Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.
- ISBN: 9781420088625 | 1420088629
- Cover: Hardcover
- Copyright: 1/1/2010
Liquid industries, including reactive chemical factories, petroleum and metal refining, food and bio-pharma production are ones that could make great use of the concepts of lean. However, lean manufacturing is not widely used in these industries, largely because they are naturally conservative and thanks to the times, more financially stable than most, so great case stories of successful lean implementation are rare. This book will be the first to offer details and examples of adapting lean manufacturing to liquid industries. It will be based on more than twenty years of industry experience from the legendary Raymond Floyd, one of the first to successfully practice lean in the chemical industry.
Foreword | p. xv |
Acknowledgments | p. xix |
Business Results in Process Industries | p. 1 |
Introduction | p. 1 |
How This Book Is Organized: Shingo Prize Criteria | p. 2 |
Business Results: Improve Performance with Lean | p. 3 |
Beat the Competition with Very Flexible Manufacturing | p. 4 |
Improve Performance with Lean and an Engaged Workforce | p. 7 |
Gain First Mover Advantage | p. 10 |
Achieve Prompt Improvement | p. 13 |
All Companies Can Benefit from Lean, but Not All Do | p. 14 |
Disruptive Changes | p. 15 |
Why the Process Industry Needs Its Own Version of Lean | p. 16 |
Transforming the Raw Material | p. 17 |
Indirect Material Transformations | p. 18 |
Time as an Independent Element of Production | p. 19 |
Special Case: Continuous Processing | p. 21 |
Notes | p. 22 |
Lean Enterprise Thinking | p. 23 |
Introduction | p. 23 |
Developing a Western Lean-Enabling Culture | p. 25 |
Historical Perspective | p. 27 |
Early View of Lean: Just-in-Time Manufacturing | p. 27 |
Early View of Engaged Employees: Quality Circles | p. 30 |
The Eight Sources of Waste | p. 32 |
The Relationship between Inventory and Operating Problems | p. 34 |
Value Streams and Support Processes | p. 36 |
Lean Values: Inventory Reductions Can Sustain Improvements | p. 39 |
Lean Values: Culture of Engagement | p. 40 |
Notes | p. 42 |
Policy Deployment | p. 43 |
Introduction | p. 43 |
Large Events and Small Events | p. 44 |
A Strategic View of Manufacturing | p. 45 |
Strategic Alignment and Necessary Boundaries | p. 48 |
Prerequisites for Structured Autonomous Improvement | p. 50 |
Strategic Direction | p. 52 |
The Role of Communication in Achieving Strategic Alignment | p. 54 |
Limiting Opportunities for Improvement | p. 59 |
Deploying Strategic Intent | p. 60 |
Simple Statement of the Goal | p. 60 |
Prose Statement of Intended Future State | p. 61 |
Prose Statement of Current Reality | p. 61 |
Objective Measures of Progress | p. 61 |
Interim Performance Targets | p. 62 |
Formatting Goal Statement | p. 62 |
Translating Strategic Intent throughout the Organization | p. 63 |
Framework for Action | p. 69 |
How Quality Stations Work | p. 70 |
Display the Team Goals | p. 71 |
Display What the Team Has Completed | p. 73 |
Show the Work in Progress | p. 74 |
Provide Interactive Space | p. 74 |
Policy Deployment in Action: Conversations at a Quality Station | p. 75 |
Internal Team Conversations | p. 76 |
External Team Conversations | p. 79 |
Improving Flexibility and Availability in Mechanical Equipment | p. 81 |
Introduction | p. 81 |
Single Minute Exchange of Dies System | p. 82 |
What We Can Learn from NASCAR | p. 84 |
Translating NASCAR Success to Our Plants | p. 85 |
Preparation | p. 85 |
Teamwork | p. 88 |
Equipment | p. 89 |
How to Use the SMED Concept | p. 91 |
The Five Key Components of SMED Practice | p. 92 |
Separation of Activities | p. 94 |
Modification of Rate-Limiting Internal Activities | p. 99 |
Modification of the Work Team | p. 102 |
Modification of the Equipment | p. 103 |
Modify Equipment to Maximize Efficiency | p. 104 |
Preparing for Events and Sustaining the Improvements | p. 109 |
Outcome of Improvements | p. 110 |
Operational Planning to Improve Chemical Transitions | p. 113 |
Introduction | p. 113 |
The Causes of Chemical Inflexibility | p. 114 |
Chemical Contamination | p. 114 |
Unintended Conversions | p. 114 |
Fixed Sequence Variable Volume Production | p. 115 |
The Concept: A Comprehensive Approach to the Production Cycle | p. 116 |
What We Can Learn from the New York Subway System | p. 117 |
The Four Components of FSVV Practice | p. 119 |
Typical Operating Problems | p. 120 |
Changes in Process Conditions | p. 120 |
Additives and Modifiers | p. 120 |
Changes in Reactive Chemicals | p. 121 |
The Fixed Sequence | p. 121 |
Establishing a Fixed Sequence | p. 122 |
FSVV Inventory Policy | p. 126 |
Days of Demand in Inventory | p. 126 |
ABC Inventories | p. 127 |
FSVV Inventory Policy | p. 128 |
Wheels within Wheels | p. 130 |
Variable Volume Scheduling | p. 131 |
