Greetings!
Let’s Get Lean
And Mean…
If you
haven’t heard of LEAN management, then this introduction will
get you thinking about learning to think in terms of LEAN. A
philosophy that has as its core principle the elimination of
waste and inefficiency in the processes we employ to deliver, store
and organize our products.
Like value
analysis, LEAN thinking is based upon the concept of value in
your customers eyes not yours! Its tenets require you to
specify value, map your value stream and flow, reduce pulls (or
just-in-time inventories), and to search for perfection and
replication throughout your organization of the best practices you
have learned.
LEAN
sounds easy doesn’t it?
It also sounds easy to ride a bike
until you try to ride it. It takes time, training and a
disciplined approach to be a skilled LEAN practitioner.
My point
here is that by adding the LEAN principles to your value
analysis or Six Sigma methodologies you can more successfully attack
the waste and inefficiency in your value chain by shortening the
time between your customer’s orders and deliveries.
Your Partner
in Supply Chain Savings,
Robert T.
Yokl
President &
Chief Value Strategist
P.S.
Are You Ready...To Take Your Organization's Supply Chain to a Whole
New Level With
Supply Six Sigma?
|
Are
new strategies, tactics, tools, and techniques required to
dig deeper and broader for supply chain savings?
Supply
Six
Sigma
CLICK
HERE TO LEARN MORE
|
Five Reasons Why
Value Analysis Has Been Weak And Puny At Driving Out All
Waste And Inefficiency In Healthcare Organizations’ Supply Chains
“The
Face of Cost-Management Is Changing, But Are Healthcare
Organizations Really Changing With It"
Millions of dollars are lost each
year because healthcare organizations aren’t employing the right
tools, training, methodologies and software to “wring the towel
dry” on their supply chain expenses. The answer to this dilemma
is for healthcare organizations to look to proven cost saving and
quality models like Six Sigma to fill in the gaps where value
analysis is weak and puny.
The face of cost-management is
changing! However healthcare organizations are still employing old,
tired and outmoded models of cutting their supply costs. Most
hospitals call this value analysis and it is growing less and less
effective. Those hospitals that embrace new savings models, employ
the latest technologies, and utilize revolutionary techniques will
succeed in discovering and exploiting new cost-saving opportunities
that are now hidden from their view.
What disturbs me is that
healthcare organizations are fixated on a process we call
value analysis. This has been a process that is weak and puny at
driving out all waste and inefficiency in a healthcare
organization’s supply chain. Most healthcare organizations aren’t
even practicing value analysis, but are doing something else and
calling it value analysis.
Here are five reasons why value
analysis ALONE isn’t working any longer to “wring the
towel dry” on healthcare organizations’ supply chain expenses:
1.
Value analysis practitioners
have focused exclusively on price and standardization issues and
have ignored the appropriate utilization (or consumption) of their
products, services and technologies where 67% of new supply chain
savings are hidden from their view.
2.
Traditional value analysis models never even touch the
edges of conformance to requirements because of the conventional
wisdom that “to save money you must standardize on the products,
services and technologies you purchase”. What is needed is to
embrace the new philosophy of customization of the products,
services and technologies that are bought. This will save 12% to
22% beyond standardization strategies and tactics.
3.
Broader and deeper supply chain reductions of 3%, 6% or
even 9% requires a strategic approach, not a problem solving
approach as is now offered by today’s conventional value analysis
systems. To move to the next level of supply chain savings,
hospital, systems and IDNs need to embrace a strategic approach if
they are to “wring the towel dry” on their supply chain savings.
4.
Value analysis programs don’t have a built-in mechanism
for holding the gains that these programs achieve, as opposed to Six
Sigma where standards and measurements are continuously monitored
for compliance.
5.
There is no focus on defects (or what a customer doesn’t
want) in products, services and technologies with value analysis.
Neither is there a scientific test to control the variation in the
commodities hospitals are purchasing, even thought defects and
variation can cause huge patient and staff dissatisfactions, or,
worse yet, accidents and deaths.
The answer to this dilemma
is for healthcare organizations to look to new
proven cost saving and quality models like Six Sigma to fill in the
gaps where value analysis is weak and puny. What is holding back
hospitals, systems and IDNs from doing so is that they think that
value analysis was cemented in a fixed set of rules that couldn’t be
broken, altered or changed. That however is not the case. Since its
creation in the 1940s by Larry Miles, the value analysis methodology
has evolved almost every decade as value analysis practitioners
discovered new strategies, tactics, tools, techniques or swiped them
from other disciplines to modernize Larry’s value analysis model.
Healthcare organizations are
always updating their medical technologies to stay current. It is
now time for them to bring their supply chain savings models up to
date!
DID
YOU KNOW…
In the early
and mid-1980s, with Chairman Bob Galvin at the helm, Motorola
engineers decided that the traditional quality levels -- measuring
defects in thousands of opportunities -- didn't provide enough
exactness. Instead, they wanted to measure the defects per million
opportunities. Motorola developed this new standard and created the
methodology and needed cultural change associated with it. Six Sigma
helped Motorola realize powerful bottom-line results in their
organization. In fact, they documented more than $16 Billion in
savings as a result of their Six Sigma efforts.