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All kinds of processes - those that make things or deliver services
or operate companies - can be made more productive, and society's
continued well-being requires it. This book is for all those with a
stake in improving how companies run. It introduces the concept of
'swift, even flow' and explains how that concept stands behind
popular business tools such as 'lean' principles and Six Sigma.
More than that, it shows how swift, even flow can lead to deep,
strategic insights and fresh ideas. The book uses many examples,
both contemporary and historic, and 16 case studies from all sorts
of business situations to demonstrate how swift, even flow can be
applied. Services and manufacturing, supply chains and individual
operations, product development and outsourcing, strategy and
tactics, hourly workers and top level executives - all benefit from
this fundamental re-thinking of what it takes to become productive.
The motivation for this book came out of a shared belief that what
passed as 'theory' in operations management (OM) was all too often
inadequate. In one respect, OM scholars were bending over backwards
to make theories from other fields fit our research problems. In
another, questionable assumptions were being used to apply
mathematics to OM problems. Neither proved a good match with what
the authors' had observed in practice. Successful operations were
managed by considerations that were far more straightforward than
much of what was being published. The authors of this book codify
these practical considerations into a set of ten fundamental
principles that bring together a century of operations management
thinking. The authors then apply these principles to important
topics such as process design, process improvement, the supply
chain, new product development, project management, environmental
sustainability, and the interfaces between operations management
and other business school disciplines.
The motivation for this book came out of a shared belief that what
passed as 'theory' in operations management (OM) was all too often
inadequate. In one respect, OM scholars were bending over backwards
to make theories from other fields fit our research problems. In
another, questionable assumptions were being used to apply
mathematics to OM problems. Neither proved a good match with what
the authors' had observed in practice. Successful operations were
managed by considerations that were far more straightforward than
much of what was being published. The authors of this book codify
these practical considerations into a set of ten fundamental
principles that bring together a century of operations management
thinking. The authors then apply these principles to important
topics such as process design, process improvement, the supply
chain, new product development, project management, environmental
sustainability, and the interfaces between operations management
and other business school disciplines.
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