Posts Tagged ‘quality cost’

Brigade provides Lean Six Sigma training to deployed Soldiers

Monday, December 26th, 2011

KANDAHAR AIRFIELD, Afghanistan –

Military logistics operations are centered on providing the best possible service to their customers. Ensuring the best possible service to soldiers downrange is the priority of every logistics leader. One deployed unit is providing their soldiers an opportunity to learn new ways to improve logistic capabilities. The Task Force Resolute command provides a Lean Six Sigma course at the U.S. Forces Afghanistan conference room on Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan.

“Through Lean Six Sigma, soldiers and leaders will learn how to properly manage time and resources while delivering a top quality product the first time,” said Chief Warrant Officer Jackie Vuorinen, the TF-Resolute safety officer. “This is a program all soldiers can use to save Army resources while providing higher quality products.”

It’s only natural that the Task Force Resolute command use Lean Six Sigma. After all, providing military logistics is a complex process and, like any process, it can be improved. The current best practice for improving complex processes is Lean Six Sigma. Soldiers are being taught the Lean Six Sigma Green Belt body of knowledge. The most fundamental principal taught by the “Green Belt” course is to center the students thinking to several key concepts: define, measure, analyze, improve and control.

The soldier begins by defining a need within their organization centered around quality, cost or timing. The need must be clearly stated through a quantifiable unit such as units shipped, number of products delivered in a sub-standard state or the amount of time it takes to bring a product to the customer. soldiers measure all their statistics through historical data. The data is analyzed and the implications of faults within the organizations system are used to determine methods of improvement. These methods are implemented and used to create a steady improvement in service to the end customer.

Perhaps the effectiveness of the approach is why, according to the DVIDs website story, that students strongly recommend the course to all leaders and soldiers. In truth, this is the standard Lean Six Sigma approach applied in the context of military logistics. Let’s hope that the word spreads.

GD Star Rating
loading...

Selecting Six Sigma Projects

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

Sometimes just determining which projects to undertake isn’t enough.

Six Sigma is project-intensive. Large firms, such as General Electric, report completing as many as 7,000 Six Sigma projects in a single year. Even much smaller companies can complete several hundred projects per year. But this should come as no surprise, as projects are the means by which Six Sigma converts knowledge into bottom-line results.

However, not all Six Sigma projects produce bottom-line benefits; many produce only local improvements. In my June column I described how to use the theory of constraints (TOC) to decide where in the process to conduct Six Sigma projects. But we need to go even further. In addition to telling us where to conduct Six Sigma projects, knowing the process constraints also helps us determine what the focus of the project should be.

Six Sigma projects address three different areas of potential improvement: quality, cost and schedule. Critical characteristics in the product, process or service are identified using CTx notation: Critical-to-quality characteristics are designated CTQ; critical-to-cost, CTC; and critical-to-schedule, CTS. This classification scheme, combined with the TOC, can help focus Six Sigma projects by defining project deliverables in terms of their impact on one or more CTx characteristics.

Figure 1: A Simple Process with a Constraint

Consider the simple process in Figure 1. The process is producing a product for which there is a market demand of 20 units per week. However, the best this process can deliver is seven units per week because that’s the best step C can do.

Applying the TOC strategy described in another post, we know that Six Sigma projects that affect step C should be given priority, those affecting steps D and E second priority, and those affecting A and B third priority. This tells us where to focus our efforts. The CTx information can help us determine what to focus on.

Assume that you have three Six Sigma candidate projects all focusing on process step C, the constraint. The area addressed is correct, but which project should you pursue first? Assume that one project will improve quality, another cost, and another schedule. Does this new information help? Definitely! Table 1 shows how this information can be used.

Table 1: Throughput Priority of CTx Projects That Affect the Constraint

Projects in the same priority group are ranked according to their impact on throughput. The same thought process can be applied to process steps before and after the constraint. The results are shown in Table 2. (Note that Table 2 assumes that projects before the constraint don’t result in problems at the constraint.) Remember, impact should be measured in terms of throughput.

Knowing the project’s throughput priority will help you make better project selections among project candidates. Of course, the throughput priority is just one input into the project selection process; other factors–for example, integration with other projects, a regulatory requirement or a better payoff in the long-term–may lead to a different decision.

Table 2: Project Throughput Priority vs. Project Focus

GD Star Rating
loading...