Lean Manufacturing that Works

Lean Manufacturing that Works
Author: Bill Carreira
Publisher: AMACOM/American Management Association
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2005
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780814428542

If your manufacturing organization is slow and inefficient, it's time to slim down. Here's a proven "weight loss" plan.

Lean Manufacturing

Lean Manufacturing
Author: John W. Davis
Publisher: Industrial Press Inc.
Total Pages: 202
Release: 2009
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780831133856

Typically understood and/or accepted as the general path of implementation it took. It contains a list of important 'Key Reflections' at the end of each chapter

Lean Manufacturing

Lean Manufacturing
Author: William M Feld
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2000-09-28
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1420025538

There are some very good books available that explain the Lean Manufacturing theory and touch on implementing its techniques. However, you cannot learn "how to be" lean from merely reading the theory. And to be successful in the real-work environment you need a clear comprehension of how lean techniques work, rather than just a remote understanding

Handbook of Lean Manufacturing in the Food Industry

Handbook of Lean Manufacturing in the Food Industry
Author: Michael Dudbridge
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2011-02-02
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 1444393111

The principles of lean manufacturing – increasing efficiency, reducing waste, lowering costs and improving control – may be applied to any industry. However, the food industry is unique, and creates unique demands. The political, social and economic importance of food is unrivalled by any other form of produce, as is the scrutiny to which the manufacture of food is subjected. For the food industry, lean manufacturing is not simply a cost-saving strategy, but is directly linked to issues of sustainability, the environment, ethics and public accountability. Handbook of Lean Manufacturing in the Food Industry is a major new source of information and ideas for those working in food manufacturing. Offering a fresh and modern perspective on best practice, it points the way to fewer breakdowns, reduced quality faults, improved teamwork and increased profits. With a focus on operations management and new process development, the book is accessible and easy to read, and is complemented by a wealth of practical examples drawn from industry. The author’s conversational style and questioning approach will be invaluable to food manufacturers who are seeking solutions to fundamental issues. The book is directed at those who are working in food manufacturing or the wider food industry, particularly factory operations managers and training teams who are looking for resources to help with lean manufacturing implementations. Others in the supply chain, from producers to retailers, will also find it invaluable. The book is a clear and timely introduction for students and lecturers in food science and technology who want to access the reality of lean manufacturing as well as the theory.

Lean Manufacturing for the Small Shop, Second Edition

Lean Manufacturing for the Small Shop, Second Edition
Author: Gary Conner
Publisher: Society of Manufacturing Engineers
Total Pages: 361
Release: 2009
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0872638588

A how-to guide to shortening delivery times, eliminating waste, improving quality, and reducing costs. It describes not only what to do, but includes many tools useful to the reader describing how to do it. It explores tools including kaizen, value stream mapping, takt time, determining optimum lot sizes, setup reduction and problem solving.

Speed to Market

Speed to Market
Author: Vincent Bozzone
Publisher: AMACOM/American Management Association
Total Pages: 268
Release: 2001
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780814426609

Lean manufacturing is the single most effective way to increase sales, cut costs, improve margins, and secure the future of a business. The problem is that the principles and philosophies of lean manufacturing are geared strictly to mass production operations and can be ineffective, even detrimental, for smaller job shops and make-to-order businesses. Now, Speed to Market delivers a proven approach for smaller suppliers who want to successfully cut their lead time and trigger profitable growth. Completely updated and expanded, the book explains how to: * Apply the principles of pull, flow, and the elimination of waste to every area of the company, at every stage from quotes to cash* Implement a continuous improvement process while sidestepping the typical implementation pitfalls* Ease scheduling problems* Improve performance and profitability using the book's practical concepts, process analysis tools, and perspective-enhancing techniques and much more

How To Implement Lean Manufacturing

How To Implement Lean Manufacturing
Author: Lonnie Wilson
Publisher: McGraw Hill Professional
Total Pages: 335
Release: 2009-07-06
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0071625089

A Practical, Hands-on Guide to Lean Manufacturing This real-world resource offers proven solutions for implementing lean manufacturing in an enterprise environment, covering the engineering and production aspects as well as the business culture concerns. Filled with detailed examples, the book focuses on the rapid application of lean principles so that large, early financial gains can be made. How to Implement Lean Manufacturing explains Toyota Production System (TPS) practices and specifies the distinct order in which lean techniques should be applied to achieve maximum gains. Global case studies illustrate successes and pitfalls of lean manufacturing initiatives. Discover how to: Rigorously test and retest the state of your "leanness" with unique evaluators Develop and deploy plant-wide strategies and goals Improve speed and quality and dramatically reduce costs Reduce variation in the manufacturing system in order to reduce inventory Reduce lead times to enable improved responsiveness and flexibility Synchronize production and supply to the customer Create flow and establish pull-demand systems Perform system-wide and specific value-stream evaluations Generate a comprehensive list of highly focused Kaizen activities Sustain process gains Manage constraints and reduce bottlenecks Implement cellular manufacturing

Becoming Lean

Becoming Lean
Author: Jeffrey K. Liker
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 570
Release: 1997-11-12
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781563271731

What is Lean? Pure and simple, lean is reducing the time from customer order to manufacturing by eliminating non-value-added waste in the production stream. The ideal of a lean system is one-piece flow, because a lean manufacturer is continuously improving. Most other books on lean management focus on technical methods and offer a picture of how a lean system should look like. Other books provide snapshots of companies before and after lean was implemented. This is the first book to provide technical descriptions of successful solutions and performance improvements. It's also the first book to go beyond snapshots and includes powerful first-hand accounts of the complete process of change; its impact on the entire organization; and the rewards and benefits of becoming lean. At the heart of Becoming Lean are the stories of American manufacturers that have successfully implemented lean methods. The writers offer personalized accounts of their organization's lean transformation. You have a unique opportunity to go inside the implementation process and see what worked, what didn't, and why.

Standard Work Is a Verb

Standard Work Is a Verb
Author: John Allwood
Publisher:
Total Pages: 141
Release: 2016-06-04
Genre: Lean manufacturing
ISBN: 9780997560305

In this book, John Allwood establishes the prominence of Standard Work, linking it historically from Taiichi Ohno's own hand to its initial introduction to Western manufacturing and into the waiting hands of Bob Pentland. Bob Pentland later became John Allwood's teacher at Tuthill Pump in Alsip Illinois. Pentland's comments and anecdotes are included throughout the text.John introduces the tools and skills required to perform Time Observations and write Standard Work for the shop floor and then he connects those tools to A PHYSICAL Continuous Improvement Cycle and explains how the CI cycle can be used as a visual control to manage processes. John then explains how these tools and skills line up into a functional "playbook" with which to approach any new and unknown LEAN situations.