Sunday, November 4, 2012

Difference Between Six Sigma and Lean

I was recently asked by a university student what the difference was between Six Sigma and Lean.  In order to make it easier to understand I used the example of a process that generates dozens and dozens of Weekly Reports for a large project management office (PMO).  In each example the starting point is the same.  However depending on which method you chose the outcome can be quite different.

For the sake of example consider the following situation:
  • Process: dozens of project managers, project coordinators and other support staff put together detailed reports each week outlining the status of each project within the organization.
  • Product: 100 project status reports each containing 100 pieces of data on average
  • Total Data Points: 100 x 100 = 10,000
  • Effort Required: 4 hours per report
  • Total Effort Required: 4 hours x 100 reports = 400 hours
  • Total Cost: 400 hours x $50/hr = $20,000 per week or $1,000,000 per year
  • Error Rate: 10%
  • Average Number of Errors: 10% x 10,000 = 100 errors
  • Standard Deviation: 10 errors

Six Sigma Approach:

A team is assembled to study the problem of errors appearing on weekly project reports.  They interview stakeholders throughout the process and discover the following major problems:
  1. Inconsistent Training: Initial training when the electronic reports were first introduced was extensive.  However over the past year and a half there have been many new staff who do not always receive the same level of training.
  2. Inconsistent Auditing: Some departments have extensive review and feedback processes in place designed to catch errors and report them back to the project teams for correction.  However across the organization the level of auditing and tolerance for errors varies widely.
  3. Lack of Restrictions: There are many pieces of information that should follow a standard format.  However the electronic forms do not take advantage of the error catching capability of the software.  As a result project managers are allowed to enter and submit incorrect information.
Using the information collected the team quickly comes up with a list of recommendations.  In addition they install run charts throughout the entire process to track the rate of errors.  Based on this quantitative information they are able to quickly identify the departments where most of the errors occur.  Corrective actions such as re-training and consistent auditing are utilized to reduce the number of errors.  Also they are able to use their tracking data to get approval from senior management to pay for the re-configuration of the on-line reports so that many of the errors are caught at the point of entry.

The Six Sigma Results:
  • Effort Required: 3 hours per report
  • Total Effort Required: 3 hours x 100 reports = 300 hours
  • Total Cost: 400 hours x $50/hr = $15,000 per week or $750,000 per year
  • Savings: $250,000 per year
  • Error Rate: 2%
  • Average Number of Errors: 2% x 10,000 = 20 errors
  • Standard Deviation: 2 errors

Lean Approach:

A team is assembled to study the problem of errors appearing on weekly project reports.  They start by talking to the organization's customers to find out how much Value the reports provide.  What they discover after talking to external and internal customers is the following:
  1. External Customers: Not surprisingly the team quickly discovers that the external customers, those who purchase the products and services produced by the organization have little or no idea that the firm even has a Project Management Office.  And these customers certainly have no idea what the Weekly Status Reports are or why they would need them.
  2. Internal Customers: Perhaps somewhat surprisingly the team learns that even the internal customers who are the beneficiaries of the various projects have little use for the reports.  In fact one manager comments "all I want is the project finished on time, on scope and on budget.  Maybe they should spend less time on those reports and more time managing my projects."
  3. Senior Executives: Most surprising of all they learn by talking to the senior executives, the group who everyone agrees asks for the reports, that they only read a very few of the 100 reports that are generated weekly.  When asked why they asked for the reports in the first place one executive explains "well having them make all those reports is how I ensure everything is being properly managed."
Based on the Voice of the Customer the team is forced to acknowledge that the Weekly Status reports add no Value to the firm's customers and are therefore Waste.  They begin work on the Value Stream used to create the reports and classify each task as follows:
  1. Type 2 Waste: These tasks can be immediately stopped with no negative impact
  2. Type 1 Waste: These tasks require Kaizens or small improvement efforts before further action is taken
After a series of Kaizen events are conducted changes similar to the following examples are made to the process that generates the reports:
  1. Reduce Data Points: The number of required data points on each report is reduced from an average of 100 down to less than 10 Key Performance Indicators.
  2. Reduce Reports: The number of reports is reduced from 100 down to 25 to track just the projects with a high Impact or a high Risk for the organization.
  3. Reduce Auditing: With the simpler reports it is discovered that it is no longer necessary to have an extensive audit system in place.  In addition the senior executives acknowledge that holding people accountable for errors in the reports is not a substitute for good project governance.
The Lean Results:
  • Effort Required: 15 minutes per report
  • Total Effort Required: 15 minutes x 25 reports = 6 hours, 15 minutes
  • Total Cost: 6.25 hours x $50/hr = $312.50 per week or $15,625 per year
  • Savings: $984,375 per year
  • Error Rate: n/a
  • Average Number of Errors: n/a
  • Standard Deviation: n/a

