Lean Systems and Six-Sigma Quality

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Statistical Quality Control
Advertisements

Chapter 6 - Statistical Process Control
LC Technology Manufacturing Systems. Quality Management – Pareto Analysis Pinpoints problems through the identification and separation of the ‘vital few’
Quality Assurance (Quality Control)
1 © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2006 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Technical Note 9 Process Capability and Statistical Quality Control.
Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Statistical Process Control Operations Management - 5 th Edition.
Statistical Process Control. 4-2 Lecture Outline  Basics of Statistical Process Control  Control Charts  Control Charts for Attributes  Control Charts.
1 Manufacturing Process A sequence of activities that is intended to achieve a result (Juran). Quality of Manufacturing Process depends on Entry Criteria.
HABEEB HATTAB HABEEB Office: BN-Block, Level-3, Room Ext. No.: 7292 H/P No.:
Chapter 3 Planning for Production. Objectives Product oriented manufacturing systems versus people oriented manufacturing systems. Manufacturing smaller.
Just-in-Time and Lean Systems
Chapter 18 Introduction to Quality
Just-In-Time and Lean Systems
Lean Systems and Six Sigma Quality
Just-in-Time and Lean Systems
S6 - 1© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall S6 Statistical Process Control PowerPoint presentation to accompany Heizer and Render.
Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Statistical Process Control Operations Management - 5 th Edition.
Quality Control Tools for Improving Processes
CHAPTER 8TN Process Capability and Statistical Quality Control
Managing Quality.
Chapter 7 – Just-in-Time and Lean Systems Operations Management by R. Dan Reid & Nada R. Sander s 2 nd Edition © Wiley 2005 PowerPoint Presentation by.
Management 11e John Schermerhorn
Chapter 16 - Lean Systems Focus on operations strategy, process, technology, quality, capacity, layout, supply chains, and inventory. Operations systems.
Total Quality Management BUS 3 – 142 Statistics for Variables Week of Mar 14, 2011.
© Wiley Chapter 7 – Just-in-Time and Lean Systems Operations Management by R. Dan Reid & Nada R. Sanders 4th Edition © Wiley 2010.
Copyright 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Chapter 10 Lean Systems and Six-Sigma Quality 10-1.
Quality Control and Improvement
JUST IN TIME. Just in Time Getting the right quantity of goods at the right place at the right time.
Quality, Quality Control Lee Buddress, Ph,D., C.P.M. Robert G. Gleason Professor and Director Supply and Logistics Program Portland State University.
Statistical Process Control (SPC)
Chapter 9 Quality Management – Focus on 6 Sigma
Process Capability and SPC
Quality Control McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
SIX-SIGMA QUALITY Chapter Understand total quality management. 2. Describe how quality is measured and be aware of the different dimensions of quality.
Just-in-Time (JIT) and Lean Systems Chapter 7. MGMT 326 Foundations of Operations Introduction Strategy Quality Assurance Facilities Planning & Control.
1 Outline:  Six Sigma Quality and Tools  ISO 9000  Service Quality Measurement Six-Sigma Quality.
Chapter 7 – Just-in-Time and Lean Systems
Process Capability and SPC
Process Capability and Statistical Process Control.
© 2006 Prentice Hall, Inc.S6 – 1 Operations Management Supplement 6 – Statistical Process Control © 2006 Prentice Hall, Inc. PowerPoint presentation to.
Welcome to MM305 Unit 8 Seminar Diallo Wallace Statistical Quality Control.
Statistical Process Control (SPC)
Reid & Sanders, Operations Management © Wiley 2002 Statistical Quality Control 6 C H A P T E R.
Statistical Quality Control/Statistical Process Control
Copyright 2009, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Statistical Process Control Operations Management - 5 th Edition.
Chapter 11 TQM & Quality Tools. Management 3620Chapter 11 TQM and Quality Tools11-2 Total Quality Management A philosophy that involves everyone in an.
Statistical Quality Control
Operations Fall 2015 Bruce Duggan Providence University College.
Quality Improvement Tools CHAPTER SIX SUPPLEMENT McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1 © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., Technical Note 7 Process Capability and Statistical Quality Control.
Just-in-Time (JIT) and Lean Systems Chapter 7. Management 326 Operations and Operations Strategy Designing an Operations System Managing an Operations.
Chapter 7 – Just-in-Time and Lean Systems
© 2005 Wiley1 Total Quality Management Chapter 5.
Reid & Sanders, Operations Management © Wiley 2002 Just-In-Time Systems 7 C H A P T E R.
Operations Management JIT & Lean Systems
LSM733-PRODUCTION OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT By: OSMAN BIN SAIF LECTURE 30 1.
Fishbone diagram Visual model to clarify cause-and-effect relationships. scatter diagram or fishbone diagram or histogram? Click here for Hint.
Quality Control Chapter 6. Transformation Process Inputs Facilities Equipment Materials Energy Outputs Goods & Services Variation in inputs create variation.
MOS 3330 Operations Management Professor Burjaw Fall/Winter
Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. U N I T. 2 RESOURCE PLANNING WORKFORCE CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS CAPACITY FACILITIES.
Assemble-to- order (ATO) A system that produces standard modules to be modified and/or combined into a customizable product. ATO or QFD or DMAIC? Click.
1-1 1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved.
Statistical Quality Control
TQM Defined Total quality management is defined as managing the entire organization so that it excels on all dimensions of products and services that are.
Process Capability and Capability Index
Just-in-Time and Lean Systems
36.1 Introduction Objective of Quality Engineering:
Lean Systems and Six-Sigma Quality
Operations Management
Presentation transcript:

