The Toyota Way 1Spring 2008
The Toyota Wayby
Jeffrey Liker
14 Management Principlesfrom the World’s
Greatest Manufacturer
ENMA 284: Lean Manufacturing SystemsOverview - derived from…
The Toyota Way 2Spring 2008
The Toyota Approach : 4Ps
Long Term PHILOSOPHY
The right PROCESS will produce the right results
Add value to the organization by developing
your PEOPLE and PARTNERS
Continuously solving root PROBLEMS
Principle 1
Principles 2-8
Principles 9-11
Principles 12-14
The Toyota Way 3Spring 2008
Toyota’s 14 Management Principles1. Base your management decisions on a long term philosophy, even at the expense of short
term financial goals.
2. Create continuous process flow to bring problems to the surface.
3. Use “pull” systems to avoid overproduction.
4. Level out workload (heijunka).
5. Build a culture of stopping to fix problems, to get quality right the first time.
6. Standardized tasks are the foundation for continuous improvement and employee empowerment
7. Use visual controls so no problems are hidden.
8. Use only reliable thoroughly tested technology that serves your people and processes.
9. Grow leaders who thoroughly understand the work, live the philosophy, and teach it to others
10. Develop exceptional people and teams who follow your company’s philosophy
11. Respect you extended network of partners and suppliers by challenging them improve
12. Go and see for yourself to thoroughly understand the situation
13. Make decisions slowly by consensus, thoroughly considering all options; implement decisions rapidly
14. Become a learning organization through relentless reflection (hansei) and continuous improvement (kaizen)
The Toyota Way 4Spring 2008
Principle 1: Base management decisions on long term philosophy, even at the expense of short term financial goals.
• Have a sense of purpose that supercedes any short term decision making. Align the organization toward a purpose greater than “making money.” Understand your place in the history of the company and work to bring the company to the next level.
• Generate value for the customer, society and the economy. Evaluate every function in the company in terms of its ability to generate value.
• Be responsible. Strive to decide your own fate. Act with self reliance and trust in your own abilities. Accept responsibility for your conduct and maintain and improve the skills that enable you to produce added value.
The Toyota Way 5Spring 2008
Principle 2: Create continuous process flow to bring problems to the surface
• Redesign processes to achieve continuous flow.
• Create flow to move material and information fast.
• Link processes and people so that problems surface right away.
• Make flow obvious throughout your organizational culture.
• The Toyota Way case study – Navy yard job summaries• Lead time reduced 63%• Distance paperwork traveled reduced 55-92%• Number of steps reduced by 67%• Handoffs reduced by 80%
The Toyota Way 6Spring 2008
Principle 3: Use “pull” systems to avoid overproduction
• Provide downstream customers in the process with what they want, when they want it, and in the amount that they want. • Toyota studied US supermarkets in the 50’s
• Pull vs Push• Material replenishment initiated by consumption is the basis
for just-in-time. • Just-in Time - an organized system of inventory buffers. • Examples- filling your gas tank, office supplies.
• “Flow (one piece) where you can and pull where you must.”
• Scheduling still happens, but keep it short (days vs. months)
The Toyota Way 7Spring 2008
Principle 4: Level out workload (heijunka)
• Eliminating Muda is just one third of the equation for making lean successful. Eliminating Muri and eliminating Mura in production are just as important.
• Muda (waste)• Transportation, Inventory, Movement, Waiting, Overproduction,
Overprocessing, Defects + Unused employee abilities
• Muri (overwork), Mura (unevenness) Heijunka (evenness)
• The Toyota Way case study- Gutter manufacturer• Lead time reduced by 40%• Changeover time reduced by 70%• WIP reduced by 40%• Inventory obsolescence reduced by 60%
The Toyota Way 8Spring 2008
Principle 5: Build a culture of stopping to fix problems to get quality right the first time
• Quality at the source• Jidoka – autonomation• Andon – signal for help• Poke yoke – mistake proofing
• Administrative approaches –standardized work and checklists
• Toyota’s quality process:• Go and see• Understand the situation• Andon• One piece flow• Ask why 5 times
The Toyota Way 9Spring 2008
Principle 6: Standardized tasks are the foundation for continuous improvement and employee empowerment
• Standardized work is not the end result, the “one best way,” it is the beginning of improvement.
• Use stable, repeatable methods everywhere to maintain the predictability, timing, and regular output of your processes. It is the foundation of flow and pull.
• Standardized work consists of three elements-• Takt time• Sequence of the process• Amount of stock on hand
• Capture the accumulated learning about a process by standardizing the current best practices. Allow creative and individual expression to improve upon the standard; then incorporate it into the new standard.
