In this blog, we’ll provide a solution to a common problem across all industries: insufficient standardization, leading to quality issues and inconsistent throughput rates.
Specifically, we will talk about an advanced form of standardization called standard work.
Standard work combines industrial engineering and operator knowledge to define in practical form how to use labor, materials, and machines in the most efficient way.
While you may at first be a bit shocked by the level of detail involved, it is a proven solution. In fact, people at Toyota call standard work the company’s “secret weapon.”
The key is to describe the job so that anybody can do it in the best known way. When you perform work in a repeating, rhythmic cycle, learning and doing the work with consistency becomes much easier. In turn, consistency makes it easy to discover and measure deviations, and deviations make it easy to identify problems. When the problem is well defined, it is easy to improve.
Thus, standard work is not just a way to achieve the best performance consistently; it’s a way to continuously improve. The ultimate goal when you implement standard work is to teach operators to approach their work how an industrial engineer would.
You will often hear the two used interchangeably, but there is a difference between these terms.
Each cycle has the same duration (the same work content). An example would be an operator working in an assembly or machine cell. This is sometimes called “Type 1.”
An example is a car assembly line where no two cars have the same options and therefore each car requires a different time. This is sometimes called “Type 2.”
Standard work that is not repeatable in sequence or in work content is referred to as “Type 3.” An example is material handling or warehouse picking.
It’s a sure bet that in most companies, if you observe workers performing the same job, each person will do it a bit differently. Whether this is because they were taught that way or developed their own preferred method is irrelevant. What matters is that it will make it very difficult to involve operators in continuous improvement. Let’s explore why.
Solving problems consists in finding ways to close the gap between a current state and a target state. If people can’t agree on what the current state is, needless conflicts and misunderstandings will result. In standard work, everything is specified, down to the path taken as you walk from work element 1 to work element 2, and how many parts of work in process (WIP) are to be found at specific locations.
In effect, standard work removes the noise and lets the signal come through loud and clear, helping the team understand the problem before solving it.
Standard work defines, for a given takt time (or range of takt times), the exact sequence of work elements a person must perform to complete a job, as well as the location and quantity of WIP to ensure there are no waiting times. To understand why it’s formatted in this way, remember that in Lean manufacturing we want to set cycle times (capacity) as close as possible to the takt time (demand). In this way, the quantity of resources used to meet demand is minimized.
As we describe what standard work looks like, keep in mind that it is specifically designed for Lean production, with operators working on one product at a time through the process, with some walking involved.
There are three documents that form the core of standard work. In many cases, you’ll need an additional two. To get started with standard work, create the following:
The following two documents are also helpful:
Don’t let the potential complexities of standard work slow you down. Instead, view the standard work documents and practices as a toolkit for continuous improvement and identify a starting point that makes the most sense for your goals.
What should you do if you have no Lean production in place? While it would make no sense at all to use a standard work combination sheet or a standard operations layout when an operator is stationary, you can always start by creating a detailed work instruction.
Just having the cycle broken down into work elements, defining the exact sequence of work elements, and adding the key points that make or break quality, safety and productivity requirements will be a great way to get started and identify potential improvements.
Veryable's digital Standard Work Tool simplifies the complex process of creating Standard Work. Here is a quick walk-through of the tool
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