Understanding Kaizen
Metrics
By Sam
Miller
When it comes to streamlining and maximizing
value of production in a company, no other system would beat
kaizen. Kaizen is a quality strategy or scheme adopted and
implemented by companies that are adopting measures for lean
manufacturing, which is known as a process of minimizing
production costs to boost overall valuation of a company.
Kaizen was devised and introduced by Japanese car making giant
Toyota Production System and was shared to all major firms in
operations worldwide. Through the years both minor and major
businesses have been adopting and implementing Kaizen in
efforts to improve profitability and generate costs.
Kaizen is a Japanese word that literally means 'continuous
improvement'. Principally, the idea behind the concept is that
small and relatively negligible improvements and changes in
business operations would lead to major improvements to bolster
productivity, efficiency and profitability in the long run.
Because Kaizen is a systematic process, it is logical that its
implementation is ruled and governed by several practical and
logical metrics. Hence, every company aiming to adopt Kaizen
needs to familiarize first with several important and basic
Kaizen metrics.
Basic Kaizen metrics is often led by overall duration of
production or operational cycles. By this, a company evaluating
itself using Kaizen metrics as a guide determines the overall
efficiency of operations. By looking at the duration employees
complete a product or process, the management can easily tell
whether there is efficiency in production. Manufacturers and
firms know that productivity is boosted when disturbance and
wasteful practices and objects are eliminated from the
workplace. Time factors also deal with the duration of defect
correction and processing.
Also included in the Kaizen metrics is the flow of tasks. In
manufacturing operations and business organizations, it is
important that all employees are working as a team. Competition
with each other is important in boosting productivity, but
overall synergies and cooperation to come up to good results
and increased and efficient production is also as important.
All employees from the least in the ranks, to the middlemen, to
managers and executives must work hand in hand to bolster
production and smoothen flow of job tasks.
In terms of troubleshooting and resolving problems and
disruptions during operations, it is important that companies
implement the system of 'Five Whys', which is again identified
with Kaizen. Companies adopting Kaizen must answer the
following questions when dealing with operational problems:
- Why the equipment did ceased working?
- Why was an overload a problem?
- Why was the machine not lubricated sufficiently?
- Why was the equipment not working efficiently? And
- Why did the machine part worn out?
Part of implementing and observing the metrics of Kaizen is
the follow up sessions. Follow ups serve as assessment and
evaluation of whether improvements in operations are sustained.
Part of the follow up activities is the routine performance
measures to determine if employees and executives have all
contributed productively to operations.
Kaizen metrics are as simple as that. On top of it all, it
is important that companies note that lean manufacturing
productivity measures come in cycles. Production would be
continuously efficient if all personnel involved are
disciplined to follow recommended efficient and productive
processes.
If you are interested in kaizen metrics, check this web-site to
learn more about kaizen scorecard.
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