Chapter 8
DMADV methodology
this methodology is used when the company wants to create a new product design or business process that is more predictable and defect free
changeover time
time taken to adapt and modify the manufacturing equipment and systems to produce a different product or a new batch of the same product
setup time
time taken to prepare and format the manufacturing equipment and systems for production
uniform plant loading
Planning up to capacity in earlier time periods to meet demand in later time periods.
components of LEAN Manufacturing
1. Waste Reduction 2. LEAN Layouts 3. Inventory, Setup Time, & Changeover Time Reduction 4. Small Batch Scheduling and Uniform Plant Loading 5. LEAN Supply Chain Relationships 6. Workforce Empowerment 7. Continuous Improvement
seven tools of quality control
1. check sheets 2. histograms 3. Pareto analysis 4. cause & effects diagrams 5. flow diagram 6. control charts 7. scatter diagram
Cost of Quality
An approach that supports a company's efforts to determine the level of resources necessary to prevent poor quality, and to evaluate the quality of the company's products and services
DOWNTIME
Defects Overproduction Waiting Non-Utilized Talent Transportation Inventory Motion/Movement Extra-Processing
DMADV (what it stands for)
Define Measure Analyze Design Verify
DMAIC
Define Measure Analyze Improve Control
Joseph juran
Defined quality as "fitness for use" Developed concept of quality planning, quality control, quality improvement
Kaoru Ishikawa
Developed cause-and-effect diagrams. Identified concept of "internal customer".
small batch scheduling can be facilitated through the use of
Kanbans meaning signal or card in Japanese
six sigma was originated by
Motorola in 1980s
non-value added process
Process steps that take time, resources, or space, but do not add value to the product or service
value added process
Process steps that transform or shape a product or service which is eventually sold to a customer.
______ for all people must exist for an organization to be at its best
Respect
buyer's risk
The buyer accepts a shipment of poor-quality units because the sample falsely provides a positive result against the acceptance standard (type II error)
supplier's risk
The buyer rejects a shipment of good-quality units because the sample quality level did not meet the acceptance standard (type I error)
Acceptance sampling
When a shipment is received from a supplier, a statistically significant representative sample is taken and measured against the quality acceptance standard
six sigma
a disciplined, statistical-based, data-driven methodology for identifying and removing the causes of defect and minimizing variability in manufacturing and in guess processes
Total quality management
a management philosophy based on the principle that every employee must be committed to maintaining high standard of work in every aspect of a company's operations
make-to-order
a manufacturing strategy in which manufacturing starts only after a customer's order is received
engineer-to-order
a manufacturing strategy in which the product is designed, engineered and built to the customer's specifications after receipt of the order evolution of make-to-order involves building a unique product every time
the 5 how's
a questioning technique for drilling down into the details of a potential solution to a known problem
the 5 why's
a questioning technique for identifying the root cause of the problem
cost of good quality
appraisal costs and prevention costs
setup time and changeover time
both considered a waster as they are times when the equipment is not performing its intended function non value added operations
assemble to order is a hybrid strategy of
both make-to-stock and make-to-order
Philip crosby
coined the phrase "quality is free" as defects are costly. introduced the concepts of zero defects, and focus on prevention
cost of quality can be divided into
cost of good quality and cost of poor quality
appraisal costs
costs associated with the evaluation of purchased materials, processes, products and services to ensure that they conform to specifications
project process
creates a custom product for each customer. High customization
pull approach system
each stage in the supply chain requests quantities needed from the previous stage no excess inventory generated & uncovers production problems
3) Inventory & Setup / Changeover Time Reduction
excess inventory takes up space and costs money to hold, maintain, protect, secure and insure
line process
has standard products with a limited number of variations moving on an assembly line through stages of production
Six Sigma focuses on
improving the quality of process outputs by identifying and removing the causes of defects and minimizing variability in manufacturing and business processes
continuous process
is used to manufacture such items as gas, laundry detergent and chemicals inflexible processes high capital investment
types of manufacturing strategies
make-to-stock make-to-order assemble-to-order engineer-to-order
6. Workforce Empowerment
managers must support LEAN Manufacturing by providing subordinated with the skills, tools, time and other necessary resources
batch process
manufactures a small quantity of an item in a single production run
assemble-to-order
manufacturing strategy where products ordered by customers are produced quickly and are customizable to a certain extent
DMAIC methodology
methodology is used when the company wants to improve an existing products or business process
caron-neutral
offsetting the carbon footprint of a firm's operations
the goal is not to reduce the number of ____ in an organization, it is to use ___ ___ more wisely
people; people resources
operations management
refers to managing the process to convert resources unto goods and services, in alignment with the company's business strategy as efficiently and effectively as possible
prevention costs
related to the design, implementation and maintenance of the quality management system
traditional inventory approach
supply chains work as "push" systems, and inventory is carries to cover up problems
voice of customer (VOC)
term used in business to describe the in-depth process of capturing internal and external customer's stated and unstated expectations, preferences, likes, and dislikes
4. Small Batch Scheduling and Uniform Plant Loading
the ideal schedule is to produce every product as quickly as possible and a the same rate as customer demand
value definition
the inherent worth of a product as judged by the customer which is reflected in its selling price and market demand
manufacturing management
the management of all the processes which are involved in manufacturing
intermittent processes
used to produce a large variety of products with different processing requirements in lower volumes
repetitive processes
used to produce one, or a few, standardized products in high volumes
1. waste reduction
wait times, inventories, material and people movement, processing steps, variability
W. Edwards Deming
widely considered the father of TQM, creator of the plan do check act model
manufacturing processes are put into 2 categories
- intermittent process - repetitive processes
LEAN history
- starting in the 1910's by Henry Ford's mass production line -in the 1940s taichii oho and shigeo Shinto created the Toyota Production System (TPS) - the term LEAN was first coined by John Krafcik in 1988 and the definition was expanded in the 1990 book
components of LEAN
-LEAN manufacturing -total quality management -respect for people
key principles of TQM
-Management Commitment -Employee Empowerment -Fact Based Decision Making -Continuous Improvement -Customer Focus
categories measured by Malcolm baldrige national quality award
-leadership -strategic planning -customer and market focus -information and analysis -Human Resource focus -process management -business results
In the 1990s, Supply Chain Management combined:
-quick response - efficient consumer response - just-in-time - keiretsu relationship
the five-S's
-sort: keep only necessary items -straighten: organize and arrange the be efficient -shine: clean work area -standardize: schedule regular cleaning/maintenance -sustain: stick to the rules
Malcolm baldric national quality award objectives
-stimulate firms to improve -recognize firms for quality achievements -establish guidelines so that organizations can evaluate their improvement and provide guidance to others
six sigma certification levels (worst to best)
-yellow belt -green belt -brown belt -black belt -master black belt
typically, only __ to __ % of the process steps or activities are value added
1 to 10%
six sigma methodology
1. quality is defined by the customer 2. use of statistical technical tools 3. employee involvement
2. LEAN Layouts
move people and materials when and where needed and as soon as possible ex. subway or jersey mikes
LEAN
an operating philosophy of waste reduction and value enhancement
cost of bad quality
internal failure costs and external failure costs
5. LEAN Supply Chain Relationships
mutual dependency and benefits occur among these partners developed with key customers and key suppliers to remove waste, reduce cost and improve quality and customer service
external failure costs
occur when the product or service does not meet the designed quality standards
internal failure costs
occur when the product or service does not meet the designed quality standards
make-to-stock
to manufacture products for stock based on demand forecasts will prevent excess inventory&avoid stockouts
manufacturing
to process or make raw materials or components into a finished product