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Lean Six Sigma An Overview

Lean Six Sigma An Overview. Agenda. What is Six Sigma What is Lean Thinking Lean Six Sigma and Change Lean Six Sigma Methodology Lean Six Sigma Organization Developing a Charter for Lean Six Sigma Project Lean Six Sigma Financial Benefits. “Safety is a Measure of Success”.

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Lean Six Sigma An Overview

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  1. Lean Six Sigma An Overview “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  2. Agenda • What is Six Sigma • What is Lean Thinking • Lean Six Sigma and Change • Lean Six Sigma Methodology • Lean Six Sigma Organization • Developing a Charter for Lean Six Sigma Project • Lean Six Sigma Financial Benefits “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  3. What is Six Sigma ? • Sigma (σ), a Greek letter, denotes standard deviation. • Six Sigma is a metric that measures the performance of a process. • Six Sigma as a metric • A process running at Six Sigma quality level produces no more than 3.4 defective parts per million opportunities (DPMO). • The variation in the process is reduced so that it does not produce defects 99.99966% of the time. “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  4. Lower Specification Limit (LSL) Upper Specification Limit (USL) Understanding and reducing variation # of Goals “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  5. Why to raise the quality standard ? 3.8-Sigma 99% Good 6-Sigma 99.99966% Good 3.4 defects per million opportunities . • 20,000 lost articles of mail per hour. • 5,000 incorrect surgical operations per week. • Two short or long landings at most major airports each day. • 200,000 wrong drug prescriptions each year. • Seven articles lost per hour. • 1.7 incorrect operations per week. • One short or long landing every five years. • 68 wrong drug prescriptions per year. N Based on U.S. statistics in the 1990s “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  6. What is Lean Thinking ? • Lean ideas originally developed in the United States (Ford Motors, 1914) and than widely used by Japanese (Toyota, 1950). • Lean Thinking is also known as lean, lean production, lean manufacturing, Toyota production system (TPS), Just-in-time (JIT) etc. • It is a common sense approach. • Lean is focused at eliminating the waste in the processes that in return increases the speed, improves the quality, and reduces the cost. “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  7. Understanding Wastes Waiting Unwanted Transportation Overproduction Over Inventory Unwanted Movement 8 Wastes Over processing Unused Employee Creativity Defects “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  8. Lean Six Sigma Definition • Lean Six Sigma is a rigorous, disciplined, and data driven business process optimization and problem solving methodology which aims to reduce variability, eliminate non-value added activities (waste), and reduce cost. • Lean Six Sigma is applicable to any process/activity and it is well-proven methodology worldwide. • Lean eliminates process wastes. • Six Sigma reduces process variability and defects. “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  9. Lean Six Sigma and Change • In order to develop, sustain, and become competitive, we have to make changes. • Lean Six Sigma is all about: • Changing the culture of an organization • Changing the processes to meet new customer requirements and to remove constraints. “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  10. Lean Six Sigma Methodology Practical Problem Lean Six Sigma Methodology Phase 2 Measure Characterization Analytical Problem Phase 3 Analyze Phase 1 Define Analytical Solution Phase 4 Improve Optimization Practical Solution Phase 5 Control DMAIC Define Measure Analyze Improve Control “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  11. What is important to customers OR business goals? Define Phase • Define the problem. • Identify the customer(s). • Organize the team and define its roles and responsibilities. • Establish goals and milestones. • Establish the scope of the LSS project. • Define the metrics. • Map the process. • Develop data collection plan. COMMUNICATION “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  12. How is the process performing? How does it look / feel like to the customer? How good is the data? Measure Phase • Collect data on current process. • Confirm the customer’s needs, and expectation. • Validate measurement system. • Determine input variables (X’s) that may impact output (Y’s). • Establish baseline measurement of current process. COMMUNICATION “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  13. What are the most important causes of process waste, defects & variation? Analyze Phase • Narrow the focus to specific issues. • Develop a mechanism to analyze data. • Identify what is causing defects, waste and variation. Characterize the variables (X’s). • Find improvement opportunities. • Based on data analysis, revisit problem statement and assess the need to further scope the issues. COMMUNICATION “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  14. Move the mean. Shrink the variance. Eliminate the waste. Improve Phase • Validate hypothesis about the root cause of the problem • Identify critical variables (X’s) • Identify alternate solutions • Determine optimal solution • Perform cost/benefit analysis • Design improvements • Pilot improvements • Implement and validate improvements COMMUNICATION “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  15. How can we maintain the process improvements? Control Phase • Ensure corrective actions are taken. • Mistake-proof the process. • Transition the control of the new process to the process owner. • Provide techniques to sustain the improvements. • Measure the final capability. • Monitor performance. COMMUNICATION “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  16. Lean Six Sigma Organization Roles & Responsibilities “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  17. Developing the project charter 5 W and 2 H problem identification approach Example Problem Statement: • On-time delivery performance of all ABC units is only 60%. This results in customer complaints and shipment rejections that in turn increases the inventory levels. Goal: • Improve on-time delivery to 95% by the end of June 2009. Who? Identify customers complaining about the problem What? Define the problem accurately When? Timing - When did the problem start? Where? Location - Where is it occurring? Why? Identify the causes (5 WHYs) How? In what mode the problem occur How many? Magnitude or frequency of the problem “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  18. Lean Six Sigma Practitioner Qualities • Customer focus, self-motivated and positive personality • Leadership skills • Excellent communication and presentation skills • Project management skills • Process and product knowledge is preferred • Team player • Result oriented • Data mining • Passionate • Patience • Learner “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  19. Common Causes of Project Failures • Inadequate management support. • Inadequate time for Green Belts/ Black Belts and other team members . • Project Scope Is Too large • “Boiling the ocean” • Project Scope Is Too small • Projects with little business impact. • Solution-in-Mind • “Just Do It” projects do not require the rigors of the LSS DMAIC process. • Data not available or not valid. • Lack of “soft skills” (communication, leadership, team building, and change management). “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  20. Example: Work Order Process Process Mean Improved Process Existing Process 1 50 100 Output Variation in weeks Customers Remember the Extremes (Variation), not the Average “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  21. Lean Six Sigma and Financial Benefits • From 1986 – 2001, Motorola saved $16 billions. • From 1996 – 1999, GE saved $4.4 billions. • From 1998 – 2000, Honeywell saved $ 1.8 billions. • From 2000 - 2000 Ford saved $1 billion. • Over the past 20 years Six Sigma saved Fortune 500 companies an estimated $427 billion. “Safety is a Measure of Success”

  22. “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence then, is not an act, but a habit.”~ Aristotle, 4th century BC Greek philosopher Thank You Safety is a Measure of Success

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