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The Lean Post / Articles / Ask Art: How Does Lean Apply to Every Company?

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Executive Leadership

Ask Art: How Does Lean Apply to Every Company?

By Art Byrne

March 23, 2022

Lean veteran Art Byrne shares a back-to-basics explanation of why — and how — lean thinking and practices can improve the performance of any company or organization.

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Since I started my lean journey in January of 1982 as a general manager at the General Electric Company, I have heard about every excuse companies use to justify not practicing lean. Managers claim that lean doesn’t apply because they don’t make cars, or because they are a service company or a custom products company, or — one of my favorites — “We tried that ten years ago, and it didn’t work.”  

News flash: lean can work in every company. And yet most efforts fail because people fear change that they don’t understand — and very few people don’t understand how lean works. CEOs who learn about the potential for tremendous gains rarely pursue a lean transformation in earnest. They rarely take the time to truly understand how lean works. If they try anything, they will skim the cream off the top and treat lean as nothing more than a cost reduction program.  

So, of course, lean initiatives usually “fail”: This superficial, incremental, and short-term approach captures none of the enduring promises of lean, which, done right, brings about a superior culture, market share gains, lower costs, better quality, and tremendous improvements in enterprise value.  

How Lean Works

How? Let’s start by defining what companies do, regardless of industry:

  1. They bring together a group of people 
  2. to run a bunch of processes 
  3. that deliver value to a set of customers.  

Becoming lean means learning to deliver more value to your customers by removing waste from your processes, which, in turn, results in shorter lead times, better quality, lower costs, and quicker responsiveness to customer needs. You can make this happen only by training and then tapping all your people to see and remove the waste they find in their work processes. In this way, lean is really “all about people.” 

These universal principles apply to any company. 

Applying Lean Fundamentals

So how do these principles apply to your company? Well, let’s examine this question through the lens of the lean fundamentals that I discussed earlier this year — and which apply to any company. Specifically, they are: 

  • Work To Takt Time 
  • One-Piece Flow 
  • Standard Work 
  • Pull System  

When we combine a simple definition of a company with the lean fundamentals, it is impossible to think that any company is “different” and not a lean turnaround candidate. 

When we combine a simple definition of a company with the lean fundamentals, it is impossible to think that any company is “different” and not a lean turnaround candidate.

Adapting Lean Fundamentals

That doesn’t mean that the focus of lean efforts will be the same in every company. For example, in large “process” type companies where the equipment is large and batch in nature, the idea of “sell-one-make-one” doesn’t make much sense. The lean thrust in such a company would be to make smaller and smaller batches, allowing it to be more responsive to the customer without requiring massive excess inventory. Here the focus would be on setup reduction, which I know from experience is great opportunity that lean enables you to capitalize on. I have been personally involved in reducing a rolling mill setup from 14 hours to 6 minutes, a 750-ton injection molding machine from 5 hours to 5 minutes, and a 150-ton punch press from 3 hours and 10 minutes to 1 minute.  

The focus for service companies might be on value-stream mapping and creating one-piece flow. For example, I once helped a life insurance company reduce the time it took to respond to a request for insurance by 63% while increasing the number of lives an underwriter could underwrite per week by 487%.  

At hospitals, I have seen how applying simple lean fundamentals results in vast improvements in throughput and quality in areas like the emergency room, open heart surgery discharge procedures, heart cauterizations, and even the laundry room. 

For example, I was once asked to do a kaizen event to solve the problem of what they presented as “mental patients in the emergency room.” My first reaction, of course, was, “You want to do what?” But then I realized that the emergency room wasn’t different from any other type of business, so we should be able to apply the lean fundamentals and solve this by focusing on the people and processes. So, we started by asking, “What is the takt time?” Then, we investigated the rate that people with mental a health condition entered the emergency room. Doing so led to the question of “What is the flow?” And because there wasn’t any in place, we were forced to create flow, which pushed us to develop standardized work, as there was none of that either. Once we established these practices, we could create a pull system to move the patients through the process. By the end of the week, we had gone from “you want to do what?” to an excellent working system by simply treating the ER like any company and applying the lean fundamentals. 