Lean Systems and Six-Sigma Quality Chapter 10 Lean Systems and Six-Sigma Quality

Lecture Outline What is Lean? Lean Production Respect for People Total Quality Management (TQM) Statistical Quality Control (SQC) Six-Sigma Quality Lean Six-Sigma Supply Chain

What is Lean? Lean is a management approach for creating value for the end customer through the most efficient utilization resources possible Standard in many industries Often results in: large cost reductions improved quality increased customer service

Lean Six Sigma Combines the approaches of Lean and Six Sigma Six Sigma methodology to identify and eliminate causes of quality problems

Tenets of Lean There are six tenets of the Lean Philosophy: Elimination of Waste eliminate all non-value adding activities A Broad View decisions made for the success of the entire supply chain all supply chain members responsible for adding value Simplicity the simpler the solution the better

Tenets of Lean Continued Continuous Improvement emphasis on quality and continuous improvement called kaizen Visibility visible problems are identified and solved Flexibility easily switch from one product type to another, using flexible workers that perform many different tasks

Elements of Lean Lean is composed of three elements that work in unison: Lean Production Total Quality Management (TQM) Respect for People

Elements of Lean

Lean Production Coordinated system for producing the exact products desired, delivered in right quantities to where needed Just-in-Time The Pull System Visual Signals Small Lot Production Uniform Plant Loading

The Pull System Traditional approach Pull approach supply chains work as “push” systems inventory carried to cover up problems Pull approach each stage in supply chain requests quantities needed from the previous stage no excess inventory generated reduced inventory exposes problems

Visual Signals Communication between workstations Kanban “signal” or “card” in Japanese contains information passed between stations authorizes production

Visual Signals

Small Lot Production The amount of products produced at any one time is small reduces inventory and excess processing increases flexibility shortens manufacturing lead time responds to customer demands more quickly setup time must be low

Uniform Plant Loading Problem Uniform Plant Loading demand changes are magnified throughout the supply chain contributes to inefficiency and waste Uniform Plant Loading production schedule is frozen for the month also called “leveling” helps suppliers better plan own production

Respect for People Respect for all people must exist for an organization to be its best flatter hierarchy than traditional organizations ordinary workers given great responsibility supply chain members work together in cross functional teams Look at Role of: workers, management, and suppliers

Role of Workers Workers have the ability to perform many different tasks and are actively engaged in pursuing company goals Worker Duties improve production process monitor quality correct quality problems Work in Teams quality circles

