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Test your basic knowledge |
Lean Supply Chain
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
business-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Status quo unacceptable - Put aside preconceptions - Find root causes to problems - Focus on process not people - Employees are the experts - Allow yourself the right to fail (yeuch)
Keiretsu
TPM Total Productive Maintenance
Perfection
TQRDCE
2. Material requisition planning
MRP
Keiretsu
Demand amplification mapping
Cellular flow
3. Bringing people closer together for communication - One cell per product family - Bring together all the machines - Select appropriate tools - Aim is to have them independent - Train - balance workload - Reduce space and flow difference
Supermarket
TPM Total Productive Maintenance
Cellular flow
Standard in-process inventory
4. Procurement - Manufacturing - Warehousing - Distribution - Customers
Motion waste
Supply chain components
Opportunity time
Quality filter mapping
5. Factors that influence addition of value: technology quality reliability delivery customer service and environment
Supply chain drivers
Cycle time
Flow
TQRDCE
6. Structured methodology of sequence of activities aimed at removing waste by improving organisation - visual communication and overall cleanliness. Sort - keep only what you need Set in Order - A place for everything and everything in its place Sh
Cellular flow
5S
Project desirability matrix
Motion waste
7. Quantity of inventory against time showing batch size at different points
BOM
Demand amplification mapping
RCA Root cause analysis
FIFO
8. Rework - repair - incorrect info. Due to poor training - tools - layouts - process failures - established standards - checklists - forms. - Visual controls - 5 Whys RCA - PDCA - Poke Yoke
Standardised work
Defects waste
Kaizen blitz
Traditional supply chain
9. Design and manage the processes - flows and assets of material and information required to satisfy customer demands
Supply chain management function
Opportunity time
Principles of lean thinking
Andon light
10. IT - Inbound logistics - Outbound logistics - Quality - Technology/design
Supply Chain Management
Supply chain factors
Waiting waste
Cellular flow
11. Ho - direction - Shin - needle - Strategic direction rippled down to all in organisation - Focus attention on corporate direction - Align activity to support - Integrate with daily activity of staff - Structured review of progress - Based on mgmt by
Poka yoke
Manufacture
One piece flow
Hoshin planning
12. Visual description of an activity
Demand amplification mapping
Value creation framework (Murman 2002)
Process mapping
Lean supply chain elements
13. Value left axis -Success probability right axis - height of bar shows effort involved?
Lean thinking
Demand flow technology
Supply chain
Project desirability matrix
14. Transport - Inventory - Motion - Waiting - Overproduction - Overprocessing - Defects
Kaizen
MOQ
One piece flow
TIM WOOD
15. More information or material than process needs eg unnecessary files - long equipment setup - poor communication with suppliers. Minimum order quantities adjustments. - Reduce batch size - 5S - Load levelling - Pull system eg Kanban
Lean supply chain elements
Inventory waste
Kaizen blitz
Motion waste
16. Lean thinking for equipment. Aims to eliminate accidents - defects and breakdowns. 3 areas: availability - performance - quality - equipment failure/breakdown - setup/adjustment - idling/minor stops affecting performance - reduced speed affecting
Supply chain drivers
TPM Total Productive Maintenance
Cycle time
Traditional supply chain
17. Replenishment signal that authorises activity or delivery of required materials. Initiated by consumption - only happens for good parts - using the cell triggers the pull - nothing produced or moved without signal - only the kanban quantity delivered
TQRDCE
Kanban
Logistics
MRP
18. Throw out old fixed ideas on how to do things - No blame - treat others as you want to be treated - Think positive - don't say you can't - Don't wait for perfection - 50% improvement now is fine - Correct mistakes as son as they are found - Don't sub
5S
LESAT
Kaizen rules
Value levels in an organisation
19. Minimum order quantity
MOQ
Overproducing waste
Standard in-process inventory
Takt time
20. Inventory against time typically 4 lines consumer demand - retail sales - mfr forecast - mfr plan
Demand amplification mapping
Principles of lean thinking
Kaizen rules
Takt time
21. Product portfolio - Product design - Variety in parts/raw materials - Manufacturing process - Inventory (BTO or BTS) - Distribution - Vendor partnerships - Logistics
Supply chain drivers
Supply chain management function
Inventory waste
Supply chain variability factors
22. Value added time + nva time... time it takes to go through all the elements of a process before the activity repeats
DMAIC
Cycle time
VVCPP
Overproducing waste
23. Vendor Managed Inventory
Overprocessing waste
Modern supply chain
Process cycle time or lead time
VMI
24. Short focused burst of activity used to complement Kaizen thinking