The Toyota Way 10Spring 2008
Principle 7: Use visual control so no problems are hidden
• Visual Control – The ability to see abnormalities at a glance. • 5S enables visual control
1. Sort
2. Straighten
3. Shine
4. Standardize
5. Sustain
• Process Control Boards (daily goals, takt rate, manpower, current status throughout the day)
• Reduce your reports to one piece of paper whenever possible. • E.g. A3 (11x17) Reports (Storyboards) A4 (8 ½ x 11)next!• 4-Quadrant reports.
The Toyota Way 11Spring 2008
Principle 8: Use only reliable thoroughly tested technologythat serves your people and processes
• Use technology to support people, not to replace people.
• Conduct actual tests before adopting new technology in business processes, manufacturing systems, or products.
• Reject technologies that conflict with your culture or that might disrupt stability, reliability, and predictability, but…
• Encourage people to consider new technologies when looking into new approaches to work. Quickly implement a thoroughly considered technology if it has been proven in trials and it can improve the flow of your processes.
The Toyota Way 12Spring 2008
Principle 9: Grow leaders who thoroughly understandthe work, live the philosophy, and teach it to others.
• Grow leaders from within rather than buying them from outside. This is an example of applying Heijunka, or constancy of purpose.
• Leaders must be role models of the company’s philosophy and way of doing business.
• A good leader must understand the daily work in great detail so they can be the best teacher of your company’s philosophy.
• “Before we build cars, we build people.”
The Toyota Way 13Spring 2008
Principle 10: Develop exceptional people and teams who follow your company’s philosophy
• Create a strong, stable culture in which company values and beliefs are widely shared and lived out over a period of many years.
• Train exceptional individuals and teams to work within the corporate philosophy to achieve exceptional results. Balance teamwork and excellent individual work
• Use cross functional teams to improve quality and productivity and enhance flow by solving problems.
• Make an ongoing effort to teach individuals how to work together as team toward common goals. Teamwork is something that has to be learned.
The Toyota Way 14Spring 2008
Principle 11: Respect your extended network of partners and suppliers by challenging them to improve
• Have respect for your partners and suppliers and treat them as an extension of your company.
• Challenge your partners to grow and develop. It shows that you value them. Set challenging targets and assist your partners in achieving them.
The Toyota Way 15Spring 2008
Principle 12: Go and see for yourself to thoroughly understand the situation
• Genchi (actual location) genbutsu (actual material or product)…also known as going to the gemba.
• Siena chief engineer drives in 50 states, 13 provinces and territories and Mexico. Improvements include turning radius, wind stability, drift, cup holders and trays
• “Common sense will tell you the answer, but collecting data and then understanding the facts will tell you whether your common sense was correct.”
• The Ohno circle – He asked an engineer to stand and observe an operation… for 8 hours!
• “The Geography of Thought: How Asians and Westerners Think Differently and Why” by Richard Nisbett• Westerners see things• Easterners see things and relationships
The Toyota Way 16Spring 2008
Principle 13: Make decisions slowly by consensus, thoroughly considering all options; then implement
decisions rapidly• Given a year to implement a project…
• Western – 3 months planning, 9 months implementing and correcting • Toyota – 10 months planning, pilot, implement flawlessly
• Toyota decision making:• Find out what is really going on, including genchi genbutsu• Understanding underlying causes that explain surface appearances –
asking “Why?” five times• Broadly considering alternative solutions and developing a detailed
rationale for the preferred solution. • Building consensus within the team, including employees and outside
partners. • Nemawashi –the process of discussing problems and potential
solutions with all those affected.
The Toyota Way 17Spring 2008
Principle 14: Become a learning organization throughrelentless reflection (hansei) and continuous improvement (kaizen)
• Problem solving is 20% tools and 80% thinking. • Hansei – loosely “reflection” or lessons learned
• “Please do the hansei.” • Feel sorry. • Create a plan to solve the problem.• Sincerely believe you will not make this mistake again.
• Without hansei, it is impossible to have kaizen.• Hansei kai – reflection meetings • No magic metrics
The Toyota Way 18Spring 2008
Principle 14: Become a learning organization through relentless reflection (hansei) and continuous improvement (kaizen)
“Many people are surprised when I give talks and tell them that Toyota doesn’t have a Six Sigma program. Six Sigma is based on complex statistical analysis tools. People want to know how Toyota achieves such high levels of quality without the quality tools of Six Sigma. You can find an example of every Six Sigma tool in use somewhere in Toyota at some time. Yet most problems do not call for complex statistical analysis, but instead require painstaking, detailed problem solving. This requires a level of detailed thinking and analysis that is all too absent from most companies in day-to-day activity. It is a matter of discipline, attitude, and culture.”
Jeffrey Liker
Top Related