This document discusses lean principles for location of production activities to best solve customers' problems. It argues that while instant response models aim to provide custom products immediately, most customers are willing to wait if it means lower prices. The lean solution is to offer both instant and planned delivery options. For "big ticket" items like cars, customers could specify their desired vehicle and select a future or instant delivery date, with future dates having lower prices. This approach lowers costs for both customers and providers by reducing inventory and allowing smooth production. The document also examines lean location logic and applies it to the shoe industry, arguing production should move closer to regional markets to improve responsiveness and lower costs.
by David Brunt and John Kiff of Lean Enterprise Academy with Pedro Simao and Ricardo Lopes of Grupo Fernando Simao shown at the Frontiers of Lean Summit 2005 on 31st October 2005 run by the Lean Enterprise Academy
It’s a short guide for occupiers who are considering moving distribution centres. This Do’s and Don’ts guide gives them some tips on what they should be considering.
by David Brunt and John Kiff of Lean Enterprise Academy with Pedro Simao and Ricardo Lopes of Grupo Fernando Simao shown at the Frontiers of Lean Summit 2005 on 31st October 2005 run by the Lean Enterprise Academy
It’s a short guide for occupiers who are considering moving distribution centres. This Do’s and Don’ts guide gives them some tips on what they should be considering.
Power has shifted from manufacturers to lean retailers Benefits of Lean in Retail:
Low shelf space requirement
Reduced carrying cost
Reduced Through Put Time of products in value Chain
Improved Profitability through Inventory Management
Original article from the Flevy business blog can be found here:
http://flevy.com/blog/lean-inventory-management-using-lean-initiatives-to-manage-inventory/
More firms are implementing lean inventory management techniques to reduce costs, improve flexibility and have more time to focus on their customers. Lean supply chain and inventory management enable Small Medium Businesses (SMB) to improve efficiency and increase profits.
As firms look to reduce waste, increase turns and be more flexible with their inventory, management professionals have attempted to identify how lean techniques can be adopted to build flexible and collaborative inventory.
Current references like APICS (American Production Inventory Control Society) shows that nearly 30 percent of companies are adopting lean principles in their inventory management.
What is Lean Inventory Management?
“Lean” refers to a systematic approach to enhancing value in a company’s inventory by identifying and eliminating waste of materials, effort and time through continuous improvement in pursuit of perfection.
Lean management movement is credited to Henry Ford, who in the 1920s applied the concept of “continuous flow” in the assembly-line process. Over the years, the concept has been modified and applied to nearly all industries.
Lean inventory management techniques are built upon five principles:
• Value : Define the value that your company will get from lean inventory management.
• Flow: Understand how inventory flows in your warehouse and apply Lean principle: 5S to clear any obstacles that do not add up.
• Pull (Lean principle: Kanban) : Move inventory only when requested by customer.
Is it necessary to implement lean in your business? What are the advantages of lean production? Check out the presentation on how your business can benefit from lean. More details about lean production can be found here: http://txm.com.au/lean-manufacturing/why-lean
Standard Costing can polarize rather than unite departments. Instead, get Production, Operations, and Finance all focused on the same waste reduction, productivity & financial goals. How? Support Lean Operations with these Lean Accounting principles. Learn more!
Talking points voice-directed order fulfillmentJenniferbyLucas
Web-ready version of the presentation: "Talking Points: Voice-Directed Order Fulfillment" given by Jennifer Lachenman, VP of Product Strategy and Business Alliances at Lucas Systems, for the Parcel Forum '13 event.
Lean supply chain management is challenging because so much happens outside the four walls. Time compression and inventory velocity are important in achieving end-to-end inventory speed. The benefits include higher inventory turns, less working capital, less cash burn, better cash flow, improved revenue yield maximization, and less write downs.
Inventory begins upstream where suppliers are and should flow.
This presentation is based on a case study which describes what are the initiative taken by an innovative company like 3m to implement CRM/KM and give the best to customer. what were the implementation techniques and their benefits.