Flow
FMEA
RCA Root cause analysis
Kaizen blitz
25. Identify and process value streams - Track waste and eliminate - Flow smoothly - Continuous improvement - Seamless integration with all parties
Supply chain variability factors
Lean thinking goals
Lean thinking
Supply Chain Response Matrix
26. Plan Do Check Act
Value stream map
VVCPP
PDCA
Six sigma
27. Too much or too soon - excessive work in progress - Pull system eg Kanban - Batch size reduction- Load levelling
TQRDCE
Demand amplification mapping
Poka yoke
Overproducing waste
28. 1. Value Proposition - it is easy to identify stakeholders - it is very difficult to understand what provides value to stakeholders 2. Value Identification - structure value streams based on the stakeholders' value propositions so that people - g
Supply Chain Response Matrix
Modern supply chain
Theory of constraints
Value creation framework (Murman 2002)
29. More work effort than necessary eg reviews - reports - cc-ing emails. Caused by lack of communication - teamwork - inappropriate decision making. Solved by focussing on customer value. - 5S - Value stream map - Whys RCA - PDCA
Overprocessing waste
Inventory waste
Defects waste
Production levelling
30. Endless transformation of waste into value from the customer's perspective Womack & Browne 1996
VMI
Lean implementation
Weighted average cost of capital
Lean thinking
31. Human foolproofing eg cannot insert 3-pin plug wrong way up
Deming cycle
Poka yoke
Product variation funnel
Standardised work
32. Non value added time. The potential non-production time that can be eliminated from a process
Opportunity time
Kaizen rules
Production levelling
5S
33. Tools for finding the root cause: 5 Whys - brainstorming - spaghetti diagram - Pareto analysis - Cause and Effect diagrams
RCA Root cause analysis
Supply Chain Response Matrix
Demand amplification mapping
Hoshin planning
34. Visual 'call for help' system - means a Japanese paper lantern
TQRDCE
Project desirability matrix
Andon light
Product variation funnel
35. All mfg inherently wasteful. ultimate in batch reduction is a single piece going through a process
One piece flow
Value creation framework (Murman 2002)
Weighted average cost of capital
Current state map
36. Focus on the biggest problem because it is the rate limiting step
Deming cycle
Theory of constraints
Logistics
TQRDCE
37. Suppliers inputs process outputs customers
Deming cycle
SIPOC
Six sigma
Lean implementation
38. Walk through to identify processes - Gather all relevant information - document customer/supplier info and count inventory - Establish info flow - how does each process know what to make next? - Identify push v pull - Quantify process lead time v pro
Work balancing
Lean thinking goals
LESAT
Current state map
39. Bill of materials
Opportunity time
Takt time
Value creation framework (Murman 2002)
BOM
40. Shows movement through sequence of activities through top view - Plot to see how movement can be reduced
Value stream map
Mura
Spaghetti diagram
MRP
41. Factors that influence quality. Technology quality reliability delivery customer-service environment
Waiting waste
Weighted average cost of capital
TQRDCE
VSM
42. Identify value - Map value stream - Create flow - Establish flow - Seek perfection
Value creation framework (Murman 2002)
Supply chain variability factors
Principles of lean thinking
Product variation funnel
43. Value (what customer will pay for - ask them)- Value Stream (all processes that add value) - Continuous Flow (linking - avoid stagnation) - Pull (demand - nothing produced until signalled for) - Perfection (an ideal)
Six sigma
Defects waste
Cellular flow
VVCPP
44. Must all work together - Suppliers - Procurement - Operations - Warehousing - Transport - Customers
JIT Just in Time
Supply chain
Lean supply chain elements
Supply Chain Response Matrix
45. A set of businesses with interlocking business relationships and shareholdings
Lean supply chain
LESAT
Keiretsu
Inventory waste
46. How long it takes to use all the stock that you have usually per year eg annual cost of sales over value of current inventory. It's a bigger number if you keep less of the stock that's used
Principles of lean thinking
One piece flow
Inventory turn
Kaizen rules
47. eople - knowledge and skills - Tools and technologies - Physical facilities - where the value stream resides - Communication channels - Policies and procedures
DMAIC
One piece flow
Value stream
Logistics
48. In theory of constraints drum is the rate of the constraint - buffer is stocks to supply - rope is limit on upstream production to prevent flooding.
Deming cycle
Drum buffer rope
Quality filter mapping
RCA Root cause analysis
49. Inbound: total cost of ownership - v quality - delivery schedule - flexibility - Outbound: customer satisfaction - v cost - flexibility - support level
Logistics
Cause and effect (fishbone) diagram
Kaizen rules
Quality filter mapping
50. Mistake proofing a process in order to ensure that only quality products or parts are allowed through to the next step. This helps eliminate any waste incurred from rework. Usually uses