1 / 26

PMI-MN Breakfast Meeting Tuesday, April 11 th , 2006

PMI-MN Breakfast Meeting Tuesday, April 11 th , 2006. Show Me The Business Value Discover Lean Six Sigma “Best Bets” for Tangible Improvements Part 3. Presented by: Michelle Goodman. info@trissential.com. 3 Part Series Agenda. Lean Six Sigma and the Big Picture - Part 1

yamal
Download Presentation

PMI-MN Breakfast Meeting Tuesday, April 11 th , 2006

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PMI-MN Breakfast MeetingTuesday, April 11th, 2006 Show Me The Business Value Discover Lean Six Sigma “Best Bets” for Tangible Improvements Part 3 Presented by: Michelle Goodman info@trissential.com

  2. 3 Part Series Agenda • Lean Six Sigma and the Big Picture - Part 1 • What Exactly is Lean Six Sigma? • Corporate Deployments • Big is Not Always Better • Individual Execution – Part 2 • Project or Activity Selection and Scoping • Resource Utilization • Comprehensive Communication • Metrics & Results • Personal Corporate Citizenship • Best Bets Beyond the Office Area – Part 3 • Little’s Law • Non-corporate business environments • Working with Small Businesses • Can my community work benefit?

  3. Goal – Reduce waste and increase process speed Focus – Bias for action/ Implementing known solutions Method – Kaizen events Goal – Improve performance on Customer CTQs Focus – Root Cause Analysis/ Developing Solutions Method – Black Belts dedicated to projects Lean Six Sigma Is the Integration of Two Powerful Business Improvement Approaches... Lean Speed Enables Six Sigma Quality (Faster Cycles of Experimentation/learning) Six Sigma Quality Enables Lean Speed (Fewer Defects Means Less Time Spent on Rework) Six SigmaCulture+Quality LeanSpeed+Low Cost

  4. Lean & Six Sigma Tools Define Measure Analyze Improve Control • Project ID Tools • Project Definition Form • Value of Cycle Time • Net Present Value Analysis • Internal Rate of Return Analysis • Discounted Cash Flow Analysis • PIP Management Process • RACI • Quad Charts • Process Mapping • Value Stream Mapping • Process Cycle Efficiency • Lean Six Sigma Metrics • Process Sizing • Kaizen Events • Multi-Voting Techniques • Pareto Charts • C&E/Fishbone Diagrams • FMEA • Check Sheets • Run Charts • Control Charts • Gage R&R • Subjective Measurement Systems • Cp & Cpk • SupplyChainAcceleratorSM Time Trap Analysis • Analytical Batch Sizing • Multi-Vari • Box Plots • Interaction Plots • Regression • ANOVA • C&E Matrices • FMEA • Brainstorming, Affinity • Benchmarking • Kaizen Events • Pull Systems • Generic • Replenishment • Part Stratification • Setup Reduction • TPM, 5S • Process Flow • Line Balancing • DOE • Hypothesis Testing • Force Field • Tree Diagrams • Gantt Charts • Check Sheets • Run Charts • Histograms • Scatter Diagrams • Control Charts • Visual Control Tools • Poka-Yoke • Pareto Charts • Interactive Reviews

  5. Little’s Law and other Favorite Resources

  6. Know the Heartbeat • Plan and execute in 90 day cycles • Fewer people on team – better engagement and momentum • SMEs (Subject Matter Experts) – best utilized in small doses • Focused work on fewer subjects (Little’s Law)

  7. Little’s Law • Lead Time = Amount of Work-In-Process Average Completion Rate • You can speed up any process – reduce lead time – by reducing the amount of WIP, even if you do nothing to improve the completion rate

  8. Pull System - Quote-to-Order Process Improvement Pull System - Moderate Complexity Quotation Work Cell - 2 1 1 1 2 6 6 3 1 1 5 1 3 1 4 1 2 1 1 5 2 1 5 1 1 1 3 4 1 1 WIP limit = 48 Units of Work Exits = 20 Units/Day Queue: Used to manage staffing requirements 2 1 Avg Cycle Time = “Quote WIP”/Exit Rate = 48 units / 20 units per day= 2.4 days 1 5 2 1

  9. Favorite Resources • Making Six Sigma Last by George Eckes • What is Six Sigma? by Peter Pande and Larry Holpp • What is Lean Six Sigma? by Mike George, Dave Rowlands, & Bill Kastle • Lean Six Sigma for Service by Michael George • People Styles at Work by Robert Bolton and Dorothy Grover Bolton • Memory Jogger Collection (Black Belt) by Goal QPC

  10. Lean Six Sigma “Best Bets” in The Small Business Environment

  11. Michelle’s definition of a “Best Bet” • Does not require a LSS program • Does not require LSS certification • Applicable in various business environments • Has merit on individual basis

  12. Corporate Environment • Pros: • Knowledgeable in team work / sponsorship roles • Reservoir of resources • Comfortable with standard operating procedures • Established decision making protocol • Skills enhancement such as Lean ix Sigma training • Cons: • Systems that are slow to change • Internal politics and bureaucracy • Risk and change averse • Decentralized structures discourage replication • Lack of passion?

