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Operations Engineering

5-Step Throughput Improvement Model

February 1, 2018 by stevebeeler

In my previous blog, I used the “ten machine” manufacturing puzzle to establish the need to think systemically: in isolation each machine hit its performance target, in combination the system failed to reach its goal. The 5-Step Throughput Improvement Model is a proven process to solve this local optimization paradox.

5-Step Throughput Improvement Model

Theory of Constraints views an organization as a chain of dependent activities or functions all working towards a goal. The constraint is the weakest link in the chain…the link that most severely limits the organization’s ability to achieve higher performance (throughput) relative to goal. In business, that goal is usually to make more money now and in the future. The following five step process will continuously improve performance (increase throughput) to the goal.

5-Step Throughput Improvement Model

Step 0: Define the system. In this context, the “system” includes both the goal and the activities and functions that deliver the goal: Who and what contributes to making money?

Step 1: Identify the system’s constraint. Finding the constraint in a large, complex organization can be a challenge. A simple rule of thumb: If a link in the chain is blocked then the constraint is downstream. If a link is starved then the constraint is upstream. More on finding the constraint in subsequent blogs.

Step 2: Decide how to exploit the constraint. How can we get the most out of the constraint: Approve overtime? Reduce set up times? Improve scheduling? Increase in-coming inspection?

Step 3: Subordinate everything else to the decisions made in Step 2. What can non-constraints do to ensure that the constraint is as productive as possible: Cross-train people? Improve quality? Take lunch and breaks at different times?

Step 4: Elevate the system’s constraint. Add capacity if and only if the constraint’s performance has been truly maximized.

Step 5: If a constraint is broken in Step 4, go back to Step 1. Repeat process on the next constraint until the organization’s goal has been met. If the goal is open ended (make more money!), then this process never ends.

If the plant is starved for orders, the constraint (also known as the bottleneck), is outside the plant in the marketplace.  Does that invalidate this 5-step process?  Not at all…apply it to your sales funnel.

Sales Funnel

The late Dr. Eliyahu Goldratt has a series of books on Theory of Constraints. His first book, The Goal, applies TOC to a manufacturing plant. A later book, Its Not Luck, applies TOC to a conglomerate’s portfolio of businesses. Both books are novels, not textbooks, and they are very easy reads. I highly recommend them.

Please click HERE with questions and comments.

Terminology

Bottleneck = same as constraint

Sales Funnel = customer journey from enquiry to order

Filed Under: Operations Engineering Tagged With: 5-Step Throughput Improvement Model, Bottleneck, Constraint, Theory of Constraints, weak link

Theory of Constraints

February 1, 2018 by stevebeeler

“In isolation yes, in combination no” is a key concept in Theory of Constraints and bottleneck analysis.

Consider the ten machine manufacturing process in the schematic below. Each machine had a team of manufacturing engineers managing their design and development. All ten teams hit their performance target: 50 units per hour and 98% availability. A separate team of plant engineers developed the plant layout. Their objective was to minimize work-in-process inventory. By carefully arranging the ten machines, they achieved perfect single-piece flow.

Theory of Constraints

Before the new manufacturing process went into production, the teams briefed senior management on the status of the project. Everyone had met or exceeded their objectives. Waste had been minimized. All the lean metrics looked great. Optimism for a successful launch was very high, and why not?

When the new manufacturing process was launched, production was only 42 units per hour not the 49 units per hour that was expected. If everyone met or exceeded their objectives, what went wrong?

The interactions between the machines were not considered. When Machine #6 is down, Machines #1 through #5 are immediately blocked and Machines #7 through #10 are immediately starved. In isolation, each machine could produce 49 units per hour. In combination, they could not.

This manufacturing puzzle can be solved by inspection. Now replace the ten machines with manufacturing departments and functional organizations (marketing, sales, scheduling, purchasing, manufacturing, distribution, customer support, etc). No longer are interactions (blocks and starves) easily observed. In fact, they are likely going unnoticed as the multiple activities work hard to improve their local metrics. This is the first lesson in Theory of Constraints: In isolation yes, in combination no.

And that’s the Theory of Constraints opportunity. Think of your business not as individual silos but as a dependent system…the connections matter!

Book Recommendation

“The Goal” by Eli Goldratt is the first book on Theory of Constraints.  It is written as a novel, not a text book, and is a very easy and entertaining read.  Click HERE for a link to the Amazon website.  “The Goal” will be a great addition to your library.

Terminology

Availability = percentage of time ready to work
Blocked = waiting with nowhere for completed work to go
Starved = waiting for work from the previous activity

Seven Wastes =

  1. Over-production (making more than customer demand)
  2. Motion (human or machine)
  3. Waiting (human or machine)
  4. Conveyance
  5. Over-processing (making features not valued by the customer)
  6. Inventory (raw materials or finished goods)
  7. Correction (scrap and rework)

Filed Under: Operations Engineering Tagged With: Bottleneck, Interactions, Seven Wastes, Theory of Constraints

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