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Capturing Financial Benefits From Lean Manufacturing
Once upon a time there was a company who decided to implement Lean Manufacturing. They hired a large prestigious consulting firm who created the grand strategy and trained everyone in lean thinking. Significant operating improvements were identified. It was all documented in a report two inches thick. Teams were launched, a lot of activity took place, and everyone was feeling good about the new initiative. Unfortunately, however, while management appreciated the effort, they were underwhelmed and disenchanted with the teams' bottom-line results. Does this sound like your organization? If it does, you are not alone. Lean postmortems reveal a familiar root cause for this situation: Organizations are quick to adopt the religion and methodologies of Lean Manufacturing, Six Sigma, and other improvement programs. They also have great intentions as they drive the organization to think about value-added, customer focus, and the need to quantify results. What often gets lost in the excitement of deploying Lean Manufacturing is the discipline involved in tying activities to clearly defined and auditable financial results. A good example of this is the engineer who justifies a major capital investment on a cycle time reduction or labor savings in an area where there is already excess capacity. It's just not real from a bottom-line perspective. There are several lessons that can be learned about achieving breakthrough results. These lessons work well and help organizations translate transparent intentions into visible financial results. LESSON 1: Pick Your Battles Carefully LESSON 2: Hire Your Accountants LESSON 3: Define Project Selection Criteria LESSON 4: Use Stage/Phase/Gate Reviews LESSON 5: Showcase Results And People For many organizations, Lean Manufacturing has become a lost opportunity. Management believes in it, their customers are demanding that they do it, but they just can't figure out how to turn actions into cash flow. Management is also questioning why we should continue if we can't see any value or financial impact. It's not the end of the world when organizations have to go back to the drawing board and reconfigure their approach. In fact, the companies who are best at Lean Manufacturing have done this several times. A trip back to the drawing board is a good thing. Stop what isn't working. Return armed with lessons learned and fortified with a renewed perspective from your financial organization. This approach always delivers the real bottom-line results that senior management demands and should expect. About The Author Reproduction Without Permission Is Strictly Prohibited Copyright Requests Publish an Article: Do you have a Six Sigma tip, learning or case study? Share it with the largest community of Six Sigma professionals, and be recognized by your peers. It's a great way to promote your expertise and/or build your resume. Read more about submitting an article. Download the iSixSigma Toolbar for 1-Click access. Search Your Way. Everyday. Without Delay.
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