Page 235 - The Toyota Way Fieldbook
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Chapter 9. Make Technology Fit                      211


        and how many bins could be held in inventory. Kanban cards were printed to
        match the number of bins that could be produced. No card—no production—
        no more inventory. Toyota worked on equipment reliability, built-in quality, and
        operator training. Through continuous improvement, they had so little inven-
        tory that there was no real value to collecting real-time inventory data at each
        stage in the process—this is just waste. In other words, they worked on devel-
        oping the true process of production and connecting production processes
        through simple communication vehicles and standard processes. They were
        less interested in non-value adding “business processes” aimed at getting
        data into computers. Interestingly, having worked out these manual systems
        Toyota has evolved to electronic kanban. But these run in parallel to a manual
        kanban system that provides for visual control yet with the benefits of modern
        computer technology.
            The traditional supply chain software that promised visibility is actually
        based on a philosophy of top-down control. The belief is that if top management
        has all the information they need at their fingertips, they can control the system.
        The kanban system is based on a philosophy of local control. The workplace is
        viewed as a series of customer-supplier relationships with customers specifying
        just what they need when they need it through the kanban. Top management are
        expected to audit the system by walking down to the floor and seeing for them-
        selves (Figure 9-4).



            TIP
                      Always Verify the Actual Condition Yourself
                      We were working on a particular process to achieve stability and
                      address operational availability issues, and the production planner
                      on the team frequently commented that the process was “behind.”
                      Observations on the floor revealed that there was no work waiting
                      to be processed. From a traditional Toyota standpoint, an operation
                      can’t be considered behind if an upstream process is starving it or
                      if the customer process is full. This is all visual, and easy to deter-
                      mine by looking at the work area and observing the connections
                      between operations. Confused, we asked the production planner
                      to explain how the machine could be “behind.” The answer was,
                      “That’s what the system says!” meaning that the MRP planning
                      system showed work that was scheduled to be complete at that
                      operation and wasn’t. Simply using system information without
                      corresponding process information can lead to false assumptions
                      and misguided efforts to correct the “problem.”
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