David Dodd
Well-known member
When I talk with managers about lean, one question that usually comes up in one form or another is, "What makes lean different from other business improvement methods?" Since the early 1980s, we've seen numerous business improvement techniques appear on the stage, including total quality management, business process reengineering, theory of constraints, six sigma, and lean manufacturing. So, it's understandable that managers would wonder whether or how lean differs from other improvement methodologies.
Lean differs from other improvement methods in several ways, but two of the differences are particularly noteworthy. First, lean focuses on improving entire value streams, while most of the other improvement methods tend to focus on individual processes. In lean terminology, a "value stream" is all of the activities that a company must perform in order to produce and deliver a product or service to a customer. So, a value stream is really a system that is composed of numerous individual processes. Lean organizations do work on improving individual processes, but lean practitioners always remember that the real goal is to improve the whole value creation/delivery system and that improving one process won't necessary improve the performance of the value stream.
Another important difference is that most process improvement methods tend to focus on improving the productivity or efficiency of major value-adding processes, while lean emphasizes reducing or eliminating non-value-adding activities (waste). When a lean practitioner looks at an activity or process, he/she will ask a series of questions: Does this activity/process add value for a customer? If not, can we change the way we work to eliminate the need for the activity/process? If not, can we change the activity/process so that it will consume less resources (time, effort, space, etc.)?
Taiichi Ohno, one of the principal architects of Toyota's lean production system, captured both of these fundamental lean ideas when he said, "All we are doing is looking at the time line from the moment the customer gives us an order to the point when we collect the cash. And we are reducing that time line by removing the non-value-added wastes."
Lean differs from other improvement methods in several ways, but two of the differences are particularly noteworthy. First, lean focuses on improving entire value streams, while most of the other improvement methods tend to focus on individual processes. In lean terminology, a "value stream" is all of the activities that a company must perform in order to produce and deliver a product or service to a customer. So, a value stream is really a system that is composed of numerous individual processes. Lean organizations do work on improving individual processes, but lean practitioners always remember that the real goal is to improve the whole value creation/delivery system and that improving one process won't necessary improve the performance of the value stream.
Another important difference is that most process improvement methods tend to focus on improving the productivity or efficiency of major value-adding processes, while lean emphasizes reducing or eliminating non-value-adding activities (waste). When a lean practitioner looks at an activity or process, he/she will ask a series of questions: Does this activity/process add value for a customer? If not, can we change the way we work to eliminate the need for the activity/process? If not, can we change the activity/process so that it will consume less resources (time, effort, space, etc.)?
Taiichi Ohno, one of the principal architects of Toyota's lean production system, captured both of these fundamental lean ideas when he said, "All we are doing is looking at the time line from the moment the customer gives us an order to the point when we collect the cash. And we are reducing that time line by removing the non-value-added wastes."