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The Lean Post / Articles / Getting a Jump on Unplanned Changes

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Line Management

Getting a Jump on Unplanned Changes

By Andrew Quibell

April 28, 2015

Andrew Quibbell, veteran of the auto industry, uses graphic recording to share lean concepts. Here's a visual of how Quibbell teaches change point management on the shop floor.

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“What when wrong?”

“I don’t know! Something changed!”

If I was given a dollar for every time I’ve heard this over my career in automotive I’d be a rich man. Changes happen in manufacturing and the majority of causes to those changes occur in a planned way which means they can be controlled and are known about by the effected parties. But what happens when changes are unplanned and sporadic? What do you do then? Panic? No. Instead, put in place a process to respond to change and escalate unplanned changes in a controlled manner. This is CPM: Change Point Management. 

When you trace back failures or escape points that impact your customer you often associate the failure with some kind of uncontrolled, unknown change point. It’s vitally important to have a mechanism in your business at the point of manufacture to alert people to changes and ensure that they can be controlled in a organized manner by those who are impacted by the unplanned change. 

The story board below is one way I teach folks about CPM and show the very basic process by which you can capture, visualize, communicate, and record changes (and why it’s in your best interest to do so). People wonder why they carry so much inefficiency, waste, and scrap. One reason is because they drop the ball on managing or even being aware of unplanned changes which are the hidden causes of the inefficiency and pain they have to suffer. Can you relate your experiences in the workplace to the images and words below? How do you share lean ideas?

https://www.lean.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/cpmarch2014.jpg

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Written by:

Andrew Quibell

About Andrew Quibell

Born and raised in the United Kingdom, Andrew Quibell entered the automotive industry in the mid 1980’s as a trainee quality engineer. He advanced through the ranks into quality management and worked in several established tier-1 companies in the UK before joining the Textron division Kautex in 2002. Quibell entered Textron’s Lean Black Belt program in 2006, eventually becoming a leading lean practitioner in the business, working primarily in high volume manufacturing. His roles at Kautex included VP CI Global and Director, Quality – Global.

Prior to leaving the automotive sector, Quibell sat on Textron’s Quality & Continuous Improvement Council while also working as a regional advisor within Toyota’s tier-1 supplier base organization BAMA. Currently Quibell holds status as a Chartered Member of the UK CQI, a Senior Member of the ASQ, an Incorporated Engineer within ICME, and is registered as a principal auditor in QMS with IRCA.

In January 2016 Quibell left Kautex and moved into the printing industry, joining CIMPRESS – a leader in mass customization of printed products – as their Global Head of Quality Assurance.  Presently Andrew lives with his wife and daughter in the Windsor / Greater Detroit area.

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