Presenting an alternate approach to supply chain management,
Lean Supply Chain Management Essentials: A Framework for Materials
Managers explains why the traditional materials planning
environment, typically embodied by an Enterprise Resource Planning
(ERP) system, is an ineffective support system for a company that
wants to adopt Lean practices. It begins by defining supply chain
management basics, including roles, objectives, and
responsibilities from a traditional framework. Next, it describes
Lean basics and explores the conflicts between Lean and the
traditional framework.
The book focuses on the materials management aspects of Lean,
such as leveling work into the value stream, heijunka scheduling,
standard work, and the concept of intervals, including Every Part
Every Interval (EPEI). By combining traditional materials
management tools, such as Sales and Operations Planning (S&OP),
with Lean manufacturing approaches and applying them to different
manufacturing environments, the authors clarify the logic behind
why you are doing what you re doing with Lean components and how
they fit together as a system. Specifically, they explain how
to:
- Determine which leveling strategy to use to smooth
production
- Calculate interval to determine lot sizes in various production
environments
- Apply Lean to purchasing, warehouse, and logistics areas
- Use your value stream map for green initiatives and risk
management
- Replace capacity planning and shop floor control with visual
factory, operator balance charts, EPEI, and plan for every
part
Illustrating why balancing demand and capacity is better than
trying to balance supply and demand, the book includes a definitive
chart that matches Lean tools to the planning and control charts
that have served as the model for ERP systems. It integrates the
principles learned from Toyota s fifty-plus-year journey with Lean
principles to provide the up-to-date understanding required to
approach the application of Lean to your supply chain with a
methodology that allows for experimentation, learning, and
continuous improvement.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!