Management lessons from Taiichi Ohno : what every leader can learn from the man who invented the Toyota production system

Author(s)

    • 原田, 武彦 ハラダ, タケヒコ

Bibliographic Information

Management lessons from Taiichi Ohno : what every leader can learn from the man who invented the Toyota production system

Takehiko Harada

McGraw-Hill Education, c2015

Other Title

モノの流れをつくる人 : 大野耐一さんが伝えたかったトップ・管理者の役割

Mono no nagare wo tsukuru hito : Ohno Taiichi-san ga tsutaetakatta top kanrisha no yakuwari

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Note

Originally published in Japan: c2013

Other title from t.p. verso

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The 15 most powerful practices for guiding breakthrough productivity improvements in any company Management Lessons From Taiichi Ohno provides firsthand knowledge of the tools, techniques, and challenges to implementing the Lean values of the Toyota Production System (TPS) in an organization. Takehiko Harada spent four decades applying Lean principles at Toyota with Taiichi Ohno, and the motivating insights he shares on maintaining a Lean culture are peerless. More than a set of rules for managers and executives to implement, this personal guidebook is from the heart in an attempt to see other companies enjoy the rewards of the TPS values Toyota leaders dedicated their lives to serving. It puts you in touch with the actual people who learned the key to success is creating a workforce of smiling employees who find purpose to their work. Real-world examples from Toyota as well as other companies striving to practice TPS/Lean fully demonstrate: The 15 sayings of Taiichi Ohno-what his words mean and how his philosophies are practiced throughout Toyota The 4 Stages of Things-a very useful method for visiting the gemba, which is where the action takes place The managerial role-what management at the frontline should be, how it is different from a supervisor's duties, and the critical motivational elements to creating a vibrant, happy workplace Bridging the cultural gap-indispensable wisdom for deploying the Toyota method in non-Japanese cultures

Table of Contents

Translator's Notes and Insights ix Introduction 1 CHAPTER 1: Learning from Mr. Taiichi Ohno Lesson 1: No One Really Understood What I Was Saying, So I Had to Go to the Gemba and Give Detailed Instructions 7 Lesson 2: Kaizen Equals Getting Closer to the Final Process 11 Lesson 3: You Need by the Line Only the Parts for the Car You Are Assembling Now 17 Lesson 4: Building in Batches Stunts the Growth of Your Operations (Don't Combine Kanbans and Build a Group of Them) 20 Lesson 5: Nine Out of Ten, One Out of Ten 24 Lesson 6: The Foreman or Leader Is the One Who "Breaks" the Standard (When You Make an Improvement and You Can Take Out One Person, Give Up Your Best Person) 29 Lesson 7: Multiskilling Means Learning the Next Process-Keep It Flowing Until You Reach the Last Process 32 Lesson 8: What's That Red Circle on the Top Right of That Graph? 35 Lesson 9: Are You as the Manager Having Them Do It, or Are They Just Doing It Their Way? Which Is It, Man? 39 Lesson 10: Standard Work for the Andon Is, "Go There When It Flashes" 42 Lesson 11: Standard Work Is the Foundation of Kanban 45 Lesson 12: When the Worker Pushes the Start Button, He Has Stopped Moving. Can't You Guys Figure Out a Way for Him to Push Start While Still Moving? 49 Lesson 13: You Bought an Expensive Machine, and Now You Want an Expensive Foreman or Engineer to Run It? Are You Mad? 52 Lesson 14: Engineers in Production Become the Horizontal Threads in the Cloth 55 Lesson 15: The Lowest Kanban Quantity Should Be Five 60 CHAPTER 2: The Role of the Top The Management and Structure Needed to Have a Successful Toyota Production System Deployment 65 The Role of Top Management: People Who Can Change the Structure (Rules, Organization, and Operations) Based on Changes the Production Environment Faces 70 The Foundation of Operations: How the Top Should Look at Things from Four Perspectives 72 CHAPTER 3: The Role of Management: Enable Your Employees to Do the Work Well To All You Managers Out There 81 Managers Are There to Create an Environment in Which Increases in Flow Happen 84 Giving Authority: Growing People You Can Empower 89 Management Should Make Workplaces That Motivate People to Work and Sustain the Motivation 98 CHAPTER 4: If You Respect Other People, They Will Trust You Talk to the Top People and Other Expatriates About Their Experience 120 Think of Managing an Overseas Plant as a Three-Story Building 121 Make an Environment Where It's OK to Say, "I'm Sorry" 127 Make the Toyota Production System a Pillar of the Management of the Entity 129 Be Proactive in Encouraging the Toyota Production System Inside and Outside Your Company 132 Choose a Local Manager for Working with Suppliers 134 How to Deploy the Toyota Production System in Suppliers 137 Top Management Must Visit and Coach Suppliers at Least Three Times a Year 139 The Factory Must Be Run by Local Management, Starting with the Factory Manager and All the Way Down 141 Make Japanese the Offi cial Company Language 143 Become an Executive Who People Can Trust. Respect Othersand They Will Trust You 145 Afterword: To Those Top Managers Who Are Thinking of Applying the Toyota Principles to Make a Wonderful Operation 151 Index 157

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