Kaizen Blitz is a term used
for running a one-time special event, normally one week long, to drastically
make changes in a process. Kaizen Blitz is really a Kaikaku - a
radical change while Kaizen means small incremental changes.
I met both Yoshiki Iwata and Chihiro Nakao in Japan at Toyota subsidiaries and brought
them to America to run the first Kaizen Blitz at Jake Brake, a Danaher company in Bloomfield,Connecticut.
We initially called it ‘Five Days and One
Night,’ meaning that you would learn and work for five days and get very little
sleep during the week.
Iwata gave the initial lecture on a Monday morning, teaching the
principles of the Toyota Production System. The next day we all went into the factory in
teams of around 10 people. Each team looked at one manufacturing process
with the goal of rearranging the machines into manufacturing cells. We
looked at the process carefully, each person taking one part of the process to
study in detail. We calculated the cycle time, the time it was taking to
do each job and then we determined the takt time, the time it should take to
produce the product Just-In-Time. We especially looked at improving the
value adding ratio and the elimination of wastes. We were also taught how
to complete standard work sheets (now called Value Stream Mapping).
Standard work sheets precisely show all of
the tasks of a job including walking, and the time necessary for each task.
They also show the sequence of tasks, jigs and tools needed, and the location
of stock. They are used to show both the current process and the future process
with cycle times and takt times. The Standard Work sheets are used to map
out the new processes to make sure that every operation will be done within
takt time. Standard Work sheets detail the motion of the operator, the
sequence of operations and how long it takes to do each task. It is used
to determine opportunities for improvement. As we improve we revise the
Standard Worksheets.
On Wednesday morning we went into the plant and completely mapped out
five different processes showing the cycle timesand
the takt times. This third day we started to plan how we would move the
machines, how we would position the workers, and listed the many problems that
had to be solved for the process to be run smoothly on takt time. Problems
immediately rose to the surface.
On Wednesday night we moved 50 machines into their
five machine cells. While doing this we also listed all of the problems
and potential problems that had to be addressed to have the new lines running
properly. The problems would be work projects for company engineers,
managers and workers to solve over the next few months. The list was long.
We were intentionally creating chaos – a good thing
by the way, for when you do shake up things you can bring marvelous change to a
company. But people should be treated more respectfully, and told what
will happen, and be assured that they will all be trained and that everyone
will be able to do the job well. It would be good to tell people that the
change coming is not going to lose any jobs. Unfortunately, Lean has not
necessarily made manufacturing more efficient and many jobs have been lost in
the US.
In Japan people
were protected by lifetime employment and are therefore willing to accept
change.
On Thursday morning, after staying up after midnight moving the machines, all the
participants began to work with the Jake Brake employees to explain how they
now were going to work in their new cells. Many of the workers looked to
be in a state of ‘shock,’ not knowing what was to be expected of them. The
workers were not part of the teams. They really had no idea that overnight
their work was going to change so radically.
In reality we treated the workers like
pawns. The net result would have been a much better experience for people
if they were informed in advance about the changes and were also involved in
the training along with their managers. Where they were used to running
just one machine in the machine cell they would be expected to run many
machines one after the other. Probably the biggest change for the workers,
were to stand, not sit while they work.
For most of the engineers and managers in the workshop
the most exciting aspect was the standard worksheets and rearranging the
factory into work cells, but to me it was Jidoka which gave us an opportunity
to look differently at the human being in the work environment.
On Friday morning the five groups presented their
case studies.
It was a glorious event, probably, one of the most
important moments of transition in American manufacturing history. The
amazing thing is that it worked. The ex-Toyota managers leading the
training had spent years working under Mr. Taiichi Ohno, former
VP/manufacturing at
Toyota,
and Dr. Shigeo Shingo, independent consultant and the real brains behind
Lean. This workshop was used effectively with Toyota and their suppliers
to drive Just-In-Time (Lean) throughout their organization.
Of course, Jake Brake was in chaos for the next
three months, late on their shipments, and all kinds of problems arose. But
after those three months, the company was able to reduce inventory
substantially, reduce defects, and deliver products to the customer exactly
when they needed them.
At the Jake Brake event
we were taught a number of very powerful concepts to make lean work: Jidoka
(also referred to as autonomation), adding human judgment to automated
equipment, the analogy of inventory acting like a river (hiding most
manufacturing problems), and the use of the standard work sheets to improve the
processes by rearranging the factory primarily into work cells.
In the old “smokestack” factory, where machines
built enormous piles of inventory, the worker was there as an attendant to
watch the machines, to load and unload materials, to make adjustments, and
insure that the machines were operating efficiently. But rarely was the
worker asked to think or make independent decisions to improve productivity and
quality.
The Kaizen Blitz works very
effectively. Talented people form teams and analyze a process and take out
the waste. Many engineers and managers know what waste is, but they are
reluctant to go out and do this on their own. It was a great event.
For your Project Kaizen Groups “The Blitz” could be
a glorious event for you.
Bill
Waddell at Evolving Excellence
Chuck
Frey at Innovation
Weblog
Hal
Macomber at Reforming
Project Management
Joe
Ely at Learning about Lean
John
Miller at Panta Rei
Mark
Graban at Lean Manufacturing Blog
Norman - I really respect you for looking back and realizing that the kaizen blitz activities would have been much more impactful with the full engagement of the production workers. It's a valuable lesson for us all. Thanks for your writing.
Posted by: Mark Graban | December 09, 2005 at 10:30 AM