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E-grāmata: Continuous Improvement: Seek Perfection, Embrace Scientific Thinking, Focus on Process, Assure Quality at the Source, and Improve Flow & Pull

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  • Formāts: 194 pages
  • Sērija : The Shingo Model Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Nov-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Productivity Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000467253
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  • Formāts: 194 pages
  • Sērija : The Shingo Model Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Nov-2021
  • Izdevniecība: Productivity Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000467253
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In this third book of the Shingo Model series, Continuous Improvement focuses on five of the Shingo Guiding Principles: seek perfection, embrace scientific thinking, focus on process, assure quality at the source, and improve flow and pull.

Each chapter in Continuous Improvement is designed to enhance your comprehension of one or more aspects of the Continuous Improvement dimension of the Shingo Model and to increase your understanding of how the dimension interrelates with and complements the other principles in the Shingo Model. Ultimately, this explanation grounds the technical science of continuous improvement with a powerful social science that focuses on people development. It is this combination that creates the opportunity for improvement to be truly continuous.

Because tacit learning is critical to deepening your continuous improvement knowledge, "Reader Challenges" are included throughout the text to encourage you to apply what you have read within the context of your own organization. This hands-on practice is necessary to understand the interrelatedness of principles, systems, and tools that are inherent in the Shingo Model.

The Shingo Institute recognizes that "the transformation from traditional philosophy and practices to organizational excellence does not occur without the courage, creativity, and persistence of everyone in the organizationfrom executives to managers to team members on the frontline."
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1(6)
How to Best Use This Book
2(2)
The Connections in the Shingo Model
4(3)
Chapter 1 Organizational Excellence and the Shingo Institute
7(8)
Back to Basics
8(1)
The Shingo Institute
9(1)
The Shingo Model and the Shingo Prize
9(2)
Discover Excellence
11(1)
Systems Design
11(1)
Cultural Enablers
12(1)
Continuous Improvement
12(1)
Enterprise Alignment
13(1)
Build Excellence
13(1)
The Shingo Institutes Book Series
14(1)
Chapter 2 The Continuous Improvement Dimension
15(12)
Continuous Improvement in a Nutshell
15(3)
The Principles
18(1)
The Supporting Concepts
19(8)
Chapter 3 Seek Perfection
27(18)
Business Case for Seek Perfection
27(1)
Fundamental Truth
27(1)
Key Supporting Concepts
28(1)
Seeking Perfection Is the Flywheel
29(1)
Elaboration on Behavioral Benchmarks
30(6)
Current Condition on the Paint Line
36(1)
Seeking Perfection at an Automotive Engine Plant
36(1)
Single Patient Flow
37(1)
Why We Challenge Paradigms and Expectations
37(3)
First Things First
40(1)
Supporting Concepts
41(3)
Summary
44(1)
Chapter 4 Embrace Scientific Thinking
45(18)
Business Case for Embrace Scientific Thinking
45(1)
What Is a Fundamental Truth?
45(1)
The Supporting Concepts
46(5)
Behavioral Benchmarks and Related Context
51(6)
Chief Problem Solver
57(2)
Key Systems to Support Embrace Scientific Thinking
59(1)
Tools to Support Embrace Scientific Thinking
60(1)
Summary
61(2)
Chapter 5 Focus on Process
63(12)
Business Case for Focus on Process
63(1)
Fundamental Truth
63(1)
Develop Great Processes
64(1)
Don't Blame Others
64(1)
Who Is Responsible?
65(1)
Processes versus Operations
66(1)
Process First, Then Operations
66(1)
The Supporting Concepts
67(2)
The Consequences of Not Focusing on Process
69(1)
Behavioral Benchmarks
70(5)
Chapter 6 Assure Quality at the Source
75(10)
Business Case for Assure Quality at the Source
75(1)
Fundamental Truth
75(1)
The Supporting Concepts
76(1)
Behavioral Benchmarks
77(6)
Key Systems to Assure Quality at the Source
83(1)
Summary
84(1)
Chapter 7 Improve Flow & Pull
85(24)
Business Case for Improve Flow & Pull
85(1)
Fundamental Truth
85(1)
The Supporting Concepts
85(1)
Behavioral Benchmarks
86(1)
Improve Flow
87(1)
Improve Pull, Stop the Push
88(1)
The Goal in Improving Flow & Pull
89(3)
Flow Processing as an Alternative
92(1)
Do You Really Understand Pull?
93(2)
The Bottom Line on Improving Flow & Pull
95(1)
The Role of Systems and Tools
96(2)
Real Demand
98(2)
The Supporting Concepts
100(3)
Enabling Flow & Pull through Systems and Tools
103(1)
Key Systems to Support Improving Flow & Pull
104(3)
Summary
107(2)
Chapter 8 Theory in Practice
109(8)
Stabilize Processes
109(1)
Standard Work
110(1)
Go & Observe
110(1)
Focus on Value Stream
111(1)
Keep It Simple & Visual
111(1)
Identify 8c Eliminate Waste
112(1)
No Defects Passed Forward
113(1)
Integrate Improvement with Work
114(1)
Rely on Facts & Data
115(2)
Chapter 9 Improvement Systems and Behaviors
117(8)
What Does Ideal Look Like?
121(1)
The Shingo Behavioral Assessment Scale
121(3)
Summary
124(1)
Chapter 10 Where Do I Go from Here?
125(20)
What Is Your Current Condition?
126(1)
What Is Your Burning Platform?
127(2)
What Are Your Accelerators and Inhibitors?
129(3)
What Is Your Proof-of-Concept Project?
132(6)
How Will You Measure and Promote?
138(2)
How Will You Develop Internal Capability?
140(1)
How Will You Expand the Improvement Boundary?
141(1)
Summary
142(3)
Glossary 145(18)
Bibliography 163(2)
Recommended Reading 165(6)
About the Editors 171(4)
Index 175
Larry Anderson is a bronze, silver, and gold certified lean practitioner (AME, Shingo, SME) with more than forty years of operational excellence experience. Larry is certified as a facilitator for all Shingo Institute workshops. He has a deep understanding of Shingo Model principles and application gained through more than eighteen years of work with the model. He has conducted more than twenty assessment site visits, many as the senior examiner/team lead and has performed numerous application desktop assessments. He has also participated in the Shingo publication review process and assisted two Shingo Institute Medallion recipients. Larry earned a BSME degree from Texas Tech University, is a registered professional engineer, serves as a Shingo representative on the lean certification oversight and appeals committee, and is president of the AME Southwest region.

