« Joseph Abboud: The Respectful Suit | Main | Damn the Profits, Full Speed Ahead! »

24 January 2007

Brazilian Bikinis and Toyotas

Are Brazilians just naturally lean?  Is it something in their genes?

I started to ponder that after flying, for the fourth time in the past seven days, on an Embraer EMB120 Brasilia, flown by Skywest for United.  To get from my home airport of San Luis Obispo toBrazil_brasilia anywhere, you first have to fly one of those props to either LA or San Francisco.

A little light research into Embraer brings forth an image of a rather interesting company.  Founded by the Brazilian government in 1969 and privatized in 1994, the company now employs over 20,000 people and is one of the largest aircraft manufacturers in the world.  They manufacture 18 types of aircraft, including a new 120-seat commercial jet that has secured orders from some major airlines.

They are at least making an attempt at being lean.  A search on the subject yields a long list of consulting companies that claim Embraer as a client, and executives from the company have been speakers at several lean and six sigma conferences.  Much of their effort appears to be in the lean supply chain arena, which is perhaps to be expected as the have followed Boeing and others to China, although the vast majority of their Chinese production is destined for use in China.  Are they really lean or just looking lean?  I don't know yet. 

Lean actually has considerable history in Brazil.  Jon Miller at Gemba Panta Rei had a great story last year on Taiichi Ohno's visit to Toyota do Brasil.  The Brazilian affiliate had figured out how to do quick changeover on a forging operation and via Ohno taught the rest of Toyota.  There were several reasons for this, first and foremost being that Toyota do Brasil was "the smallest automobile company in the world" according to Ohno, producing just three cars per day.  As a result they had only one forging press that had to make over 60 different forges.  The operation was brought inside because no external supplier would tackle such a low volume high mix requirement.

Taiichi Ohno gives a lot of credit to Toyota do Brasil as being a good model plant or test case for implementing high mix low volume Toyota Production System. At Toyota in Japan the volumes were so high that many lines were dedicated and practically no changeovers were done. When Ohno says “Toyota do Brasil may be doing TPS better than any other Toyota factory” he seems to be saying that true TPS is high mix, low volume and when you have high volumes and you do not need to implement SMED, you are not really doing TPS.

That should throw the "lean and TPS can't work in high mix low volume" types at Job Shop Lean into a tizzy.  I would even bet that Toyota do Brasil did it without complex software solutions.  But we've mentioned this before: as mix becomes greater, the impact and importance of one piece flow and Brazil_thongminimized inventories also becomes greater.

Brazilians love to minimize wherever possible.  We all know and love the brazilian thong bikini. The bare minimum, and only what's required... usually.  And of course there's the brazilian wax.  If it's not necessary, remove it.  I'll leave a discussion of value from the perception of the customer up to your imagination.

I just hope, for my own safety, that those engineers at Embraer don't take the Brazilian penchant for minimalization too far.

Comments

Damn... I knew wives thow cold water on all kinds of fun things. But now they've thrown cold water on lean. I want the uncensored story!

Necessity was the mother of invention in the story about forging changeover reduction and how Toyota do Brasil became lean. Perhaps the same is true for the how the swimsuits became lean...

I enjoy reading all these articles of how people have made the transition from mrp to TPS. They pat themselves on the back and proclaim themselves expert in the field. I don't see to many of these experts doing to much, other than writing articles and publishing books. I would like to see more of their projects that have been documented success stories. You never see any of these guys that have implemented the system and seen it survive over a long period of time.
I use a three pronged strategy when I show industry how to make the transition and that is, simplify, integrate, and automate. Without someone showing me their strategy, it shows me that all they do is talk.

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been saved. Comments are moderated and will not appear until approved by the author. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until the author has approved them.

Subscribe

Search the Blog

Gemba Academy

Superfactory

  • Resources for lean excellence
    - Articles | Books
    - Events | Glossary
    - Topic Resources | eNewsletter
    - PowerPoints | Videos
    - Virtual Tours | Lean History

    PowerPoint
    Presentations

    Lean Manufacturing
    Lean Overview - 3P - 5S - Jidoka - Kaizen - Value Streams - Visual Factory - Pull - JIT - Kanban - Quick Changeover - Cellular Manufacturing - Standard Work - Theory of Constraints - TPM - TWI

    Lean Enterprise
    Lean Manufacturing - Lean Office - Lean Accounting - Lean Design - Lean Project Management - Lean Sales & Marketing - Lean Supply Chains - Hoshin Planning - Lean Enterprise Assessment

    Quality
    SPC - Root Cause Analysis - Six Sigma - FMEA - ISO 9001 - Mistake Proofing

    Business
    Balanced Scorecard - Design for Lean - Cost Accounting - Capital Budgeting - Competitive Intelligence - Knowledge Management - Job Design - Outsourcing Strategy - Supply Chain Strategy - Strategic Management - Project Management

    Safety
    Accident Investigation - Biosafety - Chemical Spills - Hazard Communication - and 35 more

     


    Factory Toolbox


    Over 500 forms, procedure templates, and tools for download.

    Lean Toolkit - Procedures Toolkit - Quality Toolkit - Tools and Forms Toolkit - Engineering Toolkit - Materials Toolkit - Safety Toolkit - HR Toolkit - Six Sigma Toolkit - Finance Tookit

The Book

  • Evolving Excellence
    Thoughts on Lean Enterprise Leadership

    by Kevin Meyer and Bill Waddell

    A 458-page edited and categorized compilation of our favorite posts! All for only $29.95.

    More information

    All 1500+ pages of Evolving Excellence from January of 2005 through July of 2008, including comments and reference sources, is now available in a series of six e-books. Perfect reading for those long plane rides to visit your farflung factories...! The entire series for only $10, which helps cover our costs.

    Purchase and download now!

Sponsors

Other

  • Copyright © 2004 - 2008
    Factory Strategies Group LLC.
    All rights reserved.