Conclusions:

In both instances the organization did the right thing by establishing teams to address the problem with reports.  And in the case of the team that used the Six Sigma approach they also did the right thing by engaging all the internal stakeholders in order to gain consensus on what the root causes of errors were and how best to fix them.  What this example illustrates however is the risk that any process improvement effort takes when they do not listen to the Voice of the Customer in order to properly assess Value and Waste.  By assuming that the reports represented Value the Six Sigma team focused all their energy on reducing errors.  By learning from their customer that the entire process was Waste the Lean team focused their energy on eliminating all but the minimum essential effort required.

The irony is that most often the further one gets in an organization from the paying customer the easier it is to forget about listening to the Voice of the Customer.  The result being the greater the likelihood that any improvement efforts will do little more than optimize Waste.

@leanmind

12 comments:

  1. This is an unabashed plug for lean over six sigma. People forget that whether it is lean or six sigma at the end of thd day these are just tools . Use the tool that makes sense. Any six sigma practitioner would also have listened to the VOC and asked the same q

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  2. The fact they you state these are just tools just reinforces a common misunderstanding. Six Sigma is a method and tools without any management theory.

    Lean is a complete system to design, build, operate and improve the whole business. Its a Management System which engages people in a very different conversation.

    Stephen Parry @leanvoices

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  3. Lean, Six Sigma, etc are all subsets of Industrial Engineering.

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    1. No, the Lean management system has ideas about psychology and leadership that don't have roots in Industrial Engineering. IE principles and methods are a major part of Lean, but it's not all I.E.

      For example, Deming's teachings on leadership and the Toyota "respect for people" philosophy aren't taught in Industrial Engineering.

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    2. Mark, not sure where you got your IE degree but where I got mine (BS and MS) psychology of management and people focus were both taught. I agree with Anonymous that core of both Lean and Six Sigma are based on the IE principles.

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    3. I graduated from Northwestern University in 1995 with an I.E. degree. They barely mentioned Lean and all in the context of an inventory and pull production methodology.

      Maybe I.E. programs have added Lean to the curriculum in recent years, but it was reactive.

      Much of Lean comes from Dr. W. Edwards Deming, who was not an industrial engineer.

      I love my degree and my profession -- I.E. contributes much to Lean (a lot of "Lean" improvement work is basically industrial engineering), but you can't say everything... maybe "the core" but I'd say "some of the core."

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  4. Dears,
    I really need to learn about both six sigma & lean sigma, Is there any course?

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  5. Well definitely, this is not the right answer for any student, actually the answer is not accurate.
    The correct answer is that there are no differences..why? because both are Business Strategies, Management Frameworks, Management Methodologies, both focus on value generation..so then there is actually no difference except by the tools used.
    Again the correct answer is that there is no differences

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    Replies
    1. They are both business strategies, but they are very different. There's some overlap, but at times the philosophies of Lean and Six Sigma couldn't be more different at times.

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  6. This example is a ridiculous comparison that apparently is written by someone that doesn't know and practice Six Sigma. I am an expert having used both for more than 10 years. I have taught over 1000 Black Belts on Six Sigma and Lean. BBs that I have taught would not fix processes without first getting VOC and evaluating the process for value and non-value added steps. And by the way, what do you think Kaizens are? Kaizen are focused DMAIC projects. Please don't mislead people with this type of biased writing.

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  7. reading the comments above I still didn't understood what is the diffrence between Lean and Six sigma.
    I know the definition of both but can someone give me examples in industry, also I have seen that many tools are used in both.

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  8. Hi,MR.Richard I hope you can get answer for your question by seeing the following content
    Six Sigma alone analyzing data and removing variances in the process. Lean Six Sigma is integration of using six sigma data and lean tools to remove variations in the process.

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