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Kaizen From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation , search "Red tag" redirects here. For designation of damaged structures, see Red-tagged structure . This article is about the continuous improvement philosophy. For the fantasy currency invented by Kaizen Games with symbol "$K", see Priston Tale . The term kaizen (改改 , Japanese for "improvement") is a Japanese word adopted into English referring to a philosophy or practices focusing on continuous improvement in manufacturing activities, business activities in general, and even life in general, depending on interpretation and usage. When used in the business sense and applied to the workplace, kaizen typically refers to activities that continually improve all functions of a business, from manufacturing to management and from the CEO to the assembly line workers. [1] By improving standardized activities and processes, kaizen aims to eliminate waste (see lean manufacturing ). Kaizen was first implemented in several Japanese businesses during the country's recovery after World War II and has since spread to businesses throughout the world. [2] Contents [hide ] 1 Introduction 2 Translation 3 History 4 Implementation o 4.1 The five main elements of kaizen o 4.2 Major results 5 Criticism 6 See also

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KaizenFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search"Red tag" redirects here. For designation of damaged structures, see Red-tagged structure.

This article is about the continuous improvement philosophy. For the fantasy currency invented by Kaizen Games with symbol "$K", see Priston Tale.

The term kaizen (改善, Japanese for "improvement") is a Japanese word adopted into English referring to a philosophy or practices focusing on continuous improvement in manufacturing activities, business activities in general, and even life in general, depending on interpretation and usage. When used in the business sense and applied to the workplace, kaizen typically refers to activities that continually improve all functions of a business, from manufacturing to management and from the CEO to the assembly line workers.[1] By improving standardized activities and processes, kaizen aims to eliminate waste (see lean manufacturing). Kaizen was first implemented in several Japanese businesses during the country's recovery after World War II and has since spread to businesses throughout the world.[2]

Contents

[hide] 1 Introduction 2 Translation

3 History

4 Implementation

o 4.1 The five main elements of kaizen

o 4.2 Major results

5 Criticism

6 See also

7 References

8 Further reading

[edit] Introduction

The Japanese word "kaizen" means simply "improvement," with no inherent meaning of either "continuous" or "Japanese philosophy"; the word refers to any improvement, one-time or continuous, large or small, in the same sense as the mundane English word "improvement".[3] However, given the common practice in Japan of labeling industrial or business improvement techniques with the word "kaizen" (for lack of a specific Japanese word meaning "continuous improvement" or "philosophy of improvement"), especially in the case of oft-emulated practices spearheaded by Toyota, the word kaizen in English is typically

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applied to measures for implementing continuous improvement, or even taken to mean a "Japanese philosophy" thereof. The discussion below focuses on such interpretations of the word, as frequently used in the context of modern management discussions.[citation needed]

Kaizen is a daily activity, the purpose of which goes beyond simple productivity improvement. It is also a process that, when done correctly, humanizes the workplace, eliminates overly hard work ("muri"), and teaches people how to perform experiments on their work using the scientific method and how to learn to spot and eliminate waste in business processes. The philosophy can be defined as bringing back the thought process into the automated production environment dominated by repetitive tasks that traditionally required little mental participation from the employees.[citation needed]

People at all levels of an organization can participate in kaizen, from the CEO down, as well as external stakeholders when applicable. The format for kaizen can be individual, suggestion system, small group, or large group. At Toyota, it is usually a local improvement within a workstation or local area and involves a small group in improving their own work environment and productivity. This group is often guided through the kaizen process by a line supervisor; sometimes this is the line supervisor's key role. Kaizen on a broad, cross-departmental scale in companies, generates total quality management, and frees human efforts through improving productivity using machines and computing power.[citation needed]

While kaizen (at Toyota) usually delivers small improvements, the culture of continual aligned small improvements and standardization yields large results in the form of compound productivity improvement. This philosophy differs from the "command and control" improvement programs of the mid-twentieth century. Kaizen methodology includes making changes and monitoring results, then adjusting. Large-scale pre-planning and extensive project scheduling are replaced by smaller experiments, which can be rapidly adapted as new improvements are suggested.[citation needed]

In modern usage, a focused kaizen that is designed to address a particular issue over the course of a week is referred to as a "kaizen blitz" or "kaizen event". These are limited in scope, and issues that arise from them are typically used in later blitzes.[citation needed]

[edit] Translation

The original kanji characters for this word are: "改 善" (see 改 and 善)

In Japanese this is pronounced "kaizen".[4]

改 ("kai") means "change" or "the action to correct". 善 ("zen") means "good".

In Korean this is pronounced "ge sun"

改善 ("gae seon") means "improvement" or "change for the better"

In Mandarin this is pronounced "gǎi shàn":

改善 ("gǎi shàn") means "change for the better" or "improve".

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改 ("gǎi") means "change" or "the action to correct".

善 ("shàn") means "good" or "benefit". "Benefit" is more related to the Taoist or Buddhist philosophy, which gives the definition as the action that 'benefits' the society but not one particular individual (i.e., multilateral improvement). In other words, one cannot benefit at another's expense. The quality of benefit that is involved here should be sustained forever, in other words the "shan" is an act that truly benefits others.

