Link This |
Email this |
Blog This |
Comments (0)
Lean is NOT About Outsourcing
September 7, 2007
How Boeing Got Going - TIME
Evolving Excellence's Kevin Meyer will comment on this after his vacation, I'm sure (read
his other Boeing comments starting here).
There's a piece in Time Magazine and it makes a very misguided reference to "lean."
Boeing is planning to shift the emphasis on speed to the production line. It took a page from lean manufacturing to help manage its restructured partner base and outsourcing of parts. The company has pushed outsourcing to new levels, about 70% of the aircraft. (Boeing and Airbus both averaged about 50% on previous jets.)
I don't know Boeing's business well, so I'm not so much questioning their supply chain strategies here. But, I do take issue with Boeing (or more likely, the reporter) equating lean to outsourcing.
There's nothing in the Lean or Toyota Production System approaches that says you should outsource, or that outsourcing is a good thing. Toyota doesn't make all of their parts, but outsourcing is a business decision that's somewhat separate from lean, right? What percentage of Toyota's "value add" is done in house? If you're outsourcing and that leads to longer lead times (say, you outsource to China), that's a problem. The lean approach values fast response and short lead time supply chains.
The folks in the article also take a different view of "value."
To Richard Aboulafia, vice president of analysis for Teal Group, an aerospace and defense consultancy, the 787's production process qualifies it as the iPod of aerospace--essentially not only the new face of aviation but of American manufacturing as well. "Look at your iPod. Where was it built? Who the hell cares? That's not where the value is," he says. "You design, you integrate, you sell, you support, you finance. There's a lot to be said for putting it together under your roof, but leave bending metal or pouring plastic to someone else."
What do you think about this? Traditionally, we view "value" as the value creating manufacturing steps that actually change the product in some way. Aboulafia pooh-poohs that dirty manufacturing stuff, but thinks value is created by financing?
We have different definitions of "value" here. The lean definition of value follows three rules:
- The customer must value the activity (be willing to pay for it)
- The activity must change the form, fit, or function of the product
- The activity must be done right the first time
Finance doesn't really fit those rules, does it?
Is this a new
"iPod world" or does manufacturing still provide the true value to customers??
Posted by Mark Graban on September 7, 2007 | Comments (0)