The Lean Manufacturing Assessment –
A Brief Overview
First off, even a Lean Assessment should be a Value-Adding
experience for your company. It’s not enough for a couple
of consultants to drop-in, take a look around, and then send you
a report that tells you what they observed and what to do.
Most of the time you’ll pay for a Lean Assessment, (though
probably at a reduced rate,) so you should still expect some
tangible return on your investment beyond a report. Your
assessors will be looking for waste. When and where they find
waste, in its many forms, and how to eliminate it should be an
expected deliverable.
The following is a very brief overview of some things you should
look for when hiring a consultant to assess the opportunities for
Lean at your company. This also applies to the progress you have
made so far if assessing for benchmarking purposes.
This is
NOT an exhaustive list by any means, but it is a
good start.
Although a good assessor should make the process flex to the
specifics of each company, I have outlined some of the common
items you should expect during and after a typical 1 – 5
day assessment.
The Lean Assessor Should Do the Following (at
minimum):
1. Meet with you by phone or in person to discuss some of the
specific information you wish to collect during the assessment
process. Although the consultant will have his or her own
approach and measurement systems, there may be data important to
you that are not generally gathered. You’ll get far greater
benefit by mentioning your specific metrics up-front.
(At Each Plant Being Assessed)
2. Speak with a senior management team member regarding the
assessment process by phone and arrange for a “process
expert(s)” to guide them throughout your company during the
visit. It is wise for you to mention the visit to the management
team, express your support for the process, and ask that they be
as helpful as possible.
3. Once on site they should hold a brief introductory meeting
with at least one member of the senior management team to discuss
the process, resources needed, and assure them that they will do
all in their power to be helpful etc. This is also a great time
for your consultant to ask senior managers where they believe the
greatest needs for improvement are. Most seasoned managers
probably already know where most of the opportunities lie and can
be very helpful to the consultant and get him to better
understand their concerns. This is true even if opportunities
that are more significant are found elsewhere during the
assessment process.
a. Side Note: Consultants aren’t trying to
trick you into giving them information that they should be able
to find on their own. They value your experience and insider
expertise and use it to ensure maximum value is added to the
process. Forget the clichés about consultants; few would
be in business today if they were true.
4. Walk the process. Most consultants like to start with what is
generally “the beginning” of the process (as far as
the plant is concerned,) which is Sales/Order Taking. A brief
overview of how that process is conducted will naturally lead
them to Planning, Engineering, Scheduling, etc. In each
department, they will seek out a “resident expert” or
two, and pick their brains regarding their processes in general
terms. Before long, they will find their way to the shop floor
where value-adding activities and Lean opportunities should
abound. Occasionally assessors will begin their analysis at the
“back door” or shipping dock where internal processes
end. This is a method used to help assessors get closer to
“external customers” and try to see your system from
their perspective. Both approaches seem to work equally well.
5. Once on the shop floor (with your resident expert,) they will
begin “walking the floor” from wherever the starting
point is, sequentially throughout the entire production system
(Value Stream.)
a. As each functional area is visited they will
observe and ask questions related to their processes and seek out
examples of how they apply appropriate Lean tools and skills
within their areas. Implementation of 5S, SMED, Maintenance
(TPM), Standardized Work Instructions, Visual Controls, KanBans,
WIP Levels, Product Flow, Materials Replenishment, Ergonomics
Concerns, Potential Safety Risks, Teamwork, Cultural Issues,
Workspace Utilization, as well as quite a large number of other
factors are evaluated.
b. After this initial “value-adding” assessment has
been conducted, your assessor will generally visit areas such as
stockrooms, a connected warehouse, shipping & receiving,
scout around for inventory in all its’ forms, find the
company “junk pile” (if there is one,) and etc. Like
the shop floor assessment process, many questions will be asked
and observations are noted.
c. Very often at this point in the process your assessor might
dismiss your “resident expert” tour guide, and begin
the process over again, either from the beginning, or by going to
critical areas that have potential for profoundly positive, or
even far-reaching negative, impact on the rest of the processes
or company. They will spend a fair amount of time discussing area
issues with operators and shop floor level supervisors to get the
closest view possible to the where and how the actual work is
performed. This “up close and personal” examination
is a critical step to finding the “Bang for the Buck”
Lean opportunities.
d. Nearing completion, time is beginning to run short on a 2 day
assessment (which is a common length for an assessment,) so your
assessor will generally begin looking much more closely at the
areas/issues that, if addressed, would have the greatest positive
(even immediate bottom-line impact,) and generate the largest
overall gain.
6. On the final day of assessment, most assessors will once again
meet with one or more members of senior management to ask
questions and get some clarifications on some of their
observations. Very often they will discuss many of their
observations and suggest some improvements that could be
implemented very quickly to alleviate certain problems, or simply
reduce wastes with little or no investment. If this feedback is
accepted and action is taken quickly, the gains realized will pay
for the assessment visit many times over. Sometimes incredible
improvements are made before the assessor even finishes his
process. Good assessors expect to leave this type of value with
their clients even if it is “only an assessment.”
7. Upon conclusion of the assessment, the assessor will begin
compiling the results of his or her observations. They will
generally compose a categorical bulleted list type of report
describing the status of items like: SMED Implementation,
Workplace Organization 5S, (all applicable Lean Tools,) and their
level of proficiency, acceptance, and implementation etc. This is
followed by recommendations regarding the “tools” of
Lean, and where further attention is warranted and in what
sequence.
8. The Lean Assessment is closed-out by identifying opportunities
for improvement and suggesting a sequence and process to
addressing them in order to achieve maximum results, in the
shortest amount of time, while consuming the least amount of
resources possible. This document is emailed (or mailed) to all
parties you have indicated to receive it. Of course, there should
be follow-up with emails and phone calls for clarification and
planning purposes, even if you choose not to use the training and
implementation assistance of your assessor in your Lean
Improvement efforts.
It should also be noted that two heads are always better than one
when it comes to conducting assessments (and most anything else
for that matter.) Obviously, that doubles the cost, but it has
been my experience that it at least triples the ROI. It still
takes the same number of days per assessment as it is not
“divide and conquer” for the most part, but the
assessors will stick together to feed off each other’s
insights and ideas.
In very large companies, perhaps several consultants/assessors
are warranted and they will certainly divide the assessment
process among the team. That’s fine, but don’t let
them “move-in” on you. I often hear stories of large
consulting firms bringing a team of 20 – 30 consultants in
for several weeks of “analysis” before any
improvements begin to happen at all. In Lean we call that
“WASTE” and “analysis paralysis,” and
though some call it thorough, we call it excessive except in the
rarest cases (which we have yet to see.)
Of course there is much more that could be said on this subject
but I hope this gives you some sense of what to expect when you
decide to engage in the Lean Assessment process. Having an
assessment completed by a reputable firm is a critical step to
maximizing the benefits realized in your Lean transformation
process. If you are already well into Lean improvements you
should consider at least annual assessments of your facilities
from outside Lean experts with “fresh eyes.” Again, a
value-adding assessment will pay for itself many times over.
Click
HERE If you
would like to learn more about “waste” and how a Lean
Assessment can help you.