Lean Manufacturing<+>Understanding Lean Manufacturing<+><+><+>
This might approach you as a big surprise, but the principles of lean manufacturing actually dates a whole lot back, specifically the era of Benjamin Franklin. This does not assume that lean manufacturing principles are ancient, but the time of Benjamin Frankling cannot be called recent can it?
It is stated that in lean manufacturing, you must not waste time. Why? Well, have you ever heard of the saying “Time is gold”? You probably never imagined that this saying could apply to real life; well it does, especially in lean manufacturing. If you lose five shillings worth of time, you lose five shillings worth of money.
So you might as well be throwing five shillings out over a cliff. It is only eventual that if you lose the sum of five shillings, you also lose the advantages and opportunities that come along with it.
So, hopefully, you learn a lesson which is, if you waste time, thus wasting money, then you can say bye bye to the other good things, or blessings, that come along with it.
It is also a must in lean manufacturing that you avoid involving yourself with unnecessary costs because doing so is believed, in terms of lean manufacturing, as a more profitable way, rather than increasing your sales. Increasing your sales do not conclude that the consumers will buy what it is thay you are selling.
But not purchasing or spending money on things that are not really necessary will definitely save you a big comfortable bag of money. Just take this saying for example, “A penny saved is two pence clear. A pin a day is a groat a year. Save and have.”
Having unnecessary inventory can give you quite a number of disadvantages. It not only adds up to the space of your sales, and it also adds to your responsibilities, but it also gets you busy over things that you do not really need to be responsible of.
You might refer to those unnecessary items as goods.
However, you have to give these so-called goods some care if you do not want them to give you some evils. They will probably be sold with a cheap price, which is very unfair because they cost a lot more than they price with which they are sold.
If your sales are cheap, then they are only apparent and not real, as you expected and have been hoping for. If you do engage yourself and your sales in certain bargains, you have to be careful and you also have to be choosy of the said bargains.
Why?
Some bargains, which at first deem to be straightening your business, may actually cause you more harm than good. Harm in the case that when it straightens your circumstances, it reduces a big amount of the cast that is available.
The concept of having trash built into certain jobs and then taken for granted afterwards was taken to notice byb some motion efficiency experts. One motion efficiency expert is Frank Gilbreth.
Frank Gilbreth used the masons to serve as an example about the practice of lean manufacturing. He saw how the masons help each other. A certain mason will bend over to pick up bricks from the floor and then another mason, the brick layer, lowers and then raises the whole of his upper body to obtain a five pound brick. They are not wasting time because time is money.
However, this came as quite an inefficiency as it as built into the job after long practice. So when the masons were introduced to a non-stooping scaffold, which does the job of delivering the bricks at waist level, permitted the masons to go on with their work, only for an approximation of three times as quickly, and also with lesser effort.
In lean manufacturing, you can make us of standardization and also of best practice development. When you involve improvement in your proposal, the policy of the management is the only one that can make a thorough and careful analysis of the new method.
If necessary, it will conduct a series of procedures to find out, accurately, if there is a relative merit of the newly suggested statement, and also of the old standard.