"All progress is made
by a lazy person
looking for an easier way"
Robert Heinlein is best known for his science
fiction works such as “Starship Troopers” or “The
Moon is a Harsh Mistress”. They are all good but
one that has stuck with me through the years is
the long short story called “The man who was too
lazy to fail”. Basic story line: Boy is growing up
in West Virginia, sees his father working in the
fields. He figures he is too lazy to do that so
goes to school. When his friends graduate and go
to work in the mines, he is too lazy and goes to
the Naval Academy. He finds the easiest job in the
Navy is flying so becomes a Naval Aviator. Flying
is hard work so he invents an automatic pilot. And
so on. It is an interesting story in itself but
what made it stick with me was the concept of what
I would call creative laziness.
When I present my Achieving Lean Changeover
workshops in client plants, many of the attendees
come with impression that I am there to make them
work harder and faster. In my experience, trying
to get people to work harder and/or faster than
the natural pace is like trying to teach a pig to
sing. It frustrates the teacher and annoys the
pig. What I want them to do is work less while
doing it more slowly and carefully while reducing
the time it takes for changeover. The only way to
accomplish this seemingly contradictory goal is to
eliminate work that is unnecessary.
I tell Heinlein story in my workshops and even
have a slide that says “Be Lazy!”. It is not that
I want people to be lazy in the sense we normally
think of the word. I want people to be lazy in
creative ways. I want them to find easier ways to
do their jobs. To repeat, I want them to eliminate
work that is unnecessary.
The initial reaction of most people is that
everything they do is necessary. In some cases
that may be true but in many cases, it is not.
CASE: I was presenting the workshop and we
were focusing on changeover of a cartoner. The
process called for a series of adjustments on each
side of the machine. The way they did this was to
adjust the first point on the front of the
machine, walk around the end of the line and make
the corresponding adjustment on the back. They
would then make the next adjustment on the back
and walk around to make the corresponding
adjustment on the front. One of the operators
noted that more than 5 minutes (by stopwatch) was
being spent walking during the changeover. The
first thought was to have two people working on
this, one on the front, one on the back. This
looked like it might take more time, getting the
two people to the machine at the same time, than
it would save. One of the operators asked if all
the front adjustment could be made together prior
to making the back adjustment. There seemed no
reason why not, it was tried and on proving
successful, implemented. This saved the mechanic 5
minutes or about 1/3 of a mile of walking per
changeover. Walking is not productive work.
CASE: At the end of the batch, operators
needed to remove bottles of tablets from the line
for reconciliation. There were usually several
hundred bottles. They removed the bottles 4-5 at a
time and carried them to a nearby table. The table
was modified by adding locking castors. Now,
instead of bringing the bottles to the table, the
table is brought to the bottles.
CASE: In a bottling plant, plastic bottles
were laser coded on the shoulder. For each bottle
height, the laser needed to be repositioned. The
code was moved to the heel of the bottle.
Regardless of bottle height/diameter, the
centerline of the bottle at the heel is always in
the exact same place. The cap is used to trigger
the laser and no adjustment is ever necessary. The
entire laser changeover was eliminated.
There are many other examples in all industries
and all processes. I would be willing to bet cash
money there are examples right in your plant.
These tasks continue to be done year in and year
out for a variety of reasons. Perhaps the most
common is simple inertia. That is the way it has
always been done so that is the way it always will
be done. Closely related to inertia is failure to
look at each task to determine whether it is
really necessary and take action to eliminate it
when it is not. It takes an effort to break out of
this zone but the effort will be worth it.
Changeovers will be easier and better for
eliminating all wasted work. This is really all
Lean Manufacturing is. It might be better to call
it Lazy Manufacturing.
In my workshops I pass out yellow lapel buttons
made up that say “Be Lazy”. I will be happy to
send one to anyone who requests it. Just drop me a
note at
johnhenry@changeover.com
The Downtime Loss Calculator calculates
your
savings from reducing change over time. Want a copy? Just let me know
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