[edit] History

In Japan, after World War II, American occupation forces brought in American experts in statistical control methods and who were familiar with the War Department's Training Within Industry (TWI) training programs to restore the nation. TWI programs included Job Instruction (standard work) and Job Methods (process improvement). In conjunction with the Shewhart cycle taught by W. Edwards Deming, and other statistics-based methods taught by Joseph M. Juran, these became the basis of the kaizen revolution in Japan that took place in the 1950s.[5]

[edit] Implementation

The Toyota Production System is known for kaizen, where all line personnel are expected to stop their moving production line in case of any abnormality and, along with their supervisor, suggest an improvement to resolve the abnormality which may initiate a kaizen.

The PDCA cycles

The cycle of kaizen activity can be defined as:

Standardize an operation Measure the standardized operation (find cycle time and amount of in-process

inventory)

Gauge measurements against requirements

Innovate to meet requirements and increase productivity

Standardize the new, improved operations

Continue cycle ad infinitum

This is also known as the Shewhart cycle, Deming cycle, or PDCA.

Masaaki Imai made the term famous in his book Kaizen: The Key to Japan's Competitive Success.

Apart from business applications of the method, both Anthony Robbins and Robert Maurer have popularized the kaizen principles into personal development principles. The basis of Robbins' CANI (Constant and Never-Ending Improvement) method in kaizen is discussed in his Lessons in Mastery series.

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In their book The Toyota Way Fieldbook, Brijesh Rawat, Jeffrey Liker, and David Meier discuss the kaizen blitz and kaizen burst (or kaizen event) approaches to continuous improvement. A kaizen blitz, or rapid improvement, is a focused activity on a particular process or activity. The basic concept is to identify and quickly remove waste. Another approach is that of kaizen burst, a specific kaizen activity on a particular process in the value stream.[6]

Key elements of kaizen are quality, effort, involvement of all employees, willingness to change, and communication.

[edit] The five main elements of kaizen

Teamwork Personal discipline

Improved morale

Quality circles

Suggestions for improvement

[edit] Major results

Elimination of waste (muda) and incorporation of efficiency The kaizen five - S framework for a well organized shop floor

o Seiri - tidiness

o Seiton - orderliness

o Seiso - cleanliness

o Seiketsu - standardization

o Shitsuke - discipline

[edit] Criticism

Kaizen is primarily a reactive process where you "check" to see if anything is wrong, then go about fixing it. While this works for lower level processes, it must be advanced to include a creative element where one actively looks for ways of improving - the key being that the worker needs to know what is important to the company to improve. There should also be room for cases where a worker makes a recommendation that doesn't fit the mold of the company's target improvements. Many new companies have started due to workers who saw a means of quantum improvement which their original employer failed to recognize despite being highlighted by the worker.

[edit] See also

5S Balanced scorecard

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Business process reengineering

Extreme Programming

Muda

Overall equipment effectiveness

Root cause analysis

Scrum

Six Sigma

Statistical process control

Theory of Constraints

TOC Lean Six Sigma

Total productive maintenance

TRIZ

[edit] References

1. ̂ Imai, Masaaki (1986). Kaizen: The Key to Japan's Competitive Success. New York, NY, USA: Random House.

2. ̂ Europe Japan Centre, Kaizen Strategies for Improving Team Performance, Ed. Michael Colenso, London: Pearson Education Limited, 2000

3. ̂ "Debunked: "kaizen = Japanese philosophy of continuous improvement"". http://www.homejapan.com/2009/03/debunked-kaizen. Retrieved 2009-08-15.

4. ̂ "Dictionary entry for Kaizen". J/E's Dictionary Server. Jeffrey Friedl. http://dict.regex.info/cgi-bin/j-e/dosearch?sDict=on&H=PS&L=J&T=kaizen&WC=none&FG=r&BG=b&S=26. Retrieved 2009-02-12.

5. ̂ Huntzinger, Jim (First Quarter 2002). "The Roots of Lean: Training within Industry—the origin of Kaizen". AME Target 18 (1): 13. http://www.leaninstituut.nl/publications/Roots_of_Lean_TWI.pdf. Retrieved 2008-05-09.

6. ̂ Liker, J. (2006). The Toyota Way Fieldbook. New York, NY, USA: McGraw-Hill.

[edit] Further reading

Cooper, Mary Pat (2008). Kaizen Sketchbook: The Comprehensive Illustrated Field Guide to Kaizen. Moffitt Associates. ISBN 978-0-615-19011-2.

Dinero, Donald (2005). Training Within Industry: The Foundation of Lean. Productivity Press. ISBN 1-56327-307-1.

Emiliani, B.; D. Stec; L. Grasso; J. Stodder (2007). Better Thinking, Better Results: Case Study and Analysis of an Enterprise-Wide Lean Transformation (2e. ed.). Kensington, CT, USA: The CLBM, LLC. ISBN 978-0-9722591-2-5.

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Imai, Masaaki (1986). Kaizen: The Key to Japan's Competitive Success. McGraw-Hill/Irwin. ISBN 0.

Imai, Masaaki (1997-03-01). Gemba Kaizen: A Commonsense, Low-Cost Approach to Management (1e. ed.). McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-031446-2.

Scotchmer, Andrew (2008). 5S Kaizen in 90 Minutes. Management Books 2000 Ltd. ISBN 978-1-8525254-7-7.

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