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About this lesson
Waste can take many forms including high costs, delayed timing, rework, redundant work and idle processes. One of the primary goals of a Lean Six Sigma project is to identify areas of process waste and eliminating or reducing those sources of waste.
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Elements of Waste.docx60.9 KB Elements of Waste - Solution.docx
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Quick reference
Elements of Waste
Waste can take many forms including high costs, delayed timing, rework, redundant work and idle processes. One of the primary goals of a Lean Six Sigma project is to identify areas of process waste and eliminating or reducing those sources of waste.
When to use
The categories of waste are referred to throughout a Lean Six Sigma project in all phases of the DMAIC.
Instructions
Lean Six Sigma uses several methods for categorizing waste. The original method was based upon three Japanese words relating to waste in a production environment:
- Muda – Those activities that consume resources but do not add any value to the customer.
- Mura – Inconsistency in the content and flow of work that is caused by changes in volume (uneven demand), mix (different work content), and quality (rework).
- Muri – Placing unrealistic workloads on people and equipment, which leads to stress, mistakes, rework, poor morale, and eventually burnout.
Today waste is normally classified as one of seven categories. These are the categories that will most likely be tested on the IASSC exams. They are organized in the acronym TIM WOOD to make them easier to remember.
- Transport – Unnecessary transport of product or goods; internal movement but not movement towards the customer.
- Inventory – High inventories greater than necessary; creates internal work for others but no value for customers.
- Movement – Unnecessary movement of employees; wasting time and effort searching for tools, materials, directions, and information.
- Waiting – Waiting for the next process step; wasted time as product is idle and not moving forward to the customer.
- Over-production – Ahead of demand; spending effort on items that no customer has requested (often delaying items the customer has requested).
- Over-processing – Performing unnecessary steps on product due to poor process design.
- Defects – Correcting defective parts; the item must be processed twice. (Don’t avoid this waste by not fixing errors and defects.)
Another technique for identifying waste is the Five S Disciplines. When these five disciplines are practiced, waste associated with a confusing and disorganized workplace is minimized. The Five S Disciplines were also developed in Japan.
- Sort – Separating items into proper categories.
- Straighten – Arrange the work space for easy flow and close proximity to where they are used.
- Shine – Clean the workspace daily, improving safety and reducing maintenance.
- Standardize – Everything in its right place and everyone following the best practice.
- Sustain – Self-discipline until it becomes a habit - reinforced with training and audits.
Hints & tips
- Use the acronym (TIM WOOD) and mnemonic (Five S) to remember the categories of waste.
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