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Jay Arthur
Copyright © 2011
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When I train companies in Lean and Six Sigma, they often ask: "Which
should I do first, Lean or Six Sigma?" While my answer is often "it
depends," I have found that there is a sequence that often works
best. It's Lean, Six Sigma and reengineering combined. And I realized
that I captured it nicely years ago in the transition planning template
available in the QI Macros. Transition PlanningFor changes to expand markets and grow the business, there is a natural flow:
Transition Planning ProcessStep 1: Define the Current and World Class EnvironmentsWhat's the current way of doing business? Too manual? To slow? Too error-prone? What would a world-class version of the company look, sound and feel like? Step 2: Simplify, Streamline and Standardize Your Processes Use Lean. Use the 3-60 rule to mind the gaps between steps. Eliminate the delay. Eliminate the unnecessary movement of people and products. Reduce inventory. Start making things "just in time", not in advance. This alone can double your speed and cut defects in half. Step 3: Optimize the Process Use Six Sigma. Use the 4-50 rule to identify and mistake-proof the most error-prone steps in your process. Eliminate defects and deviation in finished goods and services. Seek to eliminate rework loops. Eliminate scrap. Eliminate the need for inspectors. Step 4: Expand into New Domains and Markets Reengineer. As you simplify, streamline and optimize key processes, you'll start to get ideas and insights about how to redesign these work flows for even greater efficiency and effectiveness. Do it! Make the leap to faster, better and even cheaper means of serving customers. You may also discover ways to carry these processes into new markets (e.g., UPS helping companies with not only shipping, but logistics). I have found that simple processes invite reengineering; reengineering convoluted processes invites disaster. Step 5: Create a Competitive Edge Continue steps 2-4. As you collapse days of lead time into minutes or even seconds and shrink convoluted loops into small, flawless production cells, customers will sit up and take notice. The ability to do things quickly and flawlessly will create a competitive advantage that's hard to copy or beat. Become World Class As the improvements stack up, other companies will notice and come to benchmark your performance. That's when you'll know that you're becoming World Class. Bravo! Keep improving. The marketplace needs your excellence to challenge everyday thinking.
© 2008 Jay Arthur, the KnowWare® Man, works with managers who want to plug the leaks in their cash flow. Hire Jay Arthur to train your staff in his one-day Lean Six Sigma Workshop! Contact Jay at (888) 468-1537, support@qimacros.com. Rights to reprint this article in company periodicals is freely given with the inclusion of the following tag line: "© 2008 Jay Arthur, the KnowWare® Man, (888) 468-1537, support@qimacros.com."
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