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The Lean Post / Articles / How Designing Value Streams, Not Just Products, Creates Competitive Advantage

How Designing Value Streams, Not Just Products, Creates Competitive Advantage

Product & Process Development

How Designing Value Streams, Not Just Products, Creates Competitive Advantage

By James Morgan, PhD

July 30, 2021

TechnipFMC and Pella Corporation leaders describe how lean development practices helped them develop better products, create profitable value streams and strengthen development teams.

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Design the value stream
This article explores the principle of Design the Value Stream, one of the six guiding principles of Lean Product and Process Development.

As most of us know, a value stream involves all the actions required to deliver value (the product) to your customer. In their seminal work Learning to See, which introduced many of us to the concept of a value stream, Mike Rother and John Shook explain: “Taking a value-stream perspective means working on the big picture, not just working on individual processes, and improving the whole, not just optimizing the parts.” By leveraging a value-stream perspective in product development, we can design every one of those steps, not just isolated product attributes — and in so doing, deliver game-changing value to our customers.  

Our friend and colleague Al Ward was among the first to talk about this profound insight when he said, “the aim of product development is to create profitable value streams.” Unfortunately for all students of LPPD, Al died in a tragic plane crash in 2004. But he left us with plenty to think about and work on. And as I was to learn, creating a new value stream is a challenging task. It’s more than just moving people from manufacturing or supply chain “upstream” in the development process. It requires a cohesive team and an enabling system to work toward a shared vision of value creation in every step from beginning to end. 

I first had the opportunity to put this perspective into practice with an incredibly talented group of people at Ford Motor Company. We brought engineering, manufacturing, and supply chain together into an aligned team focused on the vehicle body value stream and dramatically improved program outcomes (value creation) and the work experience for team members.  

Later, when I worked at Rivian, we added logistics to our team with significant benefits to both in-process material movement and last-mile product delivery. Since then, our team at LEI has applied this powerful perspective to clinical processes in healthcare, consumer products, energy technology, and many other environments. Most recently, we have been using this thinking to create environmentally sustainable products and processes with encouraging results. But more about that in our September Design Brief. 

Many of the principles and practices we have shared in previous videos contribute directly to the ability to radically change your development focus from an isolated product to a value stream. For example, deeply understanding your customer and context, treating development as a team sport, and synchronizing workflows enable you to work in this profoundly different way. But it all starts with that value-stream mindset and a commitment to designing each value-creating step required to deliver maximum value to your customer. 

How Designing Value Streams, Not Just Products, Creates Competitive Advantage

In this month’s video, two of our partner companies share their experience creating profitable new value streams. First, a team from TechnipFMC, an energy technology company, explains how they made a pathbreaking product even better by expanding their design horizon to include improving the overall value stream. In the second story, Jaime Ogbourne, continuous improvement manager at Pella Corporation, shares how LPPD-enabled improvements in engineering increased development throughput to the point that it eventually overwhelmed manufacturing. Then he describes how changing to a value-stream approach to their LPPD work in the form of Operational Readiness Levels (ORLs) helped them resolve that problem.  

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Designing the Future

An Introduction to Lean Product and Process Development.

Written by:

James Morgan, PhD

About James Morgan, PhD

Jim is a senior advisor at Lean Enterprise Institute and a board member at Adrian Steel. He has a unique blend of industry leadership experience and rigorous scholarship, which he draws upon to improve organizational performance at a select group of companies.  Jim’s most recent industry experience was as Chief…

Read more about James Morgan, PhD
Comments (2)
zhang minsays:
June 7, 2023 at 9:25 pm

Hallo, I am a lean leaner from China, I am glad this website gives me a new way to learn Lean method, but I when I try to download eBook ‘Designing the Value Stream’, it always failed, could you please send me the eBook via email if possible? Thank you very much indeed.

Reply
Matthew Savassays:
June 8, 2023 at 2:22 pm

Thanks, Zhang. We will correct this.

Reply

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