Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Business Owners and Leaders Must Sell Their Passion

Small Business Owners/Leaders Must Sell Their Passion to Create Profitable Growth

Leanovations has worked with many family owned manufacturing companies to implement lean in their companies, with sales in the range of $1-$50 million annually. One of the first tasks we usually embark upon is how to promote the owners’ passion for the business, and desire to grow to their employees. This entails coaching the business owners and the staff on how to teach and apply lean principals to the workforce to meet their objectives. At Leanovations, we believe that to enjoy continuous improvements at your company, you must apply “Constant Gentle Pressure” to a “Plan, Do, Check, Act” process through Lean Kaizen Workshops.

Promoting and selling a passion and vision about lean to create profitable growth is the most important job of a business owner and leader. The Business Owner must fuel the fire of passion through leadership within every employee, and turn employees into advocates, and advocates into the disciples who promote your vision. Leadership is the key in building a spirit of co-operation, which means interacting frequently with the employees, expecting them to improve continually, reaching for a higher standard and inspiring them with a brighter future. Lean Kaizen Workshops provide employees a new level of teamwork, which will improve productivity and make profitable growth easier.

Leanovations utilizes Lean Kaizen Workshops to engage employees and teach them the importance of lean and innovations to provide a competitive advantage and to enjoy employment stability with opportunities in the future. A Lean Kaizen Workshop is normally 3 ½ days to 5 days in length with a focused approach that brings critical resources together and empowers participants to identify problems, determine a solution, and implement the change wherever the opportunity to improve exists.

As the organization gains knowledge, experience and confidence in lean and the Lean Kaizen Workshops, it is encouraged by Leanovations to have our clients begin conducting their own internal lean training/workshops. Essentially, the role of Leanovations should be to teach, coach and challenge an organization as a whole to attain higher improvement goals, and to be a resource for further learning.

Lean Just Got Easier For Connecticut Manufacturing Companies

Lean Just Got Easier.....

Do you find it harder and harder to enjoy profitable growth opportunities at your company? Are you interested in learning how Lean Manufacturing can create profitable growth? Do you need to rejuvenate your manufacturing capabilities to compete? Are you interested in knowing if you qualify for funding, to offset the cost to implement Lean Manufacturing? If the answer is “Yes”, then Leanovations, LLC can help you.

Fred Shamburg, President of Leanovations is a “National Shingo Prize Board Examiner” and is a registered Lean Service Provider/Consulting Group with, The State of Connecticut Center for Manufacturing Supply Chain Integration (CMSCI) for Aerospace and Defense and Northeast Utilities PRIME Program, administered by CL&P. Leanovations also enjoys a relationship with NETAAC for Lean cost sharing services between 50-75%.

ADI Funding
If you are a Connecticut company who has obtained $500,000 or more of defense or aerospace manufacturing contracts over the past two years and are interested in implementing Lean Manufacturing within your facility, you may be eligible to participate in Connecticut’s Aerospace and Defense Initiative and receive up to 50% reimbursement of the costs for Lean consulting by Leanovations.

CL&P PRIME Funding
If you are a Connecticut Light and Power (CL&P) manufacturing customer and classified with a SIC code between 2000-3999, you may be eligible for up to six (6) funded Lean Manufacturing events! The Northeast Utilities PRIME Program, administered by CL&P, will pay up to 100% of the cost of Lean Manufacturing events, led by Leanovations, for CL&P manufacturing customers who qualify. Manufacturers are eligible for up to six (6) funded events! This is a new policy by Northeast Utilities PRIME Program and is an increase of four additional events.
- Events 1 &2 are 100% NU PRIME Program funded
- Events 3 & 4 are 75% NU PRIME Program funded
- Events 5 & 6 are 50% NU PRIME Program funded

NETAAC Funding
The New England Trade Adjustment Assistance Center Inc. (NETAAC), is a government funded non-profit corporation. NETAAC offers cost shared assistance for import-injured manufacturers through a grant from the U.S. Department of Commerce. Companies that have experienced recent declines in sales and employment, due at least in part to increasing imports of competitive products, are eligible for participation in the program, in which the federal government pays 50% of the cost of consulting services such as Leanovations designed to help the client firm improve its competitive position. (The federal government pays 75% if the firm requests $30,000 or less of assistance.)

Contact Leanovations today to see if your company qualifies for any of these funding opportunities (ADI Funding, CL&P PRIME or NETAAC). The objectives of these programs are to produce measurable and sustainable process improvements that will enhance growth opportunities for your company through world - class productivity.

Please contact Leanovations at (860) 479-0293, or e-mail us at info@leanovations.com or visit http://www.leanovations.com/ for more information.

Leanvoations is a consulting group with extensive international experience, who train and coach companies to compete worldwide with lean manufacturing techniques and to win profitable growth through innovations. We focus on developing a partnership with our clients and tailor our approach to meet their specific cultural, organizational and performance needs.

Lean and Innovations Are Basic To Profitable Growth

Lean and Innovations Are Basic to Profitable Growth – Just Look at the Boeing Model

Successful companies such as Boeing, continually reinvent themselves by focusing on solving newly identified problems, or opportunities as we suggest at Leanovations, with lean or innovative solutions. Lean and innovation not only provides companies like Boeing a competitive advantage, but also helps them meet strategic challenges such as confronting accelerating rates of overall change and globalization.

