Page 72 - The Toyota Way Fieldbook
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Chapter 3. Starting the Journey of Waste Reduction               49


        years in the plant working on improvement projects before you even reach novice
        status in the Toyota Production System. There is a lot to learn that can only be
        learned by doing. Mapping makes people feel like they’re doing lean, but it is
        simply drawing pictures. To push an earlier analogy further, if I hand you a blue-
        print, it does not mean you can build the house. There are many skills involved.

        Creating Flow Step by Step

        Value stream mapping gives us a picture of how to put the pieces of the puzzle
        together to get a connected value stream. When we do specific point kaizen, we
        can reduce changeover time here, set up a cell there, put in a few mistake-proof-
        ing devices across the plant, and end up with little islands of improvement. But
        the big bang comes from setting up a system where material flows smoothly
        across processes based on the takt time—the rate of customer demand. The
        operations should be synchronized like a fine symphony orchestra. But how do
        we get to this point? Once the future state map is drawn, how should we pro-
        ceed to implement it?
            The creation of lean processes requires a methodical, step-by-step approach.
        The first step prior to setting up one-piece flow is to create a stable process capa-
        ble of meeting customer requirements. The creation of flow, and the subsequent
        connecting of operations, forces problems to surface, and any abnormalities will
        shut down production. It is imperative that all operations achieve a basic level
        of consistent capability prior to the establishment of flow. If flow is attempted
        before this basic readiness, the result could be catastrophic. Do not aim for per-
        fection, since improvement should continue once you have set up good flow.
        After one operation has reached this level, a second process is stabilized, and
        then the two processes are “connected,” or “linked,” making each process
        dependent on the other. This continues over and over until all operations in the
        value stream are connected, and flow with minimal stoppages is continuous
        from the first operation to the last. The continuous improvement cycle is shown
        in Figure 3-3.
            This process is typically introduced in a “phased” or “staged” implementa-
        tion. Initially each operation in the value stream progresses through the phases
        independently.  After successfully connecting to other operations, the entire
        chain progresses concurrently. With a step-by-step compression of the time
        frame representing the customer requirement—weekly schedules become daily,
        become hourly, and so on—the process with the greatest weakness (most waste)
        will appear.
            This repeated loop could be thought of as a spiral of deepening flow as
        illustrated in Figure 3-4. Each cycle through the phases results in ever smaller
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