Role of Management Create the cultural change in the organization needed for Lean to succeed provide atmosphere of cooperation Empower workers to take action based on their ideas develop incentive system for lean behaviors

Role of Suppliers Lean builds long-term supplier relationships companies partner with suppliers improve process quality information sharing goal to have single-source suppliers

Total Quality Management (TQM) TQM is an integrated organizational effort designed to improve quality at every level Look at: Quality Gurus Voice of the Customer Costs of Quality Quality Tools ISO 9000

Quality Gurus

Voice of the Customer Quality is defined as meeting or exceeding customer expectations Determine customer wants: focus groups market surveys customer interviews

Costs of Quality

Quality Tools Lean requires workers to identify and correct quality problems Seven Tools of Quality Control: Cause and Effect Diagrams Flowcharts Checklists Control Charts Scatter Diagrams Pareto Analysis Histograms

Cause and Effect Diagrams Identify causes of a quality problem sometimes called “fishbone diagrams”

Flowchart Diagrams the sequence of steps in an operation or process

Checklist Lists common defects and number of occurrences of the defects

Control Chart Determines whether a process is operating within expectations

Scatter Diagram Graph that visually shows how two variables are related to one another

Pareto Analysis Based on the premise that a small number of causes create the majority of problems identifies problems based on degree of importance

Histogram Chart that shows the frequency distribution of observed values of a variable

ISO 9000 “Family” of standards for quality management ISO 14000 increased international trade developed a need published by International Organization for Standards (ISO) in 1987 concerns measuring and documenting the quality process ISO provides a certification process ISO 14000 standards for environmental management

Statistical Quality Control (SQC) SQC is the use of statistical tools to measure product and process quality Three categories: Descriptive Statistics describe quality characteristics Statistical Process Control (SPC) a random sample of output is used to determine if characteristics are acceptable Acceptance Sampling sample determines if whole batch is acceptable

Sources of Variation All processes have variation Assignable Variation caused by factors that can be clearly identified and managed Common Variation inherent in the process also called random variation

Process Capability Process Capability evaluates the variation of the process relative to product specifications Product Specifications ranges of acceptable quality characteristics also called tolerances Process Variation all processes have natural variation defects are produced when variation exceeds product specifications

Process Variation Equal to Specification Range

Process Variation Exceeds Specification Range

Process Variation Narrower than Specification Range

Process Capability Index where: USL = upper specification limit LSL = lower specification limit Cp Values: Cp = 1: process is minimally capable Cp ≤ 1: process is not capable of producing products within specification Cp ≥ 1: process exceeds minimum capability

Cp Example Given a process with three separate machines that are used to fill jars with pasta sauce. specification range is between 30 and 34 ounces process mean, μ, is 31 ounces Machine σ A 0.6 B 0.7 C 1.2 Calculate the Cp for each machine to determine capabilities

Cp Example Continued A: B: C: Machine A has a Cp > 1, however the process mean is not centered

Cpk Example Cpk addresses the lack of centering of the process over the specification range Machine A: Cpk = min (1.66, 0.55) = 0.55

Process Control Charts Graph that shows whether a sample of data falls within the common range of variation sample process output plot result on the control chart use to determine if process is in control can monitor: variables characteristics that can be measured attributes characteristics that can be counted

Process Control Charts

Control Charts for Attributes A p-chart monitors the proportion of defective items in a sample centerline: average value of p across all samples, p UCL = p + z sp LCL = p – z sp where: z = standard normal variable p = sample proportion defective sp = = standard deviation of avg. proportion defective

# of Incorrect Procedures P-Chart Example Given the following five samples of data tracking incorrect procedures in a hospital Sample # of Incorrect Procedures # Inspected Fraction Defective 1 10 0.1 2 3 0.2 4 5 Total 50

P-Chart Example Continued p = 5/10 = 0.10 UCL = p + z sp = 0.10 + 3(0.095) = 0.385 LCL = p + z sp = 0.10 - 3(0.095) = 0.185