measurement Financial Planning

Page 11: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Benefits

Expertise– Staff of seasoned manufacturing professionals

Results– Proven track record will all types of industry– A national leader among MEP Centers for delivering

quantifiable, bottom-line impacts to clients

Value– Clients realize significant returns on their investments in

KMAC services

Page 12: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

FY06 Client-Reported Results

Increased Sales: $21 Million

Retained Sales: $12 Million Annual Cost

Savings: $4.8 Million

New Investment: $27 Million

Page 13: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Lean Manufacturing Lean Office

Page 14: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

What is Lean?

A systematic approach to identifying and eliminating

waste (non-value added activities) through

continuous improvement by flowing the product at

the pull of the customer.

Page 15: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Defining Value-Added Activities

VALUE ADDED:Increases the market form or function of the product or service

NON-VALUE ADDED:Does not add market form or function or is not necessary

ESSENTIAL NON-VALUE ADDED:Cannot be eliminated completely

Page 16: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Lean = Eliminating the Wastes

Value Added

Typically 95% of all lead time is non-value added

• Overproduction• Waiting• Transportation• Non-Value Added

Processing• Excess Inventory• Defects• Excess Motion• Underutilized People

Non-Value Added

Page 17: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Lean Tools

Quick Changeover

Standardized Work Batch Reduction Teams

Quality at Source

5S System Visual Plant Layout

POUS

Cellular/FlowPull/Kanban TPM

ValueStreamMapping

Continuous Improvement

Page 18: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Value Stream Mapping

Visually document current material & information flow– Identify non value-added activities– Quantify non value-added lead time

Create an ideal future state– Eliminate wastes & simplify processes

Results in development of a Lean Implementation Action Plan

– Prioritized improvement projects– Determines Lean Tools to be applied

Page 19: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

5S System

Designed to improve workplace organization and standardization

Page 20: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Visual Workplace

Simple signals providing an immediate understanding of a situation or condition

– Kanban cards– Color-coded dies, tools, pallets

Page 21: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Plant Layout

Raw StockQC Rec Ship

Shear

Screw Machin

e

QCStamp

AssemblyBrak

eMill

Lathe

Weld FinishGrind Parts Stock

Drill

Page 22: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Standardized Work

Tasks organized in the best known sequence Most effective combination of:

– People– Materials– Methods– Machines

Page 23: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Batch Reduction

The best batch size is:

ONE PIECE FLOW

Make One . . . Move One!

Page 24: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Teams

More flexible Greater productivity & use

of resources Collaborative & cross-

functional More creative & innovative

Page 25: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Quality at the Source

Quality built Operators inspect

– Necessary equipment– Established standards– Process documentation

Page 26: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Point of Use Storage

Materials are stored where used

– Simplifies physical inventory tracking, storage, and handling

Page 27: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Quick Changeover

Changing over a process to produce a different product in the most efficient manner

Page 28: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Pull/Kanban

Push System– Production based on

forecasts or schedules

Pull/Kanban System– Production based on

actual demand using Kanbans to signal replenishment

Page 29: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Cellular Flow

Linking of manual and machine operations into the most efficient combination of resources

– Flexible layout– Simplify flows– Minimize materials handling– Make use of people

Page 30: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Total Productive Maintenance

Systematic approach to the elimination of equipment downtime as a waste factor

Designed to maximize the productivity of equipment for Its entire life

Page 31: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Going Lean

Training in Lean tools Using Lean tools in improvement events

– Kaizen Events Organizational / Cultural changes

– Move toward team environment– Defined problem-solving approach– Performance metrics that support Lean

Page 32: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Improvements Achieved with Lean

Lead Time Reduction

0% 25% 50% 75% 100%

Productivity Increase

WIP Reduction

Quality Improvement

Space Utilization

Page 33: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Six Sigma

Page 34: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Definition of Six Sigma

Methodology

for disciplined

quality improvement

Page 35: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

History of Six Sigma

Originated at Motorola in the early 1980s Process modified by others Implemented by IBM & Allied Signal Adopted by General Electric in 1995

– Broadly deployed– By 1998, GE claimed $750 million in net benefits

Page 36: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Goal of Six Sigma

Optimize process capability by identifying and minimizing variation

Virtual elimination of all defects– No more than 3.4 defects per million opportunities (DPMO)– 99.9996% acceptable

Page 37: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Cost of Poor Quality

Scrap/Rework– Materials, labor costs, disposition

costs

Warranty Costs– Customer credits, return/restocking

costs, penalties

Lost Sales– Lost revenues, cost of gaining new

customers

Page 38: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Competitive Performance

Sigma Level Cost of Poor Quality Performance

2 >40% of sales Non-competitive

3 26% - 40% of sales

4 16% - 25% of sales Average

5 1% - 15% of sales

6 < 1% of sales World Class

Page 39: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Benefits of Improved Quality

Bottom-line cost savings Greater customer satisfaction Increase in throughput Reduction in waste and rework Improvement in process capability

Page 40: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Six Sigma Core Philosophies

Values defect-prevention over defect-detection Emphasizes reducing variation in processes

– Tackles root causes of poor performance

Is customer-focused by driving improvement in areas most important to your customers

Page 41: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Six Sigma Characteristics

Defined, problem-solving approach Data-driven Project-based Commitment and support from the top level

Page 42: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Problem-Solving Approach

Uses a defined approach (DMAIC)

– Define the project

– Measure the baseline process capability

– Analyze when, where and how often defects occur

– Improve process capability to reach a Six Sigma level

– Control the process to maintain the gain

Page 43: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Data-Driven

Based on data rather than perception

Uses statistical tools during the DMAIC process

Calls for training in “statistical thinking” for many; advanced statistics and project management for some

Page 44: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Project-Based

Project selection is critical

– Should advance organization’s strategic initiatives

– Have impact on a Critical to Quality (CTQ) characteristic

– Should have bottom-line financial impact

– Begin and end with performance measure

Page 45: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Top Level Leadership

Requires leadership, commitment and active support from top level management

Leaders should use Six Sigma to drive strategic improvement

– Six Sigma projects should support strategic goals

Page 46: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Six Sigma – The Players

The Champion Black Belt Green Belt Quality Process

Analyst

Page 47: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

KMAC’s Approach to Six Sigma

Developed specifically for small- and mid-sized manufacturers

– Affordable

– Flexible

– Focuses on implementation of Six Sigma not just training

– Emphasizes bottom-line results

Page 48: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Two Part Approach

On-Site Deployment Planning & Mentoring

– Helps the company gain the most benefit from implementing Six Sigma

Online Six Sigma Training

– Provides an affordable way to train Black Belts, Green Belts, and Quality Process Analysts

Page 49: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Lean and Six Sigma

Two powerful tools to help a company improve:

– Quality

– Productivity

– Bottom-line results

Page 50: Improving Your Bottom Line Making Kentucky manufacturers more competitive.

Lean & Six Sigma Together

Use Lean to:– Reduce or eliminate non-value-

added activities

Use Six Sigma to:– Improve value-added activities– Solve complex problems

uncovered by Lean or those requiring advanced analysis