Continuous Process Improvement

Business & Finance, Management & Leadership, Industrial Management
Cover of the book Continuous Process Improvement by George D. Robson, Free Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: George D. Robson ISBN: 9781451602463
Publisher: Free Press Publication: June 15, 2010
Imprint: Free Press Language: English
Author: George D. Robson
ISBN: 9781451602463
Publisher: Free Press
Publication: June 15, 2010
Imprint: Free Press
Language: English

During the past decade Japanese companies have derived many of their competitive advantages from streamlined work-flow processes. Desperate to replicate the Japanese systems, American managers have bought into countless theories advanced by management consultants which, lacking a methodology, have proved fruitless and frustrating. Now, from inside a world-renowned learning organization, comes that methodology.
Continuous Process Improvement (CPI) is an improvement and problem-prevention system created and developed by George Robson to "empower" natural work teams in three General Electric businesses. Composed of a logical set of steps, at the heart of which is "Process Flow Diagramming," CPI focuses on and simplifies the critical elements of work flow processes and eliminates those parts that add no value.
Not only has this methodology helped these GE businesses save in excess of $35 million during the first two years of implementation, but similar techniques are now being employed by leading-edge companies throughout the world. CPI is a transportable system that not only has profoundly changed manufacturing practices, but has been applied with equal success in all areas of a business. Robson shows how the "Iceberg Phenomenon" can identify the measurable benefits of accurately accounting for direct and indirect costs by carefully tracking expenses. Planning for the true costs of customer service, marketing concessions, and retraining can turn unplanned losses into short- and long-term returns on investments. Robson focuses on activities that are critical to quality in design and production and demonstrates how non-value-added work can be eliminated. The staggering cost of re-work, calculated in "The Rule of Tens," is reduced by catching mistakes before they escape to subsequent stages of handling. The CPI system, which has been widely praised within General Electric, will be of broad interest throughout the business and university communities.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

During the past decade Japanese companies have derived many of their competitive advantages from streamlined work-flow processes. Desperate to replicate the Japanese systems, American managers have bought into countless theories advanced by management consultants which, lacking a methodology, have proved fruitless and frustrating. Now, from inside a world-renowned learning organization, comes that methodology.
Continuous Process Improvement (CPI) is an improvement and problem-prevention system created and developed by George Robson to "empower" natural work teams in three General Electric businesses. Composed of a logical set of steps, at the heart of which is "Process Flow Diagramming," CPI focuses on and simplifies the critical elements of work flow processes and eliminates those parts that add no value.
Not only has this methodology helped these GE businesses save in excess of $35 million during the first two years of implementation, but similar techniques are now being employed by leading-edge companies throughout the world. CPI is a transportable system that not only has profoundly changed manufacturing practices, but has been applied with equal success in all areas of a business. Robson shows how the "Iceberg Phenomenon" can identify the measurable benefits of accurately accounting for direct and indirect costs by carefully tracking expenses. Planning for the true costs of customer service, marketing concessions, and retraining can turn unplanned losses into short- and long-term returns on investments. Robson focuses on activities that are critical to quality in design and production and demonstrates how non-value-added work can be eliminated. The staggering cost of re-work, calculated in "The Rule of Tens," is reduced by catching mistakes before they escape to subsequent stages of handling. The CPI system, which has been widely praised within General Electric, will be of broad interest throughout the business and university communities.

More books from Free Press

Cover of the book Other Greeks by George D. Robson
Cover of the book Kennedy & Nixon by George D. Robson
Cover of the book A Country Called Amreeka by George D. Robson
Cover of the book At Home in the World by George D. Robson
Cover of the book American Hour by George D. Robson
Cover of the book Leonard Woolf by George D. Robson
Cover of the book Big Cats by George D. Robson
Cover of the book The Intimate World of Abraham Lincoln by George D. Robson
Cover of the book Justice vs. Law by George D. Robson
Cover of the book When Our Grown Kids Disappoint Us by George D. Robson
Cover of the book To the Golden Cities by George D. Robson
Cover of the book Before the Best Interests of the Child by George D. Robson
Cover of the book Wildwood by George D. Robson
Cover of the book Moral Child by George D. Robson
Cover of the book The Guerrilla Factory by George D. Robson
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy