David Dodd
Well-known member
The value of any management tool or system ultimately depends on whether it improves business performance. This is just as true for lean as for any other management methodology. Most of you reading this post will stay interested in our discussions here only if you believe that lean can improve the performance of your company.
So, just how beneficial can lean be? In their best-selling book, "Lean Thinking," James Womack and Daniel Jones argue that lean can produce profound business improvements. They write, "Based on years of benchmarking and observation in organizations around the world, we have developed the following simple rules of thumb: Converting a classic batch-and-queue production system to continuous flow with effective pull by the customer will double labor productivity all the way through the system (for direct, managerial, and technical workers, from raw materials to delivered product) while cutting production throughput times by 90 percent and reducing inventories in the system by 90 percent as well. Errors reaching the customer and scrap within the production process are typically cut in half, as are job-related injuries."
That's a powerful statement. But, you may ask, does lean produce these kind of benefits for printing companies. There are fewer case studies involving printing companies, but one described a printing and fulfillment company that had been involved in a lean transformation for about a year. During that year, the company was able to reduce makeready times by over 50 percent, prepress lead time from 5 to 2 days, and overall order-to-ship lead time from 7 to 3 days.
Sharing the benefits of lean in a public forum such as this can be a touchy subject. The successful use of lean can be a source of competitive advantage. Some lean experts have argued that Toyota did not document the details of its lean production system for a long time because they believed it provided them an advantage over their competitors.
Despite these issues, if you've been using lean for a while, please describe how it has benefited your company. I'm not asking that you disclose company secrets, but forum visitors and participants need to see that learning lean will be worthwhile.
So, just how beneficial can lean be? In their best-selling book, "Lean Thinking," James Womack and Daniel Jones argue that lean can produce profound business improvements. They write, "Based on years of benchmarking and observation in organizations around the world, we have developed the following simple rules of thumb: Converting a classic batch-and-queue production system to continuous flow with effective pull by the customer will double labor productivity all the way through the system (for direct, managerial, and technical workers, from raw materials to delivered product) while cutting production throughput times by 90 percent and reducing inventories in the system by 90 percent as well. Errors reaching the customer and scrap within the production process are typically cut in half, as are job-related injuries."
That's a powerful statement. But, you may ask, does lean produce these kind of benefits for printing companies. There are fewer case studies involving printing companies, but one described a printing and fulfillment company that had been involved in a lean transformation for about a year. During that year, the company was able to reduce makeready times by over 50 percent, prepress lead time from 5 to 2 days, and overall order-to-ship lead time from 7 to 3 days.
Sharing the benefits of lean in a public forum such as this can be a touchy subject. The successful use of lean can be a source of competitive advantage. Some lean experts have argued that Toyota did not document the details of its lean production system for a long time because they believed it provided them an advantage over their competitors.
Despite these issues, if you've been using lean for a while, please describe how it has benefited your company. I'm not asking that you disclose company secrets, but forum visitors and participants need to see that learning lean will be worthwhile.