Why Chinese Manufacturers Must Adopt Lean Manufacturing to Stay CompetitiveTXM Lean Solutions
China is under increasing competitive pressure as costs rise rapidly. This presentation outlines the challenge for manufacturers of staying competitive in #China and outlines a practical #LeanManufacturing strategy to address this challenge. The presentation was presented by @TXMLean Managing Director, Tim McLean to the Fudan University School of Management on 19 March 2015
Scotland's only conference devoted to ITSM (IT Service Management) attended by over 150 IT professionals. This event was held 25th October 2016, Edinburgh.
Power has shifted from manufacturers to lean retailers Benefits of Lean in Retail:
Low shelf space requirement
Reduced carrying cost
Reduced Through Put Time of products in value Chain
Improved Profitability through Inventory Management
Original article from the Flevy business blog can be found here:
http://flevy.com/blog/lean-inventory-management-using-lean-initiatives-to-manage-inventory/
More firms are implementing lean inventory management techniques to reduce costs, improve flexibility and have more time to focus on their customers. Lean supply chain and inventory management enable Small Medium Businesses (SMB) to improve efficiency and increase profits.
As firms look to reduce waste, increase turns and be more flexible with their inventory, management professionals have attempted to identify how lean techniques can be adopted to build flexible and collaborative inventory.
Current references like APICS (American Production Inventory Control Society) shows that nearly 30 percent of companies are adopting lean principles in their inventory management.
What is Lean Inventory Management?
“Lean” refers to a systematic approach to enhancing value in a company’s inventory by identifying and eliminating waste of materials, effort and time through continuous improvement in pursuit of perfection.
Lean management movement is credited to Henry Ford, who in the 1920s applied the concept of “continuous flow” in the assembly-line process. Over the years, the concept has been modified and applied to nearly all industries.
Lean inventory management techniques are built upon five principles:
• Value : Define the value that your company will get from lean inventory management.
• Flow: Understand how inventory flows in your warehouse and apply Lean principle: 5S to clear any obstacles that do not add up.
• Pull (Lean principle: Kanban) : Move inventory only when requested by customer.
Is it necessary to implement lean in your business? What are the advantages of lean production? Check out the presentation on how your business can benefit from lean. More details about lean production can be found here: http://txm.com.au/lean-manufacturing/why-lean
Standard Costing can polarize rather than unite departments. Instead, get Production, Operations, and Finance all focused on the same waste reduction, productivity & financial goals. How? Support Lean Operations with these Lean Accounting principles. Learn more!
Talking points voice-directed order fulfillmentJenniferbyLucas
Web-ready version of the presentation: "Talking Points: Voice-Directed Order Fulfillment" given by Jennifer Lachenman, VP of Product Strategy and Business Alliances at Lucas Systems, for the Parcel Forum '13 event.
Lean supply chain management is challenging because so much happens outside the four walls. Time compression and inventory velocity are important in achieving end-to-end inventory speed. The benefits include higher inventory turns, less working capital, less cash burn, better cash flow, improved revenue yield maximization, and less write downs.
Inventory begins upstream where suppliers are and should flow.
This presentation is based on a case study which describes what are the initiative taken by an innovative company like 3m to implement CRM/KM and give the best to customer. what were the implementation techniques and their benefits.
Why Chinese Manufacturers Must Adopt Lean Manufacturing to Stay CompetitiveTXM Lean Solutions
China is under increasing competitive pressure as costs rise rapidly. This presentation outlines the challenge for manufacturers of staying competitive in #China and outlines a practical #LeanManufacturing strategy to address this challenge. The presentation was presented by @TXMLean Managing Director, Tim McLean to the Fudan University School of Management on 19 March 2015
Scotland's only conference devoted to ITSM (IT Service Management) attended by over 150 IT professionals. This event was held 25th October 2016, Edinburgh.
Neel Banerjee of Urban Airship and Gene Ehrbar of ISITE Design discuss strategy and tips for making digital disruption a part of business large and small.
Neel Banerjee of Urban Airship and Gene Ehrbar of Connective DX discuss strategy and tips for making digital disruption a part of business large and small.