Boeing rolled out their new 787 “Dreamliner” passenger jet on July 8, 2007 - “7/8/7”, which has many analysts believing this will begin a new era in air travel. Boeing’s 787 is an example of a company focused on finding better ways to delight customers and exceed their expectations. Continually assessing and enhancing products and services that customers need today and transforming them into what customers will require in tomorrow's business challenges to quote Leanovations, is called “Transforming Tomorrow Today”.

Years ago, Boeing embraced lean manufacturing, which is about eliminating waste with the goal of creating value. Eliminating waste does not just aim at reducing costs, but is also important to improving quality, safety and responsiveness to changing market requirements. Innovation is defined as, the process that transforms ideas into commercial value. Successful innovation requires the ability to break into new business arenas that are ripe for growth. Innovation includes not only new offerings and new businesses, but also extends to new management methods and other aspects of growing a business. As an example of Boeing’s recent innovations, the 787 jet is the first large passenger jet to have more than half its structure made of composite materials instead of aluminum sheets, which is revolutionary. Because of the composite materials’ lower weight, the plane will use 20% less fuel than similar size jets. The Dreamliner will require less maintenance because it has fewer parts and will experience less corrosion. It is estimated about a 30% reduction in maintenance expenses will be realized.

Boeing also continues to use innovations to enhance their lean manufacturing processes, using composites on the 787 airframe has a number of manufacturing advantages. They are able to build large subassemblies, in such places as Italy and Japan, and ship them to the final assembly facility. This essentially means having the major subassemblies coming together in final assembly. It will now take the final assembly process 3 days, compared to a month under the old traditional process.

Lean and innovation are equally important business disciplines for sustainable growth and enduring success in today's fast-changing business world. True lean and innovation comes as the result of meshing between three critical concepts: knowledge, process, and leadership. Growth through innovations along with a lean system to eliminate waste in production does not have to be a highly complex system involving numerous processes, approaches and models. Just look at Boeing and their “787 Dreamliner”, a new passenger jet ready to usher in a new era of air travel. Analysts are saying the innovative approach and lean production process for the Boeing 787 will be the basis for all future aircrafts.

U.S. Can Compete With China Through Lean and Quality

Manufacturing Performance Institute (MPI) Study Reports U.S. Can Compete with China Through Lean and Quality

China reported on July 4th, 2007 that nearly a fifth of the food and consumer products that it checked on their own store shelves, in a nationwide survey was found to be substandard or tainted, underscoring the risk faced by its own people even as the country’s exports come under greater scrutiny here in the United States. Regulators said that the broad survey of foods, agricultural tools, clothing, women and children’s products and other types of goods turned up sizable quality and safety failure rates for products sold in China. The announcement came in the midst of a growing scandal over the quality and safety of Chinese-made exports, and follows a series of international recalls involving everything from contaminated pet foods and counterfeit toothpaste to toxic toys, defective tires and contaminated seafood.

So many U.S. companies are directly or indirectly involved in China now that the commercial interest of the United States has allowed imports to come in easily and quickly. Trading with the largely unregulated Chinese marketplace has its risks, and until recently, many companies and even the federal government felt, on average, those risks were worth taking. However, those risks are now showing up as poor quality in many products imported to the United States from China.

With high quality expectations by consumers and customers in the U.S., Leanovations believes having a strong "lean and quality" culture in our factories, provides U.S. manufacturers with an opportunity to compete with low-cost, low quality global competitors.

Recognizing that many U.S. manufacturers view China as both public enemy No. 1, and the land of opportunity, a study reported by The Manufacturing Performance Institute (MPI) compared a select group of Chinese manufacturers’ operational practices of applying lean manufacturing to that of U.S. manufacturers. In China, less than 20% of manufacturing managers surveyed stated they have adopted "lean manufacturing," which is about eliminating waste, improving quality, and being responsive to changing market requirements, as their primary operational improvement. This very low percentage by the Chinese provides an opportunity for the U.S. manufacturers, as 55% of the U.S. managers surveyed said they are using “lean manufacturing” as the driving force behind operational improvement. What concerns us at Leanovations is that 45% (almost half) of the U.S. companies are not using lean as a competitive process to compete worldwide.
Many U.S. manufacturing executives who have adopted lean believe they can compete with China’s labor-cost difference, through superior trade skills, greater teamwork, lean processes, improved quality and innovations to provide higher productivity and the ability to meet market changes faster then their counterparts.

If you are one of the 45% of U.S. manufacturers who have not started on a lean transformation for your company, we need to ask, why are you waiting? Please do not hesitate to contact Leanovations to see if we can assist you. Many of our clients today are calling us the “Transformation Teachers”.

Fred Shamburg
President, Leanovations
Contact Leanovations at:
http://www.leanovations.com/

Leanvoations is a consulting group with extensive international experience, who train and coach companies to compete worldwide with lean manufacturing techniques and to win profitable growth through innovations. We focus on developing a partnership with our clients and tailor our approach to meet their specific cultural, organizational and performance needs.