Lean manufacturing helps manufacturers improve efficiency by eliminating waste in the production process, but what exactly is lean manufacturing? Is it a product, a procedure, a religion?
None of the above. Lean manufacturing is an adaptable set of “tools” that can be applied to any system of manufacturing–whether that system produces spring coils, jet engines or blog posts. It starts with identifying waste in a production process, and then focuses on eliminating that waste bit by bit until production is as streamlined and efficient as possible.
Lean manufacturing has roots in Henry Ford’s assembly line, but Japanese entrepreneurial scientists–namely those working at Toyota–are directly credited with developing the lean manufacturing tools we use today. While the term, “lean manufacturing,” wasn’t coined until 1988, Toyota started developing its tools and methodologies as early as the 1930s.
While Ford’s manufacturing process was certainly revolutionary, it was anything but perfect. By implementing what he called “flow production,” characterized most visually by the assembly line, Ford’s automotive fabrication plant was able to churn out car after car with a high degree of quality and precision. If Model Ts were the only car Ford ever made, they could have stopped right there. The problem, however, was variety. While flow production all but eliminated human error and manufacturing defects, it was nearly impossible to adapt the process to manufacture anything but that beautiful, black Model T.
Starting with Ford’s system, engineers at Japanese automaker, Toyota, began the process of perfecting flow production. The system they developed, called the Toyota Production System (TPS) formed the basis for modern lean manufacturing.
Since TPS emerged, lean manufacturing has become as academic as it is practical. In fact, the term, “lean manufacturing,” was coined in an MIT Master’s thesis. A wide variety of approaches now present manufacturers with different sets of tools, and these approaches themselves are constantly in flux. Lean manufacturing can be seen as the intersection of theoretical and applied science in manufacturing.
While quite a lot has changed over the decades–both in manufacturing technology and products themselves–the basic goals of lean manufacturing remain the same: eliminate waste, increase throughput speed and improve quality.