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This document discusses value stream mapping and lean manufacturing principles. It provides an overview of value stream mapping, including current state maps, future state maps, and achieving the future state. The goal is to develop the ability to see material and information flows and eliminate waste from processes. Key aspects covered include identifying value-added vs. non-value added activities, establishing continuous flow, reducing lead times and work-in-process inventory, and setting targets to level production based on customer demand. Overall, value stream mapping is presented as a tool to analyze and improve processes by designing out inefficiencies and implementing lean strategies.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
117 views73 pages

Vs M Presentation

This document discusses value stream mapping and lean manufacturing principles. It provides an overview of value stream mapping, including current state maps, future state maps, and achieving the future state. The goal is to develop the ability to see material and information flows and eliminate waste from processes. Key aspects covered include identifying value-added vs. non-value added activities, establishing continuous flow, reducing lead times and work-in-process inventory, and setting targets to level production based on customer demand. Overall, value stream mapping is presented as a tool to analyze and improve processes by designing out inefficiencies and implementing lean strategies.

Uploaded by

Mai
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 73

Value Stream Mapping

Bill Paolucci
IPFW
March 17, 2009
Discussion Points
1. Introduction & Getting Started
2. The Current State Map
3. Lean Value Stream
4. The Future State Map
5. Achieving the Future State
6. Conclusion

The Goal is to develop your ability to


“see the flow” and design a future state
Why Lean Manufacturing?

Past Profit Cost Price Mass


0 Production

Market
Present Profit Cost Price

Market
Future Profit Cost Price
Lean
Organization
0
Lean Manufacturing
Value Stream

Waste

Lean Manufacturing is a group of strategies for the


identification and elimination of the waste inside
the Value Stream.
What Have We learned so far…
• Value Stream mapping looks at the material and information
flow in a value stream.
• A product family matrix is used to identify and group products
into families based on whether they pass through similar steps in
your downstream process.
• A Value Stream Manager is the lead person with the
responsibility for understanding a product family’s value stream
and improving it.
• The recommended level for beginning to map for a product
family is door-to-door in an individual facility.
The Current State Map
Points To Remember….
• The best way to draw a value stream map is in pencil on the
work floor, mapping the whole value stream yourself.
• Lead time is the time it takes one piece to move all the way
through a process or a value stream from start to finish
• Data boxes should contain information based on what you
observe as you draw your map.
• The process of value stream mapping begins with the
Supplier.
current state map. (less than 5 minutes)
More Points Learned…
• Takt time is the customer demand rate
• A supermarket is used where continuous flow is not possible
due to distance, unreliability, or where processes serve
multiple product families
• A pacemaker process responds to the external customer, and is
usually the point at which production is scheduled in the door-
to-door value stream.
• Overproduction is usually the most significant source of waste
in a value stream.
Why Not Flow From Weld - Assembly

• No Reason!!
• The lean approach is to place these four
processes immediately adjacent to one
another (cellular)
• Have the operators pass parts from one
process to another.
• Keep operator’s work content just below the
takt time.
Cycling Faster than Takt Time
(Operator Balance Chart)
62s Takt = 60 sec
46s

Assy
40s
39s
Assembly

Assembly
Assembly

Weld
Stamping 1s

Weld
Weld

Current Process Takt Weld


After Kaizen Takt
Lead Time Improvements
Coils Stamped Weld/Assy Finished Production Total
Parts WIP Goods Lead time Inventory
Turns
Before 5 days 7.6 Days 6.5 Days 4.5 Days 23.6 Days 10
Cont Flow 2 days 1.5 days 0 4.5 days 8 days 30
& Pull
With 1.5 days 1 day 0 2 days 4.5 days 53
Leveling
Recap
• Kanban cards are used to provide an instruction that regulates
the sequence and timing of production.
• When calculating takt time do not include lunches, breaks,
machine downtime, and any other unavailable production time.
• Pitch is a consistent increment of schedule used to level
production volume and help detect production abnormalities at a
pacemaker process
• Finished goods supermarket can be utilized to help maintain a
level volume of pacemaker work even when customer demand
rises and falls.
future state map
Think Good Flow (5S)
• Small
– Keep equipment footprint small
– Don’t overbuild equipment, keep to the basics
• Simple
– Standard method must be easily understood
– Equipment setup and operation is easily maintained
• Smooth
– Don’t design in unnecessary WIP
– Manage to the takt time
– Target one piece being processed
• Short
– Maximize Manufacturing Cycle Time, reduce lead-time
– Eliminate Non-valued added operations
• Stabile
– Implement operator training, simple instructions
– Utilize Total Productive Maintenance
– Insist on Quality at the Source
Manufacturing Cycle Efficiency
Cycle Efficiency is measured as the amount of value added time in a process divided
by the total lead time. It can be used to gauge the potential for cost reductions.

Value-Added Time
Manufacturing Cycle Efficiency = Total Lead Time
Stretch Objective: A Lean process is one in which the value-added time in the process is more
than 25% of the total lead time of that process. Improvements in Cycle Efficiency will result in:
• Reduction in quality costs
• Shorter lead times increasing process flexibility
• Less inventory, reducing storage cost and increasing inventory turns
• Elimination of wastes due to scrap and repair resulting in improved
manufacturing overhead cost
Where: Cycle Efficiency should be collected at the end of the process.
When: Cycle Efficiency should be collected and used, at minimum, semi-annually. When a
project or kaizen has been implemented to set a new baseline, or when projects are being
evaluated for cost reduction potential.
Manufacturing Cycle Efficiency Calculation
Manufacturing Cycle Efficiency = Value-Added Time
Total Lead Time
Value added time = 3 hours
Total lead time = 96 hours ( 12, 8 hour days)

Manufacturing Cycle Efficiency =


3
96
Process Cycle Efficiency = 3.125 %
Process Lead Time can be estimated by:
Process Lead Time = Number of “Things” in Process (WIP)
Completions per Hour

Typical and world-class cycle efficiencies


Application Typical World-Class
Machining 1% 20%
Fabrication 10% 25%
Assembly 15% 35%
Continuous Manufacturing 30% 80%
Business Process - Transactional 10% 50%
Business Process- Creative/Cognitive 5% 25%
Lean Tools
Supplier
Participation Six Sigma

Poka-Yoke SMED
One-Piece
TPM Kanban
Flow

Value Stream Mapping


Eliminate Waste
Continuous Visual
Improvement Management Kaizen

Standardized Empowered
Work Teams 5S Safety
Seeing The Whole
(mapping the extended value stream)
Process Level
Creating Continuous Flow

Single Plant
Learning to See

Multiple Plants

Across the Company

When you have learned to see value streams in individual


facilities, it’s time to see and then to optimize entire value
streams, from raw materials to customer.
Acknowledgements

• Lean Enterprise Institute (LEI)


• Learning to See
– Mike Rother
– John Shook
Questions?

Thanks For Your Attendance

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