Key Points
- Every organization has waste to account for.
- Eliminating the waste from your organization can have benefits for your overall production.
- You cannot eliminate waste, but you can reduce its impact on your production’s efficiency.
Do you know the 8 Wastes of Lean? Waste in an organization is all around us. You want to be able to identify waste so that you can go about eliminating it where you can. This article will explore the most common sources of waste in any organization.
We’ll also explore the benefits of identifying and eliminating waste, provide an example of how one organization approached this issue, and then present some best practices for undertaking this effort.
Overview: What Are the 8 Wastes of Lean?
One corporate executive is fond of saying, “Waste is all around us, yet we walk by it every day.” Two popular acronyms are used to describe the 8 most commonly identified wastes. The first is TIMWOODS and the other is DOWNTIME.
Let’s first understand what TIMWOODS is all about. In Japanese, Muda is the word for Waste. Originally, 7 wastes were described by Taiichi Ohno, the Chief Engineer at Toyota, as part of the Toyota Production System (TPS). Those 7 wastes were:
- Transportation: The unnecessary moving around of material, people, and equipment often results in wasted time and possible damage.
- Inventory: Excessive inventory that takes up valuable space, requires resources to manage it, and ties up capital dollars.
- Motion: Unnecessary and dangerous movement that can cause harm to people, damage to equipment, or defects in the product. This is different from Transportation since, in the case of people, we are talking about the ergonomic issues rather than the mere relocation of them.
- Waiting: The waste of time waiting for people, equipment, materials, and information to arrive so that you can do your work.
- Overproduction: Producing more than the customer or your process needs results in excess inventory and all the expenses described above under Inventory.
- Overprocessing: Doing more than the customer wants, needs, or is willing to pay for.
- Defects: The production of a defective product or delivery of service will require either a rework or a scraping of the product. The customer will not pay for either.
- Skills: This waste was not originally included in Ohno’s original 7 Wastes but is certainly a valid waste. Skills are the waste of not using people’s talent, knowledge, and experience to improve the organization.
The second common acronym for the 8 Wastes of Lean is DOWNTIME. You will notice that the elements are the same in content but with slightly different terminology and order.
- Defects
- Overproduction
- Waiting
- Non-Utilization of Talent
- Transportation
- Inventory
- Motion
- Extra processing
Benefits of Identifying the 8 Wastes of Lean
The same executive mentioned above with regards to waste being all around us also said “If we don’t call Waste what it is, we will never eliminate it.”
It Improves Process Performance
By identifying the 8 wastes and eliminating them, you improve your productivity and process performance because you are not wasting time and resources that result from these wastes.
Creates a Common Definition and Description of Waste
By using the terms of either acronym, everyone in the organization can view and define the various wastes in common terms. This reduces any miscommunication as to what you are talking about when pointing out that something is indeed a waste.
The Wastes Focus on the Functioning of the Process and not on the People
There will be less resistance and defensiveness if waste is perceived as a process issue rather than a people issue.
Why Are the 8 Wastes of Lean Important to Understand?
After working in a process for a while, people tend to get immune to waste because they start to believe it is just the way we do things here at XYZ Corporation.
As Long as Waste Exists in an Organization, It Will Be Underperforming Compared to Its Potential
If you learn to accept waste as the way you do business, you will be wasting resources and capacity and may jeopardize the well-being of the organization.
Employees Are Aware of the Waste and Can Feel Frustrated by It
An abundance of waste in an organization will create a frustrating environment for the people doing the work. Furthermore, it can create an unsafe place to work.
Waste Will Impact the Quality of the Product and Service
Because waste tends to affect your product or service, it could also affect your customer. Nothing will lose you a customer faster than a poor product or service. Eliminate the waste, and you will likely be able to satisfy your customer to a higher degree.
An Industry Example of the 8 Wastes of Lean
The 8 Wastes of Lean are descriptive and not necessarily an actionable activity. However, some organizations have used the 8 Wastes of Lean as a template to audit their organizational processes to provide a framework for improvement.
As an example, a large banking organization used the DOWNTIME acronym as a template to evaluate its internal processes. Every department head was charged with observing their operations and evaluating the department tasks against the framework of DOWNTIME.
No one was surprised, especially the people doing the work, that there were several times when errors and Defects occurred in the documentation. Unfortunately, there was a lot of time Waiting for other departments and the customer to provide information.
Rarely were people asked for input on how to improve things, so their talent was Non-utilized. There was also a lot of walking back and forth or Transportation in the office. People also noted excessive supplies or Inventory of forms, paper, and other other office supplies.
Some of the employees complained about having to reach for things, so Motion was an issue. They also wondered why there were so many inspections, checks, and audits of things — Extra Processing for which the customer certainly wasn’t paying for.
Once senior leadership saw all the opportunities, they put together several improvement teams of employees and tasked them with recommending improvements to eliminate as much of the waste as they could.
Why Does It Matter?
Best Practices When Thinking About the 8 Wastes of Lean
Everyone hates waste, but until you confront it, little will be done to eliminate it. Here are a few best practices that will help you.
Be Sure That Everyone Has the Same Understanding of the Definition of Either TIMWOODS or DOWNTIME
Be sure to provide a clear definition of the terms and provide clear and relevant examples of each so everyone is on the same page.
Tackle the Issue of Resistance and Defensiveness Upfront
Make sure that you make it clear that you are not attacking any individual and saying that what they do is a waste. Point out that waste is the result of process design rather than due to incompetence or lack of caring on the part of the employee.
Don’t Take on Everything at Once
Evaluating a process for all the possible wastes can be daunting. Pick one or two and identify and reduce or eliminate them. This will show that waste can be reduced and eliminated and that the organization is committed to creating a better environment for people to work in.
Other Tools and Concepts
While we’ve been concerned about waste in the organization, there are other considerations to keep in mind. For example, do you know if your production’s data is normal? If you’re looking for an effective means of checking this, our guide for the Anderson-Darling Test will get you up to speed in no time.
Additionally, you might want to read up on the concept of quality and how it applies to your organization. While you might understand the basic term our guide covers the differing contextual definitions of the word and how they apply to every level of your organization.
On a Final Note: The 8 Wastes of Lean
The 8 Wastes of Lean exist in every organization and are all around you. You walk by it every day and can become desensitized to its existence. Waste can create a frustrating and unsafe work environment for your employees.
It is your responsibility to stop walking by waste, ignoring its existence, and failing to call it what it is: waste. While it’s not always easy or possible to eliminate all waste, it is simple enough for you and your organization to evaluate the things you do and identify and define the various types of waste described by TIMWOODS and DOWNTIME.
So, stop wasting time and start looking.