In a recent blog I discussed Lean Level 1 Certification through CME. Since then, the classroom portion of the training is complete and we’ve selected three projects for these teams.
In addition, two other lean teams are up and running and we've made significant progress.
In each case, project charters including scope, deliverables, and milestones have been established.
Team projects are summarized as follows:
1. Training and Development Team
This team was established in November to assess current skill levels and create a means to improve performance and develop employees. Led by Senior Designer Brian Newhook, the team has completed a skill assessment of all employees, established company skill level requirements, identified areas of risk, and put together the plan for improvement.
They are presently focusing on minimizing the risks identified in specific areas through a mentoring program to ensure expert level capability exists in all areas, with a minimum of three employees meeting the expert criteria. They also have an excellent plan that will be launched this week to all employees that will see individual skills improved using training plans to close skill gaps.
Employees will submit their individual training plans to the team who will approve training plans to raise the overall skill level at Genoa.
2. Total Productive Maintenance Team
Led by Gus Slaney, IT Support Specialist, the team will review the current maintenance requirements for all of our computer equipment. The objective is to provide solutions that will remove the need for individuals to run the various programs that scan for viruses and clean up hard drives. Ideally, automation of these functions will free up systems and operators to concentrate on design work. Presently, relying on manual interventions increases risk of infection and slows operations.
A cost / benefit analysis completed as part of the project will allow Genoa to decide which solution options are practical.
3. Cut the Waiting Team
One of three projects undertaken by the leaders trained by CME, this project is looking at sources of waiting that impact production, and cause delivery delays. The team, led by Project Manager, Chad Mercer has identified many sources of waiting and divided the list into two categories. External waiting includes all issues outside the direct control of Genoa. Studying these issues will identify issues in which Genoa can influence outcomes and improve lead times as a result. Internal waiting is directly within the control of Genoa and with corrective actions can greatly impact lead time. Both categories have been assessed and assigned to a priority matrix. Impact on operations, and ease of correction are criteria used to determine areas to work on.
Next, the team will meet with senior managers selecting items to work on.
4. Value Stream Mapping - Modeling
Led by Project Manager, Kyran Pennell, value stream mapping techiques will be used to analyze the modelling process. The objective is to identify waste, create flow, and introduce lisp routines minimizing designer effort. A training and best practices component of this project will allow designers to share knowledge and create learning opportunities improving performance. Of the projects ongoing, this one will identify and eliminate the waste within the work. In all other projects, waste identified could be considered as external to the design process.
Experienced designers on this team have their work cut out as the nature of the work lends itself to creativity and operator-unique approaches to completing tasks. The challenge will be in finding methods of improvement without removing the creative aspect from designers.
5. Standard Operating Procedures, Checklists, and Tools
Senior Designer, Angela Porter leads this team to formally identify, document and/or establish standard procedures and tools for the performance of all tasks. The goals and objectives of the SOP Project include standardization of procedures, work instructions, checklists and other tools relating to Genoa's operations and project deliverables.
It includes items such as, consistency in standards related to Genoa deliverables, assisting new employees with clearly defined procedures and documentation, assist training and development, and creation of an environment promoting employee involvement.The team will compile and index existing procedures, review them for relevance, opportunity for improvement, standardize a format, and identify needs for new procedures. It will develop a mechanism for continuous review and renewal. A communication component ensures awareness of procedures.
This is great progress and many thanks to team members for remaining focused and to employees for contributing to the results.
Ken Hogan
Lean Guy at Genoa