Improvement So Who Cares BADM 701 Dr Ron Lembke Andrew Carnegie Telegraph operator to RR division superintendent Adopted latest technology built first steel plant laid out to optimize flow ID: 577085
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Continuous Process Improvement: So Who Cares?
BADM 701
Dr. Ron LembkeSlide2
Andrew CarnegieTelegraph operator to RR division superintendent
Adopted latest technology, built first steel plant laid out to optimize flow
Focused on knowing, lowering unit cost
Raise prices with everyone else in booms, slash prices in recessionSlide3
U.S. Steel Production
Production: U.S. England
1868 8,500 111,000
1902 9,138,000 1,862,000
Steel Prices: (per ton) 1870 $100 1890 $12How? Continuous Process Improvement Slide4
The Richest Man in the World
Found out strike organizers, fired before
1886 “Triumphant Democracy,” Forum magazine- workers’ right to unionize
1889 “Gospel of Wealth”: rich need to help the poor ($25m annual income)
1892 Homestead strike: 12 hour gunfight, Pinkerton defeated (12 died), state militia called in, strike breakers hired
1901 sells out to J. P. Morgan: $480mBuilt 2,500 libraries. “The man who dies rich dies disgraced.”1919 dies, having given away 90%Slide5
#2 Richest person EVERData from Forbes. Picture from BusinessIntelligence.comSlide6
Skibo CastleSlide7
Henry Ford
Continuous Process Improvement
Advances in metal cutting allowed him to cut pre-hardened steel, produce identical parts
Standardized parts facilitated standardization of jobs, moving assembly line
Model T: 1908 $850
1920s: $250Slide8
Ford’s Rouge PlantSlide9
Vertical IntegrationOwned forests, iron mines, rubber plantation, coal mines, ships, railroad lines
Dock facilities, blast furnaces, foundries, rolling mills, stamping plants, an engine plant, glass manufacturing, a tire plant, its own power plant, and 90 miles of RR track
1927 Model A Production begins
15,000,000 cars in 15 years
120,000 employees in WWIISlide10
Rouge PlantSlide11
Details to the MaxIn his autobiographies “My Life and Work” (1922), and “Today and Tomorrow” (1926), Ford gives great detail on innovations he and his company have made, including:
Glass making, Artificial leather
Steering wheels out of Fordite
heat treating -- saved $36m in 4 years (1922)
Forging parts, wiremaking
Riveting, bronze bushings, springsWhy Black for cars?Slide12
Kingsford CharcoalSlide13
Managing Workers“It is a reciprocal relation -- the boss is the partner of his worker, the worker is partner of his boss. Both are indispensable.”
-- MLAW p. 117Slide14
Paying for Good Employees“One frequently hears that wages have to be cut because of competition, but competition is never really met by lowering wages. The only way to get a low-cost product is to
pay a high price for a high grade of human
service
and to see to it through management that you get that service.” T&T p. 43Slide15
Mindless Work“Repetitive Labour
-- the doing of one thing over and over again and always in the same way -- is a terrifying prospect to a certain kind of mind. It is terrifying to me. I could not possibly do the same thing day in and day out, but to other minds, perhaps I might say to the majority of minds, repetitive operations hold no terrors.
In fact, to some types of mind thought is absolutely appalling.
To them the ideal job is one where their creative instinct need not be expressed.” MLAW p. 103Slide16
Mindless Work
When you come right down to it, most jobs are repetitive. A business man has a routine that he follows with great exactness; the work of a bank president is nearly all routine; the work of under officers and clerks in a bank is purely routine. Indeed, for most purposes and most people, it is necessary to establish something in the way of a routine and to make most motions purely repetitive -- otherwise the individual will not get enough done to be able to live off his own exertions. -- MLAW pp 103-4.Slide17
Shigeo Shingo and Toyota
Toyota’s quest for Quality
Focused on allowing product to
flow
through the plant as evenly as possible.
Cheap affordability to JD Power #1Reduce waste? Continuous process improvementLearned all about it from whose book?
1977
1989Slide18
U.S. Auto QualitySlide19