19

The Japanese 5-s Practice

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

the secret to success

Citation preview

Page 1: The Japanese 5-s Practice
Page 2: The Japanese 5-s Practice

What is the 5-SThe logic behind the 5-S practices is that organization,

neatness, cleanliness, standardization and discipline at the workplace are basic requirements for producing high quality products ad services, with little or no waste, and with high productivity.

The 5-S has become the way of doing business, not only to impress customers but to establish effective quality processes as pre-requisites for good products and services.

Page 3: The Japanese 5-s Practice

The 5-S in DETAILS

What is organization (Seiri)?

Organization is about separating the things which are necessary for the job from those that are not and keeping the number of necessary ones as low as possible and at a convenient location.

Information Management – sort information and organize it.

Most importantly, know what to discard, what to save and how to save things so that they can be accessed later when needed.

Page 4: The Japanese 5-s Practice

Stratification Management- involves deciding how important something is and then reducing the non-essential inventory.

- ensures that the essential things are close at hand for maximum efficiency.

The key to good stratification management is the ability to make these decisions about usage frequency and to ensure that things are in their proper places.

The way to organize things according to its usage:Usage Degree of Need (Frequency of Use) Storage Method

(Stratification)

Low •Things you have not used in the past year• Things you have only used one in the last 6-12 months

•Throw them out•Store at a distance

Average •Things you have only used once in the last 2 – 6 months•Thing used more than once a month

•Store in a central place in the workplace

High •Things used once a week•Things used every day•Things used hourly

•Store near the work site or carry by the person

Page 5: The Japanese 5-s Practice

ILLUSTRATION# 1: Organized File

Page 6: The Japanese 5-s Practice

ILLUSTRATION# 2: Disorganized File - Should throw away rubbish

Page 7: The Japanese 5-s Practice

ILLUSTRATION# 3: Disorganized - Should throw away rubbish

Page 8: The Japanese 5-s Practice

Which office would you like to work on?

Page 9: The Japanese 5-s Practice

Would you like to experience a good and sound sleep in this bedroom?

Page 10: The Japanese 5-s Practice
Page 11: The Japanese 5-s Practice

Differentiation between Need and WantOnce stratification and classification are done, you are in a

position to decide what you want to do with things that you do not use more than once a year. Save them or throw them away.

SAVE : How much of them do you need?

Most people tend to err in the beginning, on the conservative side of saving things ‘just in case’. But it is crucial that management make a decision: “Is it needed?”

If NOT get rid of it!

If YES , how much of it is needed?

Get rid of the rest.

If something is borrowed, return to the owner.

Page 12: The Japanese 5-s Practice

“ONE IS BEST”It is worthwhile to emphasize the importance of a principle called “ One is Best”.

Ex: One set of Tools/Stationary

One page Memo

One day processing

One stop service for customer

One location file.

“Let today’s work belong today.”

Page 13: The Japanese 5-s Practice

ACTIVITY 1. Why is the principle “One is Best” important? Why

are the following examples below important in the household and workplace? Explain very briefly.

Ex: One set of Tools/Stationary

One page Memo

One day processing

One stop service for customer

One location file

2. Comment on the saying, “Let today’s work belong today.”

Page 14: The Japanese 5-s Practice

What is neatness (Seiton)

Neatness is a study of efficiency. It is a question how you can get the things you need and how quickly you can put them away.

4 things in achieving neatness

1. Analyze the status quo – start by analyzing how people get things out and put them away, and why it takes so long.

Typical Problems

a. Not knowing what things are called

b. Not sure where things are kept

c. Storage site is far away

d. Repeated trips

e. Hard to find because of many things

f. Not labelled

g. Not there, but not clear whether it is finished or somebody is using it

h. Unclear if spare parts exist (no ledger, nowhere to ask)

i. One brought was defective

j. Hard to get out

k. Too big to carry or too heavy to carry

l. Need to set or assemble

m. No gangway to transport

Page 15: The Japanese 5-s Practice

2. Decide where things belong

There need to be criteria for deciding this because the absence of criteria an any other pattern will make it impossible to remember where things are supposed to be and will mean that it takes that much longer for them to put things back or to get them out.