Dan Fleming, director of consulting services at GBMP, is a Shingo Prize recipient and a certified Shingo Institute workshop facilitator. He is Lean silver certified and brings more than thirty years of experience in operations and engineering to GBMP, including more than twenty-five years of hands-on experience learning, leading, and teaching the principles and tools of the Toyota Production Systems and continuous improvement. He was the lead developer of GBMPs highly regarded Lean in Healthcare Certificate course, a comprehensive program that was one of the first of its kind in healthcare. Dan has been a valued speaker at regional and national conferences. Prior to becoming director of consulting services, Dan was a continuous improvement manager at GBMP for fourteen years, working with a wide range of organizations including healthcare, electronics, medical device, pharmaceutical, equipment manufacturers, food processing, machine shops, contract manufacturers, and warehouse and distribution. Dan holds a BS in electrical engineering technology from Northeastern University.

Bruce Hamilton, president of GBMP, is also a director emeritus for the Shingo Institute, a senior Prize examiner, and a certified Shingo Institute workshop facilitator. Bruce is a past recipient of the Shingo Prize in both the business and academic categories and is an inductee into the Shingo Academy (with five awards in all). In 2015, he was also inducted into the AME Manufacturing Hall of Fame. A sought-after speaker on managements role in Lean transformation, Bruces clients have included Raytheon, Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, OC Tanner, New Balance, as well as many smaller organizations. He is the creator of the well-known Toast Kaizen video, as well as numerous other award-winning Lean training videos including Single Patient Flow and, most recently, Improvement Kata. Bruce is co-author of e2 Continuous Improvement System, a comprehensive learn-by-doing guide for Lean transformation. He also publishes the blog, OldLeanDude, which is about understanding the Toyota Production System and gaining its full benefits, and he hosts the free monthly webinar, "Tea Time with the Toast Dude." Before joining GBMP, Bruce held management positions in marketing, IT, operations management, and general management, and, in 1990, he led his organization to a Shingo Prize. He is equally at home in administrative, operational, and healthcare environments. As an early adopter of Lean, his factory was visited by Shigeo Shingo, Shigihiro Nakamura, and Ryuji Fukuda, among others. From 1994 to 1998, he was coached by Hajime Ohba and TSSC. Bruce holds a BA and attended Bowdoin College and the University of Arizona.

Pat Wardwell is a bronze, silver, and gold certified lean practitioner (AME, Shingo, SME) with more than thirty years of operational excellence experience. She is a certified Shingo Institute workshop facilitator as well as a Shingo Prize examiner. In 2011, Pat was a co-recipient of a Shingo Prize in the research and professional publication category. She is also the co-author of e2 Continuous Improvement System, a comprehensive learn-by-doing guide for Lean transformation. Pat has served in a variety of operational and management roles, including vice president of operations at a company that was a 1990 Shingo Prize recipient. Involved with continuous improvement efforts on the shop floor and in support areas since 1987, Pat has trained and coached many companies, some of whom have received recognition through the Shingo Prize process. Pat earned a BA from the University of Maine and an MBA from Bentley University. She serves as an AME representative on the lean certification oversight and appeals committee, and is a lead examiner and Awards Council member for the AME Excellence Award and long-time AME volunteer.