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| Home | Learning Center | Features | Training | FAQs |
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Where are the things we
said we were going to do to meet our goals? What commitments have we made? Can we actually
do all of those things? Which ones are working and which ones are not? What can we do about it?
You can use the “Type” filter to list projects by the type of work - TPM, Kaizen, SMED, etc., or by an important high level metric – Quality PPM, % Profit, Lead Time, Inventory Turns, etc.
These filters can be combined and used to create ad hoc reports showing the project lists associated with very specific portions of your Lean Deployment plan. For example you can sort by “Widget-A” Value Stream and Kaizen to see all of the "Kaizen" events planned for that value stream.
Some Lean projects are straight forward and require no detailed action plan. Other projects are more complex and require task level planning. Task planning not only communicates who needs to complete the task, it also reveals potential obstacles early, so actions can be taken to keep them from slowing you down. LPM software makes task level planning easy. The software refers to tasks as “Project Steps”. Your actions plans can be viewed on the “Projects Steps” screen and/or using a
Gantt Chart view. Implementing Lean is difficult and those
responsible have little time to waste searching for information. Lean Project Manager puts the
information you need at your fingertips. The software automatically creates a project folder every
time you enter a new project. Your project team can use the project folder to store and share
documents, pictures, drawings and other electronic files. When the information is needed, simply
filter the project list, click on the project name, and then click on the link to the project folder.
See our Learning Center Article
Preventing Hundreds of Hours of Lean Project Waste. Trying to get everything done can overwhelm
your team. Keeping everyone focused on work that delivers the “biggest bang for the buck” will make sure you get
the most done. Lean Project Manager keeps the most important work at the top of everyone’s list by ranking each
project in order of importance. You can easily customize the ranking criteria or use the supplied criteria.
A project rank is established as new projects are entered. High ranking projects show up at the top of the
project lists. The “strong horse gets the whip”
may be a fine way to get something done quickly, but a Lean transition takes time. Relying too much on
your top performers will burn them out and slow you down.
Lean projects are chosen to accomplish
measurable goals. The goals cascade through the different levels of your organization. The number of
measures increases as you move to lower levels. Cost reduction translates to increased productivity
then to number of operators per work cell, walking distance, cycle time, change-over time, etc.
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