Using Design Automation to Reduce Costs and Increase ProfitabilitySOLIDWORKS
By implementing design automation, engineer-to-order manufacturers can complete days of custom engineering in just minutes. Design automation also expedites and simplifies the creation of SolidWorks® software models, drawings, quote documents, manufacturing data—virtually any requirement of the custom sales process.
Strategic Advantages of Implementing Enventive SoftwareAlan Smith
Enventive is an innovative tool that allows the engineers to base their early design decisions on the definition of the Quality function of the products that they design. It is used preferably in the conceptual stage, before any CAD data has been generated and can be the first stage in Design for Six Sigma (DfSS).
by Wolfgang Krips, Senior Vice President of Global Infrastructure Operations of SAP at the Lean Summit 2010, New Horizons for Lean Thinking on 2/3 November 2010
Lean Leadership for Executives: Initial findings from LGN Research by David Brunt shown at the Lean Summit 2012 - Learning - Educating - Sharing on 27/28 November
Students, digital devices and success - Andreas Schleicher - 27 May 2024..pptxEduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher presents at the OECD webinar ‘Digital devices in schools: detrimental distraction or secret to success?’ on 27 May 2024. The presentation was based on findings from PISA 2022 results and the webinar helped launch the PISA in Focus ‘Managing screen time: How to protect and equip students against distraction’ https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/education/managing-screen-time_7c225af4-en and the OECD Education Policy Perspective ‘Students, digital devices and success’ can be found here - https://oe.cd/il/5yV
Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology:
Ethnobotany in herbal drug evaluation,
Impact of Ethnobotany in traditional medicine,
New development in herbals,
Bio-prospecting tools for drug discovery,
Role of Ethnopharmacology in drug evaluation,
Reverse Pharmacology.
The Art Pastor's Guide to Sabbath | Steve ThomasonSteve Thomason
What is the purpose of the Sabbath Law in the Torah. It is interesting to compare how the context of the law shifts from Exodus to Deuteronomy. Who gets to rest, and why?
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
The Indian economy is classified into different sectors to simplify the analysis and understanding of economic activities. For Class 10, it's essential to grasp the sectors of the Indian economy, understand their characteristics, and recognize their importance. This guide will provide detailed notes on the Sectors of the Indian Economy Class 10, using specific long-tail keywords to enhance comprehension.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleCeline George
Bills have a main role in point of sale procedure. It will help to track sales, handling payments and giving receipts to customers. Bill splitting also has an important role in POS. For example, If some friends come together for dinner and if they want to divide the bill then it is possible by POS bill splitting. This slide will show how to split bills in odoo 17 POS.
1. “Solve My Problem When I Want”
James P. Womack
President, Lean Enterprise Institute
Frontiers of Lean Summit
October 31, 2005
2. When Do We Want Products?
Do we make decisions instantaneously, with no
warning?
Or
Do most of us plan ahead?
For fast-moving consumer goods passing through
retail channels, most of us do little planning.
For “big ticket” items – motor vehicles, computing
systems, homes – most of us plan ahead.
3. The Predominant Stance of Providers
Most providers assume that we don’t plan.
“Deals” are constantly offered to consumers to make
an instant decision.
Deals, like rebates on cars, are usually driven by the
internal needs of the provider – to move excessive
inventory or keep assets busy – rather than
expressed customer demand.
Much of provision is still classic “push”.
4. Recent Business Models
Assume that decisions are instantaneous and that
customers want instant delivery.
They therefore try to provide instant response:
Dell’s make-to-order system.
3-day car initiatives at motor vehicle manufacturers.
5. Instant Response Model # 1
Dell’s make-to-order system (in theory):
• Proposes to build precisely the computer, printer,
server, etc., the customer wants and deliver almost
immediately.
• Requires suppliers to be located adjacent to Dell
assembly sites in each region (Ireland, USA,
Malaysia, Brazil, China).
6. Instant Response Model # 1
Dell’s make-to-order system (in practice):
• Fairly stable demand from big corporate buyers.
• Highly variable demand -- for total products and
option mix within product lines -- from smaller
businesses and individuals.
• Limited flex in total assembly capacity.
