Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Making Materials Flow

Making Materials Flow: A Lean Material-Handling Guide for Operations, Production-Control, and Engineering ProfessionalsMaking Materials Flow describes in plain language another step in  implementing a complete lean business system.   
LEI's first  workbook, Learning to See, focused on where to start — at the value  stream for each product family within your facilities.   
Seeing  the Whole then expanded the value stream map beyond facility walls, all  the way from raw materials to customer.   
After mapping has  identified waste and potential applications of flow and pull, you can  use the techniques in Creating Continuous Flow to implement truly  continuous flow in cellularized operations.     
Making Materials  Flow takes the next step by explaining how to supply purchased parts to  the value stream in order to support continuous flow.   
"Companies  are making progress in creating areas of continuous flow as more  managers learn about value-stream mapping and continuous-flow cells,"  said co-author Rick Harris, who also co-authored the Creating Continuous  Flow workbook. "But as I walk through facilities and examine earnest  efforts to create continuous flow, I see how hard it is to sustain  steady output. The problem often is the lack of a lean material-handling  system for purchased parts to support continuous-flow cells,  small-batch processing, and traditional assembly lines."   
Making  Materials Flow explains in plain language how to create such a system  by applying the relevant concepts and methods in a step-by-step  progression. The workbook reveals the exercises, formulas, standards,  and forms that a consultant would use to implement the system in your  environment. And, like LEI's other workbooks, Making Materials Flow  answers the key question managers often have about lean tools and  concepts, "What do I do on Monday morning to implement this?" The four  key steps detailed in the workbook include:   
1. Developing the  Plan For Every Part (PFEP). This basic database fosters accurate and  controlled inventory reduction and is the foundation for the continuous  improvement of a facility's material-handling system.   
2.  Building the purchased-parts market. Learn the formulas and methods to  size and operate a market that eliminates the waste of hoarding,  searching for parts, and storing inventory throughout a facility.   
3.  Designing delivery routes.  You get the principles and calculations  that turn a sprawling, messy plant into an organized community where  operators get the parts they need, when needed, and in the quantity  needed, delivered right to their fingertips. Proper delivery routes not  only improve inventory and flow but also safety and housekeeping.   
4.  Implementing pull signals to integrate the new material-handling system  with the information management system. Learn the steps to creating a  system that keeps inventory under control by allowing operators to pull  just what they need while focusing on producing value for customers.  You'll also learn how to calculate the number of pull signals needed and  how often to deliver material.   
Finally, you'll learn how to  sustain and continuously improving the system by implementing periodic  audits of the material-handling system across the chain of management,  from route operator to plant manager. You'll learn the five-step process  for introducing audits of the market, routes, and pull signals by a  cross-functional team from production control, operations, and  industrial engineering.   
Harris and co-authors Chris Harris and  Earl Wilson lead you through 10 simple but pragmatic questions that  show how a manufacturing facility implements a robust but flexible lean  material-handling system for purchased parts:   
The Plan For  Every Part (PFEP)   
1. What information should you include in  the PFEP?   
2. How will you maintain the integrity of the PFEP?    
Developing a Purchased-Parts Market   
3. Where do you  locate your purchased-parts market?   
4. What is the correct  size for your purchased-parts market, and what is the correct amount of  each part to hold in the market?   
5. How do you operate your  purchased-parts market?   
Designing the Delivery Route and the  Information Management System   
6. How do you convey parts from  the purchased-parts market to the production areas?   
7. How do  your production areas signal the purchased-parts market what to deliver  and when?   
8. How do you fill the delivery route?   
Sustaining  and Improving   
9. How can you sustain the performance of your  lean material-handling system?   
10. How can you identify and  remove additional waste?   
An appendix explores how to adapt the  key principles of lean material-handling to more complex environments,  such as incorporating work-in-process (WIP) markets into the system for  purchased parts, adding delivery routes from production cells to a  finished-goods market, and applying the system to low-volume, high-mix  processes.   
Making Materials Flow will benefit lean leaders,  managers, and executives in production control, operations, and  engineering who have at least a basic knowledge of lean concepts such as  value-stream mapping, cell design, and standard work. The 93-page  workbook contains more than 50 illustrations.