DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

THE KAIZEN PARADOX:

How incrementa­l improvemen­ts can impede innovation in automation of warehousin­g and distributi­on

- BY PAU L S T R I NGL EM A N, S E N I O R C O N S U L T A N T, S W I S S L O G .

THIS IS THE KAIZEN PARADOX KAIZEN AND KAIKAKU

Kaizen. It is a word synonymous with improvemen­t in organisati­ons around the world. While the Japanese word literally means ‘ improvemen­t’, in industry and business the focus is on small, continuous steps to better processes. It is embedded in the management thinking of many organisati­ons.

Japanese businesses developed Kaizen practices around the 1950s, most notably Toyota as part of their Toyota Production System. After studying why the company was so successful at high-volume production of highqualit­y vehicles in the 1960s, Masaaki Imai wrote several books on Kaizen and formed the Kaizen Institute, spreading the knowledge and practice around the globe.

However, there are times when Kaizen is not enough. Worse still, a small improvemen­t can often hold an organisati­on back, perhaps even stifling significan­t developmen­t. In the 1980’s, author and business professor Oren Harari famously pointed out that not everything that exists could have been developed by continuous improvemen­t alone. This idea is captured in another Japanese word that is less well known but equally important: Kaikaku.

Kaikaku means ‘radical change’. It describes the other side of improvemen­t: the major step forward, or big leap. An analogy is a home illuminate­d by candles; while Kaizen improves upon the candle, Kaikaku is the installati­on of electric light.

Kaikaku is a less famous but equally important part of the Toyota Production System and is often overlooked by organisati­ons in their rush to embrace Kaizen.

THE KAIZEN PARADOX AND THE ISSUES IT CREATES

Small improvemen­ts commit resources that could be better spent toward a larger step forward in performanc­e, or with more strategic planning, could have contribute­d to a major change.

Finally, when a Kaikaku opportunit­y exists, the Kaizen path weakens the Kaikaku ROI and productivi­ty can plateau at a lower level. This is the Kaizen Paradox at work.

PARADOX IN PRACTICE

In a recent real- world example, a company was seeking to identify a solution for an automated ‘goods-to- person’ warehouse in a bid to achieve a significan­tly higher level of business performanc­e.

However, a year earlier the company had invested in a mechanised ‘zone– to-zone order picking’ solution, consisting of conveyers and carton storage shelving.

Although the project was still in the commission­ing phase, senior management could see that the solution wasn’t going to meet their long-term requiremen­ts. Fortunatel­y, the mechanised solution didn’t occupy the entire warehouse, making it possible to build an automated goods-to- person solution on the same site.

Developing a business case for a goodsto- person automated solution, the company gathered quotes to either move the zone-tozone solution, redesign it, or scrap it altogether.

It soon became clear that the mechanised system made it much harder for them to proceed with the automation they required, as the business had invested a large sum on a now largely redundant piece of equipment that occupied a prime position in the warehouse. Unless the mechanised system could become part of the fully automated solution, the company also faced the cost and embarrassm­ent of scrapping the new installati­on.

While the mechanised system improved productivi­ty from 50 to 150 order lines per hour per person, the automated goods-toperson system would deliver 500 order lines per hour per person. As a result, almost a third of the productivi­ty gain that would have been realised in going from a manual to an automated operation was already delivered by the mechanised system. This worsened the business case, extending the ROI of the desired automated system by an extra year. Because the mechanised system could not be incorporat­ed in the automated solution, there was no reduction in the cost of the required automation.

This is just one example of the Kaizen Paradox, which is a common predicamen­t for many businesses, where investment­s are made to achieve productivi­ty gains, but in doing so they dilute the business case for a better investment, causing them to plateau at a lower level of productivi­ty.

TOOLS AND APPROACHES TO SUPPORT BEST PRACTICE

Both manual and mechanised warehouses involve ‘goods to person’ in some form. The difference being the way the order tote moves around the facility, trolley or picking truck to conveyor, and the addition of WMS software to control order picking more efficientl­y. These improvemen­ts have helped reduce the time between pick operations and gradually lif t productivi­ty from around 50 to 150 order lines per hour per picker.

The Kaikaku occurred when goods-to- person technology was developed that radically transforme­d the way orders were picked, allowing a stationary worker or a robot to pick from products delivered to them in sequence. This can typically boost individual picker performanc­e to between 500 and 1,000 order lines per hour and minimise the labour required, while at the same time significan­tly reducing the warehouse footprint due to higher density storage.

An automated goods-to- person warehouse can typically achieve the same throughput as a manual or mechanised operation, with around half the staff and in half the building size. As a result, a strategic approach to automation can save significan­tly on the cost of warehouse expansion or remove the need for relocation, prolonging the life of the existing facility.

This more strategic approach to Kaikaku can protect an organisati­on from being trapped in a focus on low performanc­e operations. Being cursed with the Kaizen Paradox.

NEXT STEPS FOR BOARDS AND MANAGERS

For successful organisati­ons, major leaps forward in performanc­e are often approached strategica­lly. Kaikaku investment are made before Kaizen improvemen­t.

Every business is striving to improve, but not all improvemen­ts are complement­ary or equal. Opportunit­ies to stay ahead of the competitio­n can be stalled by an organisati­on’s own efforts. Critical to enduring competitiv­eness are a regularly reviewed strategic approach to improvemen­t, and a long-term strategy to deliver.

The Kaizen Paradox is a common predicamen­t for many businesses, where investment­s are made to achieve productivi­ty gains, but in doing so they dilute the business case for a better investment, causing them to plateau at a lower level of productivi­ty. Once organisati­ons are aware of the potential for investment­s that create a Kaizen Paradox, they are better able to consider potential improvemen­ts as part of a bigger, longer-term picture.

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