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Showing posts with label TQM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TQM. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Harnessing Employee Engagement


An interview with Toyota Motor Corporation`s former Senior Managing Director, Mr. Yasuhito Yamauchi

Angela Corriero of Chase Performance had the opportunity to sit down with Mr. Yasuhito Yamauchi to discuss his views on  sustaining continuous improvement and harnessing internal know and innovation.




Managing Success
“Effective TQM and improvement implementation starts with the thorough implementation of the job`s basic work standards. After a work standard has been decided, it has to be practiced exactly. 
In order to practice the standards perfectly, staff must know the true meaning and value of each standard – not only in theory. They must have the skill and knowledge to put it into practice. Then, it is the supervisor`s duty to check and confirm the standards have been put into practice exactly.
The role of the supervisor is a very important one. Education and training to supervisors is essential.
We create standards based on the supervisor`s skill and knowledge; with the benefits for the company in mind. 
Supervisors are the link between the front line staff and upper management.

When is it time for improvement?
Sometimes, implementation of the work standards is not enough.  The operators may carry out the work sequence and standards but feel some uneasiness – this is the time for them to suggest improvement.
The key: create a working environment where workers can suggest improvements.
Work standards must be followed, but once staff realise that a particular standard is not enough,  it is the time for change.
When there is a need for improvement, supervisors must be able to improve the work sequence or fix the problem.

On workforce management
Upper level (above supervisors) must understand the continuous improvement philosophy.
Actually, it`s front line staff`s ideas and suggestions which must be absorbed into the upper levels of management. Continuous improvement implementation is truly a bottom- up approach to effective management.
In the West, there is a separation between blue collar and white collar workers.  Blue collar workers must follow white collar rules.
This inhibits effective improvement, total participation and employee motivation – This inhibits cost reduction and profit maximization.
Good Communication breeds success.

How success is culminated, one step, one worker at a time.
A company is built up by a culmination of individual efforts. Section to department to Company wide.
This is something we`ve been doing at Toyota from the beginning.  It`s nothing special, just the way of doing business.
Material costs are pre-determined by the market. Therefore, our strategy has long been:
Increase Performance Rates to
Increase Profit.
The Key: recognise waste and minimise it.
When busy, it is very difficult to reduce waste, and implement continuous improvement and 5s consistently.  After the Global Financial Crisis, it became easier to do this as we had lower production demands.  The results have been impressive.                                                                      

Although, we have not reached our Global Financial Crisis production levels, our profit level has been increasing rapidly.
This is the power of the Toyota Production System fundamentals of  standardisation, 5s and continuous improvement.

Motivation is Key!
Unless we have vitalised front line staff, we cannot be successful.  They are the ones who actually produce the product and the profit.
Our job in management, is to make them energised.The corporate culture must be vitalised.
At the factory sites, I tell staff, “you are the people who actually create profit through your skills and wisdom. Material costs are pre-determined by the market.  How do we increase profits? You. Through your skills and performance.”
Unless employees are motivated, we cannot create a good, attractive company.

Managers, directors and supervisors must understand this or their system won`t work.
“As a leader, I have to communicate the corporate vision to all members of the company and must show that we are very concerned about our vision and our future direction.
Whenever I have time, I visit the Gemba of all divisions. I visit people. Because I am in a high position, If I call others to come, it`s no good. No, I go to them.”
Mr. Yamauchi praised Proctor and Gamble`s corporate philosophy, “Proctor and Gamble share the same idea. They pay good attention to employees.  We see things in common among excellent companies throughout the world.”

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Six Sigma, Lean, TPS, TQM

Here are four brief descriptions of terms that you will encounter when dealing with us at Chase Performance.  Our programs are customised tailored solutions which are implemented with both state and federal government assistance in most cases at no cost to your business, and can be applied to any industry.  Please visit us at www.chaseperformance.com or email me: roland.weber@chaseperformance.com

Roland Weber
Executive Manager, Strategy & Sustainability


Six Sigma


is a business management strategy, originally developed by Motorola, USA in 1986.
Six Sigma seeks to improve the quality of process outputs by identifying and removing the causes of defects (errors) and minimizing variability in manufacturing and business processes. It uses a set of quality management methods, including statistical methods

A six sigma process is one in which 99.99966% of the products manufactured are statistically expected to be free of defects (3.4 defects per million)

Lean


Lean manufacturing, lean enterprise, or lean production, often simply, "Lean," is a production practice that considers the expenditure of resources for any goal other than the creation of value for the end customer to be wasteful, and thus a target for elimination. Working from the perspective of the customer who consumes a product or service, "value" is defined as any action or process that a customer would be willing to pay for.

TPS


Essentially, lean is centered on preserving value with less work. Lean manufacturing is a management philosophy derived mostly from the Toyota Production System (TPS) (hence the term Toyotism is also prevalent) and identified as "Lean" only in the 1990s

TQM


Total quality management is an integrative philosophy of management for continuously improving the quality of products and processes.

TQM functions on the premise that the quality of products and processes is the responsibility of everyone who is involved with the creation or consumption of the products or services offered by an organization. In other words, TQM capitalizes on the involvement of management, workforce, suppliers, and even customers, in order to meet or exceed customer expectations.