Lean Manufacturing : Business Bottom-Line Based

Title: Lean Manufacturing : Business Bottom-Line Based
Author: John X. Wang
ISBN: 1420086022 / 9781420086027
Format: Hard Cover
Pages: 288
Publisher: Productivity Press
Year: 2011
Availability: In Stock

Tab Article

The delivery of real bottom-line results from manufacturing improvements has proven to be much harder than expected for most companies. TQM, Zero-Defect Manufacturing, and Business Process Re-engineering have dropped off the landscape for taking much too long and failing to deliver the promised results. Lean Six Sigma is now experiencing the same fundamental difficulty. Delineating a quantitative approach, Lean Manufacturing: Business Bottom-Line Based shows you how to revitalize Lean Six Sigma by aligning it with your business’ bottom line and thus delivering results that your executives, business leaders, and customers expect.Written by an expert who has transformed product design and manufacturing at companies ranging from Maytag and Visteon to General Electric, the book demonstrates that an awareness of manufacturing business metrics is absolutely essential for every lean manufacturing practitioner. The author has seen first-hand the limitation of traditional lean manufacturing driven by business bottom lines. He outlines case studies linking world events and manufacturing efficiency and presents lean manufacturing strategies and techniques designed to accelerate responses to current and future events on the floors of the world’s manufacturing facilities.Typically, advice on lean manufacturing comes in the form of techniques regarding a particular tool or tool-box, yet the factory floor, like everything in the global community, is profoundly driven by business bottom lines. This book presents a systematic approach to improve business bottom lines through identifying and eliminating waste, and adding value and fulfillment by flowing the product at the demand of the customer.

Tab Article

Preface
About the Author

Chapter 1 : Introduction : Five Stages of Lean Manufacturing
Chapter 2 : Put Business Bottom Line First : Transfer Function For Production Cost
Chapter 3 : Understanding the Voice of Customers : The Essential Elements
Chapter 4 : Balance Production and Demand : Value Stream Mapping
Chapter 5 : From Lognormal to Cobb-Douglas Distribution : Lean Production Analysis
Chapter 6 : Business Cycles and Demand Fluctuations : Time-Critical Analysis and Decision Making
Chapter 7 : How Demand Fluctuation and “Exogenous Shocks” Influence the Bottom Line
Chapter 8 : Lean Production : Business Bottom-Line Based
Chapter 9 : Manage Production and Inventory Costs
Chapter 10 : Kanban : Align Manufacturing Flow with Demand Pull
Chapter 11 : Jidoka : Implement Lean Manufacturing with Automation
Chapter 12 : Pull System, One-Piece Flow, and Single Minute Exchange of Die (SMED)
Chapter 13 : Lean Manufacturing Business Scorecards

Bibliography
Index