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Throughput World These sides and note were prepared using Throughput World These sides and note were prepared using

Throughput World These sides and note were prepared using - PowerPoint Presentation

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Throughput World These sides and note were prepared using - PPT Presentation

1 The book Streamlined 14 Principles for Building and Managing the Lean Supply Chain 2004 Srinivasan TOMPSON ISBN 9780324232776 2 The slides originally prepared by Professor M M Srinivasan ID: 719640

step throughput profit constraint throughput step constraint profit cost constraints performance system world time capacity 000 toc work multiplier

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Slide1

Throughput World

These sides and note were prepared using

1. The book Streamlined: 14 Principles for Building and Managing the Lean Supply Chain. 2004. Srinivasan. TOMPSON ISBN: 978-0-324-23277-6.2. The slides originally prepared by Professor M. M. Srinivasan.3. Operations Management. Jacobs and Chase. McGraw-Hill.

Complex solutions do not work,

the more complex the problem

the simpler the solution must be.

Eli

Goldratt

.

Slide2

TOC owes its origin to

Eliahu

Goldratt, an Israeli physicist. The basic idea was published in his book; The Goal (1984). TOC Premise 1: The Goal of a business is to make more money, … in the present and in the future  Max NPV. Just like the links of a chain, the processes within the enterprise work together to generate profit for the stakeholders.

The chain is only as strong as its weakest link.

TOC Premise 2: There is one or at most few constraint(s) determine its output.

Theory of Constraints (TOC)Slide3

Systems Thinking and TOC

Focus on maximizing the productive use of the bottleneck. Schedule it to maximize throughput. The other resources can be schedule subsequently since they have available capacity by definition.

Principle: Time lost at a bottleneck resource results in a loss of throughput for the whole enterprise. Time saved a non-bottleneck resources is a mirage. The traditional management lives in a cost world; minimizing costs and improving efficiencies. A complex system is broken down into smaller parts; cost or profit centers with local targets. Cost or profit centers  achieve/beat targets; if every unit improved locally then the entire enterprise would improve globally. Managers in cost world think locally.Slide4

Cost World – Local Optimization

To improve performance of the total system, it is not enough to improve performance of the isolated functions; it is

Local Optimization, it ignores the interactions between the various functions. Cost world thinks locally. The throughput world thinks globally. An increase in the cost of an engine of $30 would have decreased the cost of the transmission by $80. The center producing the engine is reluctant to do so.Slide5

Systems Approach

The story of the blind men and an elephant originated

in India, where it was widely disseminated. Rumi, the 13th Century Persian poet and teacher of Sufism, included it in his retelling, "The Elephant in the Dark," uses this story as an example of the limits of individual perception. Some

Hindus had brought an elephant for exhibition and placed it in a dark house. Crowds of people were going into that dark place to see the beast. Finding that ocular inspection was impossible, each visitor felt it with his palm in the darkness.

The

palm of one fell on the trunk. This creature is like a water-spout, he said.

The

hand of another rested on the elephant’s ear. To him the beast was evidently like a fan. Slide6

Systems Approach

Another rubbed against its leg. “I found the elephant’s shape is like a pillar,” he said.

Another laid his hand on its back. Certainly this elephant was like a throne, he said. Rumi

ends his poem by stating; if each had a candle and they went in together the differences would disappear.

Jalaluddin

Rumi is not only the teacher of Sufism, but among other things, the messenger of system-thinking. Slide7

The 5 Step TOC Focusing Process

Step 1: Identify the System’s Constraint(s)

Step 2: Decide how to Exploit the System’s ConstraintsStep 3: Subordinate Everything Else to that DecisionStep 4: Elevate the System’s ConstraintsStep 5: If a Constraint Was Broken in previous Steps, Go to Step 1

Performance of subsystems to be linked to the performance of the total system.

The 5-Steps in a continuing Process. Slide8

Step 1: Identify the Constraint(s)

Physical Constraints.

Tangible; easy to recognize as constraint. H/C/F Resources. Machine capacity, material, space, cash availability.Eliminate idle time, reduce setup time and run time, Improve quality control, buy more capacity.

First Focus on where you have more WIP.Slide9

Market Constraints

Demand for company’s products and services is less than capacity, or not in desired proportion.

Harder to identify than physical constraints.Excess capacity is easily identified as a market

constraint.

Make an offer the customer cannot refuse! P > VSlide10

Policy Constraints

Methods Constraints. Never producing a batch of units below an EOQ; producing products for which there is no current demand. A flawed method of absorption costing that adds value to a product as it moves through a series of process steps.

Measures Constraints. Buying large quantities for quantity discounts. Paying sales commission based on volume of sale. Rewarding managers if they utilize their resources to produce more output because a higher output better absorbs labor and overhead. Tell me how you measure me and I will tell you how I behave.Mindset Constraints. Shop supervisor believes operators should be busy all of the time. The enterprise can become profitable through outsourcing. You don't understand, we are different, that won't work here! Slide11

Step 2 : Decide How to Exploit the System’s Constraint(s)

Exploiting the constraint means using the constraint as profitably as possible

Until the constraints are overcome by other means, the enterprise should work them as profitably (effectively) as possible.The real meaning of the word exploit? If constraint is physical resource, ensure the resource is never

idle.

If the market is the constraint, exploit by ensuring not a single sale is lost as a result of our action or

inaction.Market constraint implies extra capacity, so we exploit this by guaranteeing 100% on time delivery to

customer.