• Suppliers mostly located in East Asia. Large
inventories in 3rd party warehouse near regional
assembly sites. Long or expensive replenishment.
• Delivery time typically more than a week.
• Substantial steering of customers to buy what Dell
can make.
7. Instant Response Model # 2
3-day Car Initiatives at Every OEM (in theory):
• Shorten order entry time (from many days to
minutes).
• Hold production schedules open until the last
minute.
• Create more responsive suppliers of parts.
• Build cars to precise customer order and deliver to
the customer within a few days.
8. Instant Response Model # 2
3-day Car Initiatives (in practice):
• Order entry times can be dramatically shortened.
• Line balance requirements make it hard to create the
schedule at the last minute, particularly on multi-
product lines.
• Parts supply – where a final assembly process
attaches 1000 parts and most parts come in wide
variety – is extremely difficult. Impossible to do with
no advance notice.
• After several years, 3-day car initiatives are still
paper exercises. Finished-unit inventories
unchanged!
9. Are Dell and Auto Makers Frauds?
No!
They are simply trying to do the impossible:
Instantly respond to all customers with custom
products in gyrating markets with an extraordinary
range of choices.
The key question: Is instant response even what
customers want?
Is there a better alternative?
10. The Lean Solution
Reverse the temporal bias of consumption:
• Some of us want to get exactly what we want right
now.
• Some of us – probably a lot more of us – want to get
exactly what we want but are willing to wait,
particularly if we get a lower price.
That is, many of us do plan ahead and would be willing
to share our thoughts with a provider in return for
sharing the cost savings with the provider.
11. Auto Buy/Lease Example
Some simple physical facts:
• Production systems can deal with small amounts of
“get-it-for-me-now” demand, provided slots for last
minute demand are planned.
• Making these products will always cost more
because of the need to expedite parts.
• Making all other products to precise customer order
and getting them to the customer slowly will cost the
provider less than using current methods.
• In particular, leveling demand (heijunka) buy volume
and mix will permit the whole production process to
run smoothly at lower cost.
12. Auto Buy/Lease Example
Customers are offered two choices:
• Specify the exact vehicle wanted, for delivery in the
future, with the price falling the further ahead the
customer is willing to plan.
• Specify the exact vehicle wanted, for delivery
practically instantly (although 3 days may still be
difficult), with the price considerably higher than for
the same vehicle ordered in the future.
Dealers have no inventory except a few demonstrators
and loaner vehicles for those unable to wait even a
few days (perhaps after an accident.)
13. The Lean Solution
Results:
• Total cost of provision is lower: reduced production
costs, reduced inventory costs, reduced logistics
costs.
• Total cost for consumers is also lower:
• “Get-it-for-me-now” customers (whose cost of waiting
is high) get exactly what they want quickly at about the
cost of today’s products .
• “Plan ahead” customers (whose cost of waiting is low)
get exactly what they want when they actually want it
at costs (and prices) below the cost of today’s
products.
• A win-win for consumers and providers!
14. Lean Location Logic
James P. Womack
President, Lean Enterprise Institute
Frontiers of Lean Summit
October 31, 2005
15. Objective of Lean Thinking
Solve each customer’s problem by:
• Compressing the value stream to conduct every step in
design, production & service process at the same point!
• Locating this point immediately adjacent to the customer!
Maximizes responsiveness.
Minimizes total costs: product cost plus inventory, out-of-
stocks, defects, etc.
• Easy to do in a world with:
Comparable factor costs (especially labor) everywhere.
No scale economies.
16. In Our Current World
• Modest trade barriers in goods and services.
• Remarkable gradient in labor cost for all types of
labor:
Touch
Technical
Managerial
• Substantial scale economies in many activities.
• Tight regional concentrations of supply of some
critical items (e.g., shoe materials and electronic
components in East Asia.)
Lean thinkers must solve consumer problems while
accommodating these realities.
17. Providers Need Lean Math
Calculate the cost of designing, manufacturing, and
servicing a product for a given customer at current
locations.
Competitive?
Stay where you are!
Not competitive?
Apply lean thinking to current operations!
Still not competitive?