3. Describe how things should be put away. This is critical to functional storage.

Procedures:

a. Everything should have a name

b. A place for everything and everything in its place

c. Quick identification

d. Safe storage (ex. Heavy things on the bottom & etc.)

e. Height considerations

4. Obey the put-away rules. This means always putting back where they belong.

Rules:

a. Out of stock – decide the minimum stock level and indicate that more are on order.

b. Somebody is using it – have an indication of who is using it and when they will return it

c. Lost – decide how many there should be. Draw a shadow outline indicating clearly what is missing.

Page 16: The Japanese 5-s Practice

What is Cleaning (Seiso)“Everyone is a Janitor” - Cleaning should be done by everyone in the organization

from the managing director to the cleaner.

Mottos for cleaning are:

1. I will not get things dirty

2. I will not spill’

3. I will not scatter things right away

4. I will rewrite that have got erased

5. I will tape up things that have come down.

In an office or factory, one will start by graphing out the individual areas of responsibility.

What is Standardization (Seiketsu)- means continually and repeatedly maintaining your organization’s neatness and

cleaning. It embraces both personal cleanliness and the cleanliness of the environment.

Emphasis:

a. Visual Management – an effective means of continuous improvement and has been used for production, quality, safety and customer service.

Page 17: The Japanese 5-s Practice

Methods of Visual Management:

1. Color management – color coding(creates a pleasant work environment). Workers opt for white and other light colored clothes because these colors show the dirt quickly and they provide a good indicator of how clean the workplace is. They have highlight the need for cleaning.

2. Appropriate Labels – most effective method.

b. Transparency – an important consideration for standardization. Tools and files are put in lockers, on closed shelves and under cover to be off sight. Thing inside closed spaces should be in a transparent containers of covers to ensure cleanliness.

c. Visualizing conditions - like ribbons on the fans so everyone can see the breeze and etc.

d. Trouble maps – put maps where they are visible for everyone ex. Blueprints of fire exits in each room of the hotel

e. Quantification – by constantly measuring, quantifying results and analyzing the date statistically, one can identify the limits to management and spot deviations before they become headaches.

Page 18: The Japanese 5-s Practice

What is Discipline (Shitsuke)

- Means instilling the ability of doing things they way they are supposed to be done. Creating good habits in the workplace.

- Self-discipline is important. It guarantees the continuity of a daily routine.- Discipline is a process of repetition and practice. Think of discipline as an

integral part of industrial safety.

The 5S in the officeThe office needs the 5-S to eliminate inefficiencies, to prevent mistakes, and to keep things running smoothly. The office is for administrative and managerial work that has to be done effectively and efficiently.

The office is basically the same as factory. They both get raw materials and turn out a product, the only difference is that the factory deals with tangibles while the office deals with the information and paperwork.

Page 19: The Japanese 5-s Practice

Why is 5-S useful?The 5-S reflects our attitudes and behavioral patterns. It can help everything we do.

1. 5S is useful because it will help everyone in the organization to live a better life. Implement the 5S at you home first and you will see the real benefit. Then it will become useful in the office as well (habit forming)

2. 5S can form a good basis for QCC(quality control circle) activities. 5S can provide a very good framework fro improvement.

3. 5S also forms a basis for other quality improvement activities.

4. 5S results in immense benefits to the company. It promotes high in quality and productivity, keeps cost down, ensures delivery on time, is safe for people to work and is high in morale.

How to implement the 5SThe 5-S implementation requires commitment from both the top management and

everyone in the organization. The following s teps will help you to achieve success:

1. Get Top Management Commitment and be Prepared (sell the idea to the executives)

2. Draw up Promotional Campaign (set up timetable)

3. Keeping Records (decisions, problems, action taken and results achieved)

4. 5-S Training

5. Evaluation