Continuous Improvement | p. 134 |
Sustainability over Time | p. 136 |
The “Exception” Problem | p. 136 |
Assessment and Improvement of Other Accumulations | p. 139 |
Introduction | p. 139 |
Structural Differences between Process Industries and Mechanical Manufacturing | p. 140 |
Small Accumulations in Process Industries | p. 141 |
Statistical Quality Improvement | p. 153 |
Introduction | p. 153 |
The Power of Statistical Quality Combined with Lean Manufacturing | p. 153 |
Statistical Methods in the Process Industries | p. 154 |
Basic Statistical Concepts | p. 156 |
Six Sigma | p. 157 |
Process Improvement before Statistical Analysis | p. 159 |
Process Improvement Using Statistical Analysis | p. 160 |
Operational Improvement with Statistical Analysis | p. 161 |
Statistical Models of Process Performance | p. 162 |
Using Statistical Analysis: The Process Capability Index | p. 163 |
Capable Processes | p. 164 |
Incapable Processes | p. 165 |
Using SPC at the Frontline in a Process Plant | p. 168 |
Using a Run Chart | p. 169 |
When the Run Chart Says the Process Is Operating Normally | p. 169 |
When the Run Chart Says the Process Is Producing an Unexpected Result | p. 171 |
When the Run Chart Says the Process Is “Nearly Normal,” but Results Are Drifting | p. 172 |
Avoid the Waste of Excess Quality | p. 174 |
Notes | p. 175 |
Mistake Proofing or Poka-Yoke | p. 177 |
Introduction | p. 177 |
Mistakes Come in Two Parts | p. 178 |
The Consequences of Mistakes | p. 179 |
Mistake Proofing: Preventing Consequences | p. 180 |
Mistake Proofing Is Common Knowledge | p. 180 |
Warning Systems | p. 181 |
Four Types of Warning Systems | p. 182 |
Poka-Yoke Practice 1: Physical Separation | p. 182 |
Poka-Yoke Practice 2: Visual Signals | p. 185 |
Poka-Yoke Practice 3: Pattern Recognition | p. 189 |
Poka-Yoke Practice 4: Simple Physical Devices and Other Minor Changes | p. 191 |
Approaching Perfect Production | p. 192 |
Equipment Reliability and Operator Care | p. 195 |
Introduction | p. 195 |
Finding the Cause: Separating the Processes from the Equipment | p. 195 |
The Role of Equipment Reliability in Lean Practice | p. 196 |
Operator Care | p. 197 |
The Fundamentals of Operator Care | p. 199 |
Phase I: Basic Care | p. 199 |
Keep the Equipment Clean | p. 201 |
Keep the Equipment Cool | p. 216 |
Keep the Equipment Lubricated | p. 220 |
Phase II: Advanced Techniques | p. 221 |
Define Your Goals | p. 221 |
Change the Oil and the Filters | p. 222 |
Pay Attention | p. 223 |
Autonomous Maintenance as an Element in Improvement | p. 225 |
Autonomous Actions | p. 229 |
Lean Leadership and Ethics: Creating an Engaged Workforce | p. 235 |
Introduction | p. 235 |
Improvement Experiences at the Frontline | p. 237 |
The Structure of Employee Engagement | p. 238 |
The Elements of Engagement | p. 238 |
Clear Goals | p. 239 |
Skills Necessary to Achieve the Goals | p. 240 |
Time to Make Improvements | p. 243 |
Access to the Resources That Cause Change | p. 244 |
Framework for Action | p. 246 |
Engage Frontline Teams | p. 247 |
What to Do When Teams Do Not Engage | p. 248 |
Refresh the Understanding of Small Event Improvement | p. 249 |
The Subjective Elements of Engagement | p. 250 |
Lack of Trust in Management | p. 251 |
Disruption by Team Members | p. 253 |
Intentional Disruption | p. 254 |
Unintentional Disruption | p. 256 |
Industrial Culture | p. 257 |
Notes | p. 258 |
People Development | p. 259 |
Introduction | p. 259 |
Impact of Competent People on Organizational Performance | p. 260 |
Competence Defined | p. 261 |
Basic Competence | p. 262 |
Basic Competence Development | p. 264 |
Superior Performance | p. 264 |
Critical Positions | p. 266 |
Finding the Right Management Tool | p. 267 |
A Quick Description of Our Analysis | p. 267 |
The Influence of Critical Positions on Improvement | p. 267 |
Individual Contributors | p. 268 |
Subject Matter Experts or Mentors | p. 269 |
Leaders | p. 271 |
Identifying Critical Roles in Your Organization | p. 271 |
Common Misconceptions | p. 272 |
Developing Highly Competent People | p. 274 |
Beginning the Process | p. 275 |
Prompt Improvement | p. 277 |
Sustaining the Improvement | p. 278 |
Leadership: Initiating and Sustaining Lean Operations | p. 281 |
Introduction | p. 281 |
Transforming an Organization and Sustaining the Change | p. 281 |
Sustaining Improvement | p. 284 |
Process Documentation | p. 285 |
The Role of Transformational Leadership | p. 286 |
Sustaining Leadership | p. 289 |
When the Leader Is Not the CEO | p. 290 |
Getting Started | p. 292 |
The Value of 6-Month Intervals | p. 292 |
Three Attributes of a Successful Beginning | p. 293 |
The Value of Shared Vision | p. 294 |
The Value of Immediate Pilot Projects | p. 294 |
The Value of New Tools | p. 298 |
Notes | p. 307 |
Index | p. 309 |
About the Author | p. 325 |
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