Lean in 60 Seconds | Lean Manufacturing Ideas

Table of Contents

Lean in 60 Seconds – Lean Manufacturing

 

You could spend hours, days or weeks picking up books about Lean but like us, I doubt you have that kind of time right now. Therefore we want to make this super quick and easy.

And as Mr Taiichi Ohno said (Chairman of Toyota Motors) …

“All we are doing is looking at the timeline, from the moment the customer gives us an order to the point when we collect the cash. And we are reducing that timeline by removing the non-value-added wastes”.

So what is Lean?

 

The Lean Timeline

 

Any business activity starts when the customer places an order for the product or service. Our goal is to turn that request into cash. We want to turn that order into a delivered service or product in the best, cheapest and most efficient way possible.

Lean therefore is the idea that we want to reduce every activity … yes, I mean every activity … which slows down or increases the costs to deliver that service to the customer. Every activity which does not add direct value to the customer or in other words, the customer is not willing to pay for, is by definition Muda.

Muda

Every step or activity which does not add value to the end product is Muda (waste). Lean is firstly about identifying what is important to the customer and then figuring out the most efficient way to deliver what the customer wants.

Kaizen

 

In order to continually identify every non-value-adding step and figure out how to improve things, Lean believes we need everyone’s help across the entire organisation. It is not the quality department’s job to find improvements, but there is a team responsible for continuous improvement.

Kanban

 

The final part of the puzzle is Kanban. As you go through the course you will begin to understand that one of the core Lean Principles is to reduce the work in progress at all times. When you have lots of unfinished activities, things basically slow down – just like when you have too much to do, it feels like nothing actually gets done. Kanban is the idea of how we manage the work we are doing to limit as much as possible what is actually being worked on. This naturally gives us a few benefits:

By delivering what the customer wants quicker, we reduce the order to cash timeline.

Holding lots of unfinished products costs money. Raw materials cost money and people’s time invested in unfinished products cost money too.

We don’t want to produce too much – doing this increases our costs and perhaps the customer is not willing to pay.

Learn more about Kanban in 10 mins

"All we are doing is looking at the timeline, from the moment the customer gives us an order to the point when we collect the cash. And we are reducing that timeline by removing the non-value-added wastes"

The Lean Challenge

 

As you can see from this graphic, Lean is based on the concept that

Every business wants to run as efficiently as possible
Every business needs to produce exactly what the customer wants when they want it
And to achieve this must work together to remove every activity which does not directly add value to the customer.

So ask yourself daily:

“Would the customer be willing to pay for what I am doing?”

Other useful articles:

Share this article with a friend
Search Articles
Ready to Transform Your Business?

Contact our Business Transformation specialists now to take the next step towards success!

Recent Articles
Efficient Operation Management Consulting for Enhanced Business Performance
Lean Leadership: A Book Review of CareToWin by Alex Draper
Rear view of a carefree young unrecognizable woman in a pink raincoat relaxing sitting at a table on the embankment and admiring the scenery, copy space
Building Community in the Age of Solitude Through Lean Thinking

Recent Articles

Efficient Operation Management Consulting for Enhanced Business Performance
Lean Leadership: A Book Review of CareToWin by Alex Draper
Rear view of a carefree young unrecognizable woman in a pink raincoat relaxing sitting at a table on the embankment and admiring the scenery, copy space
Building Community in the Age of Solitude Through Lean Thinking
Business partners at brainstorming meeting in office
Top Problem Solving Skill Employers Seek (And How to Develop It)
Lean Thinking and Waste Identification
The 8 Types of Downtime in Lean: How to Identify and Eliminate Waste
VIRAL Business Transformation
Business Transformation 2025: Future-Proofing Your Business with The Transformation Roadmap
Brainstorming - Scamper Technique Article
Unleash Your Business Growth Potential with a Deep Dive into the SCAMPER Brainstorming Technique
Mood's Median Test diagram
A Beginner’s Guide to the Mood’s Median Test in Lean Six Sigma
Mood's Median Test diagram
Guidelines for Effective Meetings: Strategies for Successful Meetings
Standardisation, Optimisation and Automation
Redefining Automation: Prioritizing Standardization and Optimization
Mood's Median Test diagram
Factors to consider when developing a data collection plan
Developing Lean Skills for Leadership
Skills for Leadership: 5 Leadership Skills from Lean
Problem Solving Approaches
5 Essential Problem-Solving Strategies Every Business Leader Should Know
Online Business Courses Free
Online Business Courses Free: The Benefits for Professionals
Mood's Median Test diagram
The Critical to Quality Tool: What It Is & How to Use It
Business Strategy & Strategic Execution
Mastering Strategic Execution: Top Strategies for Success in 2025
Event Management Operational Transformation
Driving Enterprise Value: A Strategic Operational Transformation in the Events Industry
Visual Management in Digital Teams
Visual Management in Digital Workspaces: Enhancing Operations
Understanding Change Implementation
Realizing Results: Implementing Change with Precision
An illustration depicting the concept of enterprise change management.
Mastering Enterprise Change: Strategies for Successful Transformation
Scroll to Top

Create an account to access this functionality.
Discover the advantages