5s
TIM WOODS
Morning Meeting
LEAN
LEAN HISTORY
100

Name the 5S's

1. Sort

2. Set in Order

3. Shine

4. Standardize

5. Sustain

100

What does TIM WOODS stand for?

Transport

Inventory

Motion

Waiting

Over processing

Over production

Defects

Skill of employee 

100

What is the recently added purpose?

Ensure we are sustaining continuous improvement.

100

Having your voice heard within an organization is an example of what LEAN principle?

Respect

100

Who created the first moving production line ?

Henry Ford created the first rolling production line 108 years ago today!

200

TRUE or FALSE

Once you have completed a step in 5s-ing you cannot go back.

FALSE.

You can always go back to any step and improve it.

200

True or False?

When you are moving wood from the van to the table it is value added.

False.

200

What is the most powerful word in the human language?

A person's name
200

What is the concept behind this image?

200

Who coined the term Lean?

John Krafcik from MIT coined this term during his masters thesis on Toyota.

300

Paul condensed the 5s to 3s, what are they?

1. Sort

2. Sweep

3. Standardize

300

Out of the 8 wastes which one is considered to be "the mother of all wastes"

Over production.

300

How should you treat your external customers verses your internal customers?

With the same repect.

300

What are the 4 main purposes of LEAN?

To make things:

1. Easier

2. Better

3. Faster

4. Cheaper

300

Who created TPS?

Taiichi Ohno

400

What is the definition of "sort"?

Remove all items from the workplace that are not needed for current production.

400

Washing dishes by hand verses doing them in the dishwasher are examples of what?

One piece flow & batch.
400

What does Hansei mean?

To reflect and understand our actions.

400
What is SILO mentality?

Silo mentality is when different teams or team members in the same company purposely don’t share valuable information with other members of the company. This silo mindset hurts the unified vision of a business and deters long term goals from being accomplished.

400

Where was the first known use of Lean?

 Lean origins trace back to the Venice Arsenal in the 1500s, when Venetian shipbuilders could roll complete galley ships off the production line every hour, a remarkable achievement enabled by several weeks of assembly time being sequenced into a continuous, standardized flow.