  13. The Small Business World • Corporate to Small Business • Small Business to Small Business • Landscaping / Lawn Care • Construction • Real Estate • Financial Services • Educational Services • Seasonal & Holiday-based Initiatives • Professional Services • Maintenance Support • Retail Sales • Catering and Restaurants

  14. The Small Business World • Pairing varying business paradigms • Planning Cycles • Process Maturity • Funding and Resource Availability • Business Communication and Administration • Formality and Complexity of Contracts and Service Level Agreements • Ongoing versus Single Interactions Example: Business unit working with small, family-owned catering business for ongoing events and functions

  15. Small Business Environment • Pros: • Natural inclination toward VOC • Flexibility and customization • Implementation speed • Willingness to learn and accept best practices • Cons: • Ad hoc process implementation • Business administration less mature • Resource instability – capacity spikes • May need mentoring and training • Implementation speed

  16. Best Bet Solutions • Planning Cycles • Provide scope • Adjust to seasonal requirements and industry work cycles rather than corporate quarters (90 days) or budgeting cycle • Tax Season, Holiday Events, School vacations • Get a written plan – move from ad hoc planning to process orientation • Provide templates and examples for contracts and agreements

  17. Best Bet Solutions • Process Maturity • Focus is on quality aspect rather than lean improvements • Development of custom solutions rather than improvement of existing ones • Document key components of process • Provide sponsorship, mentoring, training • Establish metrics to review in future evaluations

  18. Best Bet Solutions • Funding and Resource Availability • Minimize change requests • Provide longer lead times – fewer available resources • Work with internal accounting practices to accommodate cash flow needs • Establish Risk Mitigation plan, including quality assurance

  19. Best Bet Solutions • Business Communications • State expectations explicitly in writing • Provide examples and templates (tools) • Define deliverables and time tables • Give more frequent feedback and create checkpoints early in the delivery cycle • Seek involvement beyond primary contact

  20. Community and Volunteer Activities

  21. Community and Volunteer Involvement • Corporate Outreach Programs • United Way, Meals on Wheels, Grants • Work sponsored volunteer time and funds • Professional Associations • Neighborhood and Condo Associations • Boy Scouts / School Sports / PTA • Humane Society • Cultural or Church Affiliations • Environmental Efforts and Disaster Relief • Private functions Example: Involvement on a Neighborhood Association Board of Directors

  22. Community / Volunteer Environment • Pros: • Ability to choose involvement and time commitment • Sense of purpose • Provides variety and diversification • Ability to influence standard of living other tangible monetary drivers • Cons: • Volunteer Dynamics • Lack of reliable resources • Yearly churn of participants • Lack of established and repetitive processes • Varying degrees of accountability & commitment

  23. Best Bet Solutions • Focus on Lean Aspects • Quality is hard to control • Minimal metrics or agreement to define or measure quality • No clear VOC (voice of the customer) • Many volunteers and inputs • No clear decision making • Different levels of knowledge and capabilities • Varying levels of commitment

  24. Best Bet Solutions • Reduce time obligation for those involved • Differentiate between value-add and non-value-add • Apply simplified versions of tools such as value stream mapping • Simplify approval and decision process by involving small groups and inform the rest • Reduce routing of information • Automate monthly tasks • Breakdown tasks to 1 person work packets • Work fast and furious for short durations • Schedule meetings longer to include working time

  25. Best Bet Solutions • Reduce complexity of tasks • Add efficiency and eliminate waste • Establish simplified documented standard operating procedures (repetitive process) • Use examples and templates from umbrella organizations and work experience (replication) • Introduce role of meeting facilitator and other standard team meeting principles • Provide guidelines for transition work (replication) • Introduce steps for involving SMEs for small, specialized tasks • Reduce use of acronyms, technical terms (VOC)

  26. Conclusion Michelle Goodman, MBA, PMP Senior Process Consultant O 952-595-7970 C 651-261-9422 mgoodman@trissential.com www.trissential.com

More Related