Page 192 - The Toyota Way Fieldbook
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168                       THE TOYOTA WAY FIELDBOOK


                number of senior engineers, the program ramps up to a peak and then
                comes back down to a relatively small number of engineers through
                launch. Again, this is based on the stability Toyota has in the process.
                Many of its competitors send an army of people to the plant when they
                launch. Toyota has such a well-planned process and does enough
                high-quality engineering in the concept stage that its launches are
                smooth and most engineers are on to another program.
                Fourth, Toyota takes care of the peak of the program by drawing on
                its affiliates. This includes closely linked contract firms that provide
                technicians and computer-aided design specialists at peak times. It
                also includes affiliated companies like suppliers and Toyota Auto Body,
                which send engineers at the peaks. This allows Toyota to keep the core
                engineers on staff and bring in the rest flexibly. Standardized design
                processes and designs help Toyota engineers and affiliates come in and
                out of the program and contribute seamlessly.
                Fifth, Toyota staggers the release of a lot of engineering information. For
                example, its competitors often provide a batch of all body data released
                at once to die engineers who then process all of this data into the design
                of stamping dies. Toyota releases body data as parts are developed and
                released directly to die design, which releases data as it goes to die mak-
                ing. There is a clear understanding of what body parts can be released
                early, before the rest are complete. This creates something like a one-
                piece flow and is much more level than releasing large batches of part
                designs.




                      Reflect and Learn from the Process
                      Basic leveling of production volume and model mix is necessary
                      to establish process stability and continuous flow. Using your
                      current state value stream map as a guide, identify the operations
                      that continue to struggle with meeting the expectation.
                      1. Are these operations being affected by external customer
                         variation?
                         a. Does the daily requirement change?
                         b. Determine the extent of the fluctuation (show the daily
                             demand on a line graph). Variation of greater than 10 per-
                             cent must be reduced.
                         c. Identify current methods for aligning resources (people,
                             material, machines) to these fluctuations, and your effec-
                             tiveness  in meeting the requirement (measurements of
                             efficiency and customer delivery).
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