Apply lean location logic.
18. Lean Location Logic
For manufacture of a given product for a given
customer:
• Calculate factory costs at candidate locations.
Typically these will be:
In the country of sale.
In the probable lowest-wage point in the region of
sale.
In the probable lowest-wage point anywhere in the
world.
• Add slow freight costs for reaching the customer.
(Together these might be called “mass production
math”)
19. Lean Location Logic
Then, for each location, add:
• The cost of supplied items to the production point.
• The cost of inventories needed to maintain a given
level of service to the end customer.
• The cost of lost sales due to out-of-stocks.
• The cost of premium freight to avoid out-of-stocks.
• The cost of remaindering (of over-stocks.)
• The cost of quality.
• The management cost of complex value streams in
locations remote from the customer.
20. Lean Location Logic
Then, for each candidate production location for a
given customer, add the cost of:
• Currency risk.
• Country risk.
• Company risk (especially when outsourcing to a sole
source that might fail or integrate forward.)
Note: Just because these are difficult to calculate
does not mean they are zero!
21. Lean Location
For new, technologically demanding products (processes):
• Locate all production steps as close together as possible
near the engineering center designing the product.
For make-to-order products for “got-to-have-it-now”
customers:
• Locate all production steps as close together as possible
in the market of sale.
For make-slowly-to-order and make-to-stock products with
mature production processes:
• Locate all production steps as close together as possible
at the lowest wage point within the region of sale. (E.g.,
Eastern Europe/Turkey for Western Europe; Mexico for
the USA; China or Vietnam for East Asia.)
22. Shoe Example in Today’s World
Configuration of action wear category
(e.g., Nike, Reebok, New Balance):
• Style is the competitive focus.
• Four selling seasons per year.
• Half of SKUs are new each selling season.
• Shoe manufacture is still quite labor intensive.
• Almost all production for European and North American
markets outsourced to contract manufacturers.
• Small number of giant contractors (Taiwanese and Korean
owned) make most shoes in China, Vietnam, Indonesia, and
Thailand to capture low labor costs.
• Supply base for materials, molds, etc. highly concentrated in
Taiwan, Korea, and China.
23. Shoe Example in Today’s World
Consequences for solving the customer’s problem:
• Retailers order 150 days ahead of planned selling
date.
• No re-orders possible for most items during selling
season.
• Large inventories at five points (shoe assembler, on
the boat, shoe company’s distribution warehouse,
retailer’s distribution warehouse, retail store.)
• 80% chance customer will find the desired style in
the right size.
• 40% of shoes ordered from contractors are deeply
discounted or remaindered.
24.
25. Shoe Example in a Lean World
Configuration of action-wear category:
• Same wage gradient, shipping costs, trade barriers, etc.
• Re-location of production and distribution activities:
Retailer uses scanner (customer) as order entry point.
Smaller distribution centers supply each store frequently in
small amounts.
Shoe company distribution center eliminated.
Shoe production moved to lowest labor-cost point within
region of sale.
Small overnight deliveries in trucks substituted for large
infrequent deliveries in boats.
26. Shoe Example in Lean World
Consequences for solving customer’s problem:
• Lead time falls from 150 to 10 days.
• Shelf availability (right size in right style) goes from 80 to 90%.
• Remaindering falls from 40 to 5%.
• Customers can get home deliveries by ground freight quickly if
retail outlet doesn’t have right style/size.
Consequences for solving provider’s problem:
• Inventory costs slashed dramatically.
• Lost sales and remaindering slashed substantially.
• Increase in margins of shoes companies by 8-10 percentage
points?
A win-win for customers and providers!
27.
28. Why Aren’t We Living in Lean World?
Decisions about location made in era of mass production
slow the transition to lean consumption:
• Supply base for shoe manufacturer is overwhelmingly in
Korea and Taiwan (higher technology items) and China
(lower technology items.)
• Moving final assembly to other points without moving
supply base as well doesn’t solve the problem. (Might
even slow response times further.)
• Who will be the first lean provider in the shoe industry?
• Perhaps lean thinking will start with make-to-order
shoes?