You might apply these same fundamentals differently according to your situation. Distributors who run warehouses, for example, might focus on applying lean principles to how orders are picked and shipped. As chairman of a company that made various filing products, I pushed them to apply lean fundamentals to change how they picked orders in one of their warehouses. As a result, we shifted from the traditional way of picking by order to picking by size and time. As a result, we: 

  • Reduced headcount by 42% 
  • Freed up 35,000 sq ft. of space, saving $180,000 per year in rent
  • Increased the number of picks-per-10-feet-of-rack by 367% 
  • Reduced shipping errors by 90%  

Consistently pursuing these lean fundamentals pays off across the board. For example, manufacturing companies with a lot of assembly work focusing on one-piece-flow and standardized work can: 

  • Cut lead time dramatically (from weeks to days) 
  • Free up half their floor space 
  • Generate double-digit annual productivity gains 
  • Achieve a 10x quality improvement  

In my experience, the (so-called) “custom” manufacturer might have the most to gain — despite what most of them currently believe. They are, in fact, not much different in how they work from a company that manufactures standard products. The main difference is they have much longer lead times. But applying the lean fundamentals will cut their lead times from months to days and deliver a massive competitive advantage. 

While lean applies to everyone, the difference is that some are willing to take the lean leap while others are not. This conviction and willingness to embark on this journey have nothing to do with the type of business you lead. Getting started merely requires courage and discipline. 

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Intro to Lean Thinking & Practice

An introduction to the essential concepts of lean thinking and practice.

Written by:

Art Byrne

About Art Byrne

Retired CEO, The Wiremold Company

Author, The Lean Turnaround and The Lean Turnaround Action Guide

Best known as the CEO who led an aggressive lean conversion that increased The Wiremold Company’s enterprise value by 2,467% in just under ten years, Art is the author of the best-selling books The Lean Turnaround and The Lean Turnaround Action Guide. His lean journey began with his first general manager’s job at General Electric Company in January 1982. Later, as group executive of Danaher Corporation, Art worked with Shingijutsu Global Consulting from Nagoya, Japan, all ex-Toyota Corporation experts, to initiate lean at Danaher. 

During his career, the Shingo Institute recognized Art with two awards: it bestowed the Shingo Prize to Wiremold in 1999 while he was CEO and the Shingo Publication Award to The Lean Turnaround Action Guide in 2018. Art is also a member of the AME (American Association of Manufacturing Excellence) Hall of Fame and the IndustryWeek magazine Manufacturing Hall of Fame. In addition, he has written the popular “Ask Art” articles monthly since mid-2013, compiling more than 80 of them for LEI’s Lean Post. 

Comments (3)
Art Byrnesays:
March 28, 2022 at 12:45 pm

Ken, there are lots of cases where the initial reaction is “you can’t apply takt time to this as it is too random and uneven.” A good example is order entry where the initial response is always that some orders have only three lines and some have 103 lines. But when you ask what the average order size is, lets say it is 9 lines, now you have something you can use to determine staffing on a daily basis. In my hospital example their definition of “mental patients” included people you couldn’t really communicate with, e.g drunk or on drugs as well as true mental problems. I think that resulted in this group accounting for about 20% of the daily visits to the ER. That was enough to establish a rate at which to expect mental patients to walk through the door. Based on the cycle time to triage them we could determine staffing. We then established a separate flow that took them out of the emergency room right away to an area where they could be treated. The treatments varied of course but getting them out of the ER waiting room where they were causing a lot of disruption solved the biggest part of the problem.

Reply
Ken Eakinsays:
March 24, 2022 at 9:58 pm

Art, could you elaborate on how you calculated and used Takt time in the case of mental patients visiting the ER? I know how to calculate Takt but what I’m asking is how you accommodated the variability. Certainly the staffing of ER psychiatrists and other mental health professionals must have been quite variable. Even more variable would have been, I’m guessing, the arrival times and quantity of patients. Over a month the ER might get 100 mental patient visits but on any given day you might have 10 visits or 0. They might arrive at 4 AM or 4 PM. I completely understand the value of establishing flow, standardized work, and pull, but I’ve always been puzzled how Takt time can be used productively in highly variable, chaotic, and unpredictable environments like ERs. Would love to learn more.

Reply
Claytonsays:
March 23, 2022 at 3:44 pm

This is very interesting to read and see how six sigma can be used in every type of work place. From being a college student much of the work I have done is physical labor or retail work. From looking back at my jobs I can see how they were using some six sigma principals in the workplace whether they knew it or not. I believe that six sigma can help you run many things in your life more efficiently.

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