Intro: Welcome to the E6S-Methods podcast with Jacob and Aaron, brought to you by E6S Industries, your source for expert training, consulting, and leadership in business performance and continuous improvement methods, like Lean and Six Sigma. In this episode number 75 we continue our "8 wastes" discussion with an in-depth look at Over Processing and Transportation. "Go the Extra MILE MR TOYOTA - Part 4. Here we go. http://bit.ly/E6S-075; http://bit.ly/E6S-iTunes Recall: Go the extra MILE: (Mitigate, Investigate, Litigate, Eliminate) ; MR TOYOTA (Motion, Reserves, Transport, Overproduction, Yield Problems, Over processing, Talents, Awaiting Availability)I Over Processing – Putting in more effort than neededa. What it “looks” likei. Well Hidden1. Tasks taking longer than expected or standard cycle time2. Overly designed or constrained3. “Excessive” quality4. Repeating the same or similar steps (Redundancy)5. Reworking of defects6. Band-aid reactions to past quality excursions7. Transporting WIP - By definition is putting more work into the part than necessary. b. Examples i. Redundant patient paperwork in the Emergency Room intakeii. Removing coating or paint overspray from an unwanted area, or even applying masking to these areas before-hand.iii. Mirror polish on a hidden, painted, non-visible surface, or that will be later removedc. Common Root Causes (May need 5 Why’s)i. Legacy from pilot-scale or semi-works launch1. Same procedures being used as when it was first developed as a proof of concept, but never refinedii. Over-perfectionism or unclear quality requirements/standardsiii. Silo functional organizational structures, without communication.d. Potential Remedies i. Critically Ask: Who’s the real customer here, and what do they want? Subordinate all tasks, systems, and processes to that.1. In the ER, who’s the real customer? (Patient, Insurance Company, Hospital Administrators, Regulatory Agency….?)ii. Empowered Continual Improvement1. Don’t assume the design has to be perfect before implementation – Active progress over delayed perfection2. Don’t assume the initial design is how it “must” be kept3. Things change. Advancements are made. Need to keep working at it. Cannot be eliminated, but continually minimizesII Transportation – Transporting WIPa. What it “looks” likei. Moving Containers of materials1. By vehicle2. By footii. Spaghetti on a layout (spaghetti diagram) b. Examplesi. Fork truck transporting WIP from the “outbox” of one department to the “inbox” of another departmentii. Expediting approval paperwork (walking it through)iii. Mailing, emailing or faxing paperwork to another office.iv. Global distribution networksv. Production plant utilities, cooling water, steam, power. c. Common Root Causes (May need 5 Why’s)i. We don’t produce at the location where the product is consumed1. Share Cutting fluid example (high volume custom chemistry with only one customer)a. RMs shipped by boat from China and arrive in US at Pacific portb. Delivered and Consumed (converted to final product) in Midwestc. Final product delivered back to the Pacific area for consumptionii. Poor office or plan layoutiii. Global commerce and off-shoringd. Potential Remedies i. Change the Layout or Distribution Network1. Cellular Layout Design 2. Co-locate production with consumptiona. Satellite production areasOutro: Thanks for listening to episode 75 of the E6S-Methods Podcast. Stay tuned for episode number 76, the fifth and final part in this series on the 8 wastes, where we dig further into Motion and Defects. If you would like to be a guest on the podcast, contact us through our website. Join our mailing list! Subscribe to past and future episodes on iTunes or stream us live on-demand with Stitcher Radio. Find outlines and graphics for all shows and more at www.E6S-Methods.com. “Journey Through Success”
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