Slide12

Step 3 : Subordinate Everything Else to that Decision

We

do not want non-bottleneck resources becoming bottlenecks because of our negligence of focusing on constraints. Work must be started and sequenced so the constraint can always work or work smarter

Drum-buffer-rope (DBR),

or pull-from-the-bottleneck model, is similar to

kanban system. Except

the

input process of DBR is linked to the rate or production of the constraint to utilize it as much as possibleSlide13

Step 4 : Elevate the System’s Constraints

Lift

the restriction that is preventing the enterprise from making more moneyIdentifying ways that the performance of the system can be improved, relative to its goals

This step should

only

be performed after the exploit step, step 2If the constraint still exists, or another emerges, then it is time to execute the fourth

step. Slide14

Step 5 : If a Constraint Was Broken in a Previous Step, Go Back to Step 1

Can we stop with the fourth step?

If we elevate the constraint, it will probably not remain a constraintPerformance will not be dictated by another element that has become the weakest linkTo find this new weak link, we must revisit all the steps once againGoldratt

adds this warning: “

Do not allow inertia to cause a system’s constraints

.”Step 5 is crucial because it prevents inertia from derailing continuous improvement processSlide15

Long-term Increase or Short-term Gain?

A chain can demonstrate how the cost world focus sacrifices long term throughput increases for short-term gains.

Instead of strengthening the weakest link (improving Throughput in the throughput world), we focus on improving efficiency at the current level of performance (improving Operating Expenses in the cost world). Chain of 10 links, each with carrying capacity of 100 lbs except for one with only 50 lbs. Management unhappy with cost of maintaining the nine strong links so it sells

the nine heavy links.Slide16

Long-term Increase or Short-term Gain?

It replaces each link with a capacity of 50 which makes an efficient chain; every link is carrying

exactly same load. The enterprise is now locked into the current performance level; it now has ten links, any one of which can break.In the future, if improved performance is desired, it will have to work all ten links in the chainThe same problem occurs when enterprises eliminate overcapacity. If business picks up, it will be harder to recruit employees, why?Fearful of being fired in the next downsize.Slide17

IF:

Clients never change their mind,

Vendors always supply what we ask for, on time,We do not have any absenteeism,

Our workers are excellently trained,

Our processes are extremely reliable,

Our quality is superb,

Data is readily available and accurate,

and

Managing production will be a piece of cake, …

THEN:

You can decide on whatever policies you want.

right?

The Paradise Plant!Slide18

Tell me how you will measure me and

I will tell you how I will behave.

If you measure me in an illogical way, … do not complain about illogical behavior. If you measure me in an unreasonable way, no one knows how I will behave....Not even me.

Effect of Performance MeasuresSlide19

TOC Performance Measures

Throughput (T): The rate at which the system generates money through sales.

Sales – Row Material and Component costs.Investment (I): All the money invested in purchasing things needed by the system to sell its products. Raw Material, WIP, and Finished Goods inventory as well as Capital Resources owned.Operating Expenses (OE): All the money the system spends, turning inventory into throughput.

Direct labor, Administrative and Non Administration overhead, Depreciation, Rent. Slide20

Priorities in Traditional World

First: OE

Second: T

Distant Third: ISlide21

Where is the Bang for the Buck? (T vs. OE)

$

Revenue 100RM 40DL 10OH 40Cost 90

NP 10

100

114

10

8

40

40

98

88

16

12

40

48

Leverage from

Decreasing OE

Leverage from

Increasing T

Assume a) you have 20% excess capacity, and b) sales will increase

by 20

% if you can effect a 5% price reduction.

0.95(100) = 95

1.20(95) = 114Slide22

Throughput Profit Multiplier

Since a large fraction of the operating costs of are fixed, small changes in throughput could be translated into large changes in profits.

Throughput profit multiplier = % change in profit / % change in throughput Suppose FC = $180,000 per month. P = 22, and V = 2. In July, the process throughput was 10,000 units. 10000(22-2) – 180,000 = $20,000 profitA process improvement increased throughput in August by 1% to 10,100 units, without any increase in the fixed cost. 10100(22-2) – 180,000 = $22,000 profit

(22000-20000)/20000 = 10%

1% throughput improvement

 10% profit improvementSlide23

Throughput Profit Multiplier

The throughput profit multiplier could be computed directly.

Throughput profit multiplier =contribution margin per unit / profit per unitIn our example, profit was 20,000 for July when throughput was 10,000. Profit per unit sold is then 20000/10000=$2profit margin per unit is $20.For each additional unit sold, we get a throughput profit multiplier yielding a factor of 20/2 = 10.If the throughput profit multiplier is large, the financial impact of increasing throughput is significant. Slide24

Shifting Paradigms

Current Priority

First: OE Second: T

Third:

I

T

I

OE

New PrioritySlide25

TOC/Lean Principle

Decisions should promote a growth strategy.

While enterprises should attempt to simultaneously increase throughput, decrease inventory, and decrease operating expenses, the focus must be on improving throughput.

Link the goal of the subsystem to the goal of the total system. Measure the performance of the subsystem based on the performance of the total system.Slide26

Inventory adversely affects

all competing edges (P/Q/V/D)Has cost

Physical carrying costsFinancial costsHas risk of obsolescence Due to market changesDue to technology changesLeads to poor quality Feed back loop is longHides problemsUnreliable suppliers, machine breakdowns, long changeover times, too much scrap.

Causes long flow time

Lean Operations: The Real Cost of Inventory