Lean Six Sigma for process efficiency improvement: Case study at roof-tile manufacturing company
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Date
2021-08Author
R. Abdullah
A. H. Abdul Rasib
A. Azhar
H. O. Mansoor
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Show full item recordAbstract
Lean Six Sigma is regarded as a strategic business change to improve the efficiency of the
processes. A combination of Lean Manufacturing and Six Sigma's theory is a powerful
practice by companies looking for ways to improve their productivity. The roof-tile
company under study faced issues with high inventory and high lead time affecting the
manufacturing efficiency. The team from UTeM was consulted with the objective to
investigate the issues and propose improvement plans. Lean Six Sigma DMAIC-VSM
methodology was used to systematically guide the project implementation. The Define-
Measure-Analyse-Improve-Control process was explained in detail including the use of the
current state value-stream map (CVSM) to identify the bottleneck and the fish-bone
diagrams to evaluate the key issues. The three main problems uncovered were the high
cycle-time at the hand spray coating process, the hydraulic press, the high waiting time for
the clay bat process. Why-why analysis was used to define the countermeasures. The
implemented improvements will enable the company to improve the bottleneck capacity
and production efficiency by 42% without incurring additional costs. The company has
benefitted from this study by having the right focus on the improvement plans to achieve a
leaner production for the manufacturing line.