TPM,
Important Step In
Lean Manufacturing Implementation

For several years now, I have been very
familiar with the implementation of the Lean Manufacturing disciplines. I know of the
problems that implementers face and how these can be approached to fully accomplish their
goals.
On the other hand, we have
gradually seen
so much progress in machine designs, so many innovative systems, that our maintenance
crews are very much aware of the need to keep up with change. This puts some
pressure on them. TPM helps to relieve this
pressure. It lets them evolve to more effectively respond to the new
requirements.
This makes me think that it is
obvious that the most successful lean implementations should include TPM. Total Productive
Maintenance starts by creating a very much needed bonding and cooperation between
maintenance crews and production operators, supervisors and management.
These forces have been traditionally antagonistic: production blames on
maintenance for any breakdown, production blames on the operators for
abusing the machine.
TPM is a discipline comprised of
most of the key ingredients of the Toyota Production System, now known as Lean
Manufacturing, such as:
- Total participation
- Employee empowerment
- Leadership environment
- Continuous improvement
- Development of ownership feeling
- Improved
attitude and morale
- Increased reliability
Once a good TPM program takes
off, the benefits start flowing to the whole organization. That is when many
people
start coming aboard. The participants feel encouraged and become familiar with
communicating their ideas, confident in the new listening attitude of the whole team.
In order to create the right
environment, we have to comply with the most elemental requirements:
- Total commitment from the top
management.
- Appropriate diffusion of the
plan and its results.
- Authentic empowerment and mutual
respect at all levels.
We have experienced first hand
the benefits derived from this approach. The spirit of cooperation is growing constantly
after years of the implementation stage. It is not unusual for operators to come up with
outstanding ideas to improve quality or cut-shorten-ease operations. This
becomes a part of the Lean Philosophy that is spreading. It will be up to
the TPM coordinator to keep this trend actively growing.
It is important to thoroughly
assess the needs of a plant to determine which discipline should be implemented
first. We also recommend to be open minded towards applying in some cases, more than one discipline at
a time.
A TPM Kaizen
event starts the TPM implementation by creating the basic process for Autonomous
Maintenance. The participants from various departments discover how TPM
will help them. It should be perceived not as an
extra load on them, but as the opportunity to reach a higher level of
knowledge and value to ease the achievement of their own goals.
There is a lot
more information on TPM in our Articles
section
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