Areas of Lean Manufacturing for Productivity Improvement in a Manufacturing Unit
Many organisations are nowadays interested to adopt
lean manufacturing strategy that would enable them to compete in
this competitive globalisation market. In this respect, it is necessary
to assess the implementation of lean manufacturing in different
organisations so that the important best practices can be identified.
This paper describes the development of key areas which will be
used to assess the adoption and implementation of lean
manufacturing practices. There are some key areas developed to
evaluate and reduce the most optimal projects so as to enhance their
production efficiency and increase the purpose of the economic
benefits of the manufacturing unit.
Lean manufacturing is becoming lean enterprise by treating its
customers and suppliers as partners. This gives the extra edge in
today-s cost and time competitive markets. The organisation is
becoming strong in all the conventional competition points. They are
Price, Quality and Delivery. Lean enterprise owners can deliver high
quality products quickly, with low price.
[1] Yongsheng Wang, Ershi Qi, "Enterprise Planning of Total Life Cycle
Lean Thinking".
[2] J.P. Womack, D.T. Jones and D. Roos, The Machine That Changed the
World, Rawson Associates, New York, NY, 1990.
[3] Kartik Ramchandran, "A Complete Guide for Lean Manufacturing",
Lean Manufacturing- Spring 2001.
[4] Taichi Ohno, Toyota Production System, Productivity Press, June, pp. 6,
58, 126, (1988)
[5] Aza Badurdeen, Lean Manufacturing Basics, 2007
[6] Taichi Ohno, Toyota Production System, Productivity Press, pp. 6, 8, 29,
58, 70, 126 (1988)
[7] Seiichi Nakajima, "Introduction to TPM", 1989
[8] Anwar Ali, "Key Practice Areas of Lean Manufacturing", International
Association of Computer Science and Information Technology - Spring
Conference, 2009
[9] Tarek Al-Hawari, Faisal Aqlan, Mu-aweyah Al-Buhaisi, Zaid Al-Faqeer,
"Simulation-based Analysis and Productivity Improvement of a Fully
Automatic Bottle - filling Production System: A Practical Case Study"
Second International Conference, 2010.
[1] Yongsheng Wang, Ershi Qi, "Enterprise Planning of Total Life Cycle
Lean Thinking".
[2] J.P. Womack, D.T. Jones and D. Roos, The Machine That Changed the
World, Rawson Associates, New York, NY, 1990.
[3] Kartik Ramchandran, "A Complete Guide for Lean Manufacturing",
Lean Manufacturing- Spring 2001.
[4] Taichi Ohno, Toyota Production System, Productivity Press, June, pp. 6,
58, 126, (1988)
[5] Aza Badurdeen, Lean Manufacturing Basics, 2007
[6] Taichi Ohno, Toyota Production System, Productivity Press, pp. 6, 8, 29,
58, 70, 126 (1988)
[7] Seiichi Nakajima, "Introduction to TPM", 1989
[8] Anwar Ali, "Key Practice Areas of Lean Manufacturing", International
Association of Computer Science and Information Technology - Spring
Conference, 2009
[9] Tarek Al-Hawari, Faisal Aqlan, Mu-aweyah Al-Buhaisi, Zaid Al-Faqeer,
"Simulation-based Analysis and Productivity Improvement of a Fully
Automatic Bottle - filling Production System: A Practical Case Study"
Second International Conference, 2010.
@article{"International Journal of Mechanical, Industrial and Aerospace Sciences:50183", author = "Hudli Mohd. Rameez and K.H.Inamdar", title = "Areas of Lean Manufacturing for Productivity Improvement in a Manufacturing Unit", abstract = "Many organisations are nowadays interested to adopt
lean manufacturing strategy that would enable them to compete in
this competitive globalisation market. In this respect, it is necessary
to assess the implementation of lean manufacturing in different
organisations so that the important best practices can be identified.
This paper describes the development of key areas which will be
used to assess the adoption and implementation of lean
manufacturing practices. There are some key areas developed to
evaluate and reduce the most optimal projects so as to enhance their
production efficiency and increase the purpose of the economic
benefits of the manufacturing unit.
Lean manufacturing is becoming lean enterprise by treating its
customers and suppliers as partners. This gives the extra edge in
today-s cost and time competitive markets. The organisation is
becoming strong in all the conventional competition points. They are
Price, Quality and Delivery. Lean enterprise owners can deliver high
quality products quickly, with low price.", keywords = "Competitive points, implementation, Leanmanufacturing, tools and techniques", volume = "4", number = "9", pages = "796-4", }