TPS Benchmarking

147 Articles

Respect for People? Labor Unrest at Toyota Kirloskar

By Jon Miller - January 11th, 2006

There has been labor unrest at the Toyota Kirloskar joint venture in Bidadi, India over the last week. Indian business news has covered these events, but there has been very little mention of it in American or Japanese news. On January

American Workers Embrace Kaizen Culture at NUMMI

By Jon Miller - January 10th, 2006

Here is a link to an excellent article from September 2005 in the Manufacturing Engineering magazine about the GM-Toyota 50/50 joint venture NUMMI. In this excerpt form the article one of the team members who later became a team leader

Happy New Year, and Genchi Gembutsu

By Jon Miller - January 3rd, 2006

I don’t mean to be lazy about crafting a New Year’s message, but once again the good people at Toyota have made my job easy. This is the first New Year for Mr. Watanabe as Toyota’s new President. In a memo titled New

How to Kaizen Boxing Day

By Jon Miller - December 26th, 2005

One of the greatest evils that kaizen and Lean manufacturing attempts to eliminate is overproduction, one of the 7 wastes. Overproduction hides true capacity, exacerbates quality problems, builds inventory, and generally amplifies the

Are they Nuts? Lean Team Shouts “Do It First and Think Later”

By Jon Miller - December 23rd, 2005

Edson Oda Senior Operations Consultant It was funny to see some puzzled faces and hear some comments and jokes from those who had seen the NEC Lean manufacturing slogan or heard the Lean team shout loudly ‘Faço, Faço, Faço Já

Faça Primeiro e Pense Depois: What I Learned from Japan in Brazil

By Jon Miller - December 20th, 2005

Edson Oda Senior Operations Consultant On the Evolving Excellence blog today Bill Waddell admits he doesn’t speak Japanese, warns against drowning your Lean efforts with Japanese lessons, and takes on the Japanese for not being curio

Heads Firmly in Sand, Motor City Chairmen Speak Out

By Jon Miller - December 13th, 2005

General Motors Chairman Rick Wagoner asks why U.S. automobile manufacturers are doing so poorly when foreign ones are doing so well in the December 6, 2005 Wall Street Journal editorial A Portrait of My Industry. “Despite public

Triangulating the Problem of American Manufacturing, Part 2

By Jon Miller - November 24th, 2005

Why do organizations fail to invest sufficiently in their people? The term Human Capital was introduced over 40 year ago by University of Chicago Professor Gary Becker. Human capital are the assets a person owns in for form of job skil

Triangulating the Problem of American Manufacturing, Part 1

By Jon Miller - November 23rd, 2005

Triangulation is a process by which you figure out where you are by checking three points or positions. Triangulation can be used to study a phenomenon by comparing three (or more) types of points of view or data sources. Three things

Eric’s Japan Lean Benchmarking Trip, 3

By Jon Miller - November 16th, 2005

This is the third and final installation of Eric’s report from his Lean manufacturing benchmarking trip to Japan in October. “Omron Taiyo manufactures electronic parts and employs the handicapped. Omron Taiyo produces vario

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