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Evaluating Methods of Change Nancy Kress Head, Bookstacks Department University of Chicago Library
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The Challenge Users expect books to be on the shelf at all times Bookstacks Mission: The Stacks Department serves library patrons through quick, accurate re- shelving of library materials.
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Methodologies for Change 2003 - present Process mapping –2003-2005 Continuous process improvement –2004-present Lean Manufacturing –present
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What wasn’t solved? Peak book returns –4 quarterly due dates –Normal weekly book returns avg. 8,000 –Peak weekly returns avg. 35,000
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Best Practice Models Other Libraries Similar process organizations –U.S. Post Office –Library Bindery
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Heckman Plant Tour View lean manufacturing process Improve Bookstacks efficiencies at Regenstein
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What is “Lean Manufacturing?” Lean manufacturing is aimed at elimination of waste Organize processes to add value to the customer Deliver goods “just-in-time” Service organizations also using lean
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History of Lean “The Machine That Changed the World” Toyota auto manufacturing “Value chain”
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Basic Lean Principles Add nothing but value –Eliminate “muda” – waste Do it right the first time People doing the work add value –Team oriented Deliver on demand –“Pull” instead of push
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Lean learned from Heckman Key Principle #1: Pull… –…means work isn’t done until a downstream process requires it –Make only what the next process needs – when it needs it
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“Pull” becomes “Immediate Shelving” The Process: –Only full shelves pulled to cart –One shelf = 30 minutes
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Lean learned from Heckman Key Principle #2: Batching –Key to rapid delivery is small batch sizes
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“The Goal” by Eliyahu M. Goldratt & Jeff Cox “This book is about progress. It’s about the creation and acceptance of improvements – change for the better.”
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More from “The Goal”… What is the Bookstacks Department’s ONE goal? –Quick, accurate reshelving –All books on the shelf in correct order, ALL THE TIME
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Are we meeting the Goal? ThroughputBooks coming IN Inventory Books WAITING to be shelved Operational ExpensePayroll COST
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Our Challenge for Lean Peak Book Returns 4 Quarterly Due Dates –Normal weekly returns: 6,000 –Peak returns: 35,000
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Brainstorming Session Book knowledge can only go so far… –Best way to learn is by DOING Begin where the greatest need exists
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Creating “level pull” “Level pull” is basically a replenishment model –Replenish Bookstacks shelves Create a “level” daily schedule of work –Use inventory to buffer against large swings in work
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Keys to level pull Create inventory –“supermarket” Organize how inventory is stored –Consolidate similar types
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Optimize the Bottlenecks Reduce batch sizes –Eliminate uneven amounts of work Put the best people on the bottlenecks –They set the pace
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The Lean Solution OLDNEW Bottlenecks go to overflow shelving Only non-bottlenecks go to overflow No “immediate shelving” Bottlenecks are “immediate shelving” Everything goes through same process 2 processes – bottleneck and non
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Future Outcomes? GOAL: measurable results VALUE: high use books are on shelf
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Actual Outcomes Winter 2005Winter 2006 Reserve books turnaround 4 days Reserve books turnaround 2 days Search requests found in pre-shelving: 14% Search requests found in pre-shelving: 7% High use books stored in overflow unavailable to users High use books carted, sent to stacks available to users
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Future Goals Bionic Bookstacks –Better –Stronger –Faster
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Exercise: Identifying Waste What activities add no value to library users?
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Waste Categories Overproducing Inventory Waiting Extra Processing Correction Excess Motion Transportation Underutilized People
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References Goldratt, E. M. & Cox, J. (1992). The goal: A process of ongoing improvement 2 nd rev. ed.). Great Barrington, MA: North River Press. Keyte, B., & Locher, D. (2004) The complete lean enterprise: Value stream mapping for administrative and office processes. New York: Productivity Press. Madison, D. (2005). Process mapping, process improvement, and process management: A practical guide for enhancing work and information flow. Chico, Calif: Paton Press. Nalicheri, N., Baily, C., & Cade, S. The lean, green service machine. http://www.strategy-business.com/ http://www.strategy-business.com/ Poppendick, M. (2002). Principles of lean thinking. http://www.poppendieck.com/papers/LeanThinking.pdf http://www.poppendieck.com/papers/LeanThinking.pdf Rother, M., Shook, J., & Lean Enterprise Institute. (2003). Learning to see: Value stream mapping to create value and eliminate muda (Version 1.3 ed.). Brookline, MA: Lean Enterprise Institute.
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