David Dodd
Well-known member
Last week over in the Prepress and Workflow forum, someone asked a question about how to prevent, reduce, or eliminate production mistakes. Another forum member responded by saying that the answer to this question begins with lean manufacturing and that Standard Work is an amazing tool. I introduced Standard Work a few days ago in another thread, and I won't repeat that information here except to say that Standard Work can be a powerful tool for reducing errors and defects.
What often goes unappreciated is that Standard Work and the other "techniques" of lean are simply tools for solving problems. Real success with lean comes not from using tools for tools' sake, but from using tools to solve problems that are inhibiting better business performance.
Note that the objective here is "solving problems" not simply "correcting errors/mistakes." Under the pressures of daily work, there is a strong tendency to simply "fix the errors" and get on with production. The downside of that approach is that, if you don't identify the root cause of the problem and eliminate the cause or deal with it in some other way, you'll find yourself "correcting" the same mistakes over and over.
Lean organizations (particularly Toyota) are relentless in attacking the root causes of problems. In fact, Toyota has developed a problem-solving tool that its employees use extensively. The tool is usually called the "A3 Process." The term A3 refers to the size of the sheet of paper that was originally used to document the process. The story goes that Taiichi Ohno, one of the principal architects of Toyota's lean production system, would not read reports that were more than one page long.
The A3 Process has be described in various ways by lean practitioners, but it always contains some version of the following eight steps:
Identify the problem or need
Conduct research to understand the current situation
Conduct root cause analysis
Devise solutions (countermeasures) to address root causes
Develop a target state
Create an implementation plan
Develop a follow-up plan with predicted outcomes
Implement the plan
There are also several versions of the A3 Process Report used in the lean community, and I've attached a PDF of one that illustrates the process pretty well.
The A3 Process is a structured approach to problem solving, and it requires a certain degree of discipline to use it effectively. But the alternative is to spend a significant amount of time "correcting errors" without ever "solving problems."
What often goes unappreciated is that Standard Work and the other "techniques" of lean are simply tools for solving problems. Real success with lean comes not from using tools for tools' sake, but from using tools to solve problems that are inhibiting better business performance.
Note that the objective here is "solving problems" not simply "correcting errors/mistakes." Under the pressures of daily work, there is a strong tendency to simply "fix the errors" and get on with production. The downside of that approach is that, if you don't identify the root cause of the problem and eliminate the cause or deal with it in some other way, you'll find yourself "correcting" the same mistakes over and over.
Lean organizations (particularly Toyota) are relentless in attacking the root causes of problems. In fact, Toyota has developed a problem-solving tool that its employees use extensively. The tool is usually called the "A3 Process." The term A3 refers to the size of the sheet of paper that was originally used to document the process. The story goes that Taiichi Ohno, one of the principal architects of Toyota's lean production system, would not read reports that were more than one page long.
The A3 Process has be described in various ways by lean practitioners, but it always contains some version of the following eight steps:
Identify the problem or need
Conduct research to understand the current situation
Conduct root cause analysis
Devise solutions (countermeasures) to address root causes
Develop a target state
Create an implementation plan
Develop a follow-up plan with predicted outcomes
Implement the plan
There are also several versions of the A3 Process Report used in the lean community, and I've attached a PDF of one that illustrates the process pretty well.
The A3 Process is a structured approach to problem solving, and it requires a certain degree of discipline to use it effectively. But the alternative is to spend a significant amount of time "correcting errors" without ever "solving problems."