Ebook: Understanding, Measuring, and Improving Daily Management: How to Use Effective Daily Management to Drive Significant Process Improvement
Author: Ross Kenneth Kennedy (Author)
- Tags: Economics Finance Business & Industry, Business Management and Marketing, Production Operations & Information Management, Strategic Management, Management Education, Leadership, Engineering & Technology, Manufacturing Engineering, Production Research & Economics, Lean Manufacturing
- Year: 2019
- Publisher: Productivity Press
- City: New York
- Edition: 1
- pdf
Understanding, Measuring, and Improving Daily Management explains the critical parts of a continuous improvement strategy to achieve Operational Excellence and where reactive improvement through effective daily management fits in. In addition, it shows the consequences to your Operational Excellence journey if daily management is not performed well.
Reactive improvement develops the capability and discipline within the organization to be able to rapidly recover from an event or incident that stops you from achieving your expected or target performance for the day, shift, or hour and most importantly -- your ability to capture the learning and initiate corrective actions so that the event or incident will not re-occur anywhere across the organization. As such, reactive improvement focuses on improving daily management through your daily review meetings, your information centers supporting the daily review meetings, and your frontline problem-solving root cause analysis capability at all levels.
The book introduces the seven elements of reactive improvement that must work in concert for effective daily management and allows the reader to rate their site or department to determine their starting point compared to best practices:
1. Supportive organization structure to support development of your people so they have ownership and accountability for the performance of their area of responsibility;
2. Effective frontline leaders to ensure everyone else in the leadership structure are not working down a level;
3. Appropriate measures with expected targets that are linked to the site’s Key Success Factors for Operations to ensure goal alignment, and are relevant to the area being focused on;
4. Structured daily review meetings to identify opportunities (problems/incidents) and monitor progress of their solution so they don’t happen again;
5. Visual information centers that visually display daily and trending performance along with monitoring of actions to address problems/issues raised;
6. Frontline problem-solving root cause analysis capability across the site; and
7. Rapid sharing of learning capability across shifts, departments, and the organization.
The author outlines in detail why each of the seven elements are important to achieving Operational Excellence, and most importantly, how to implement each element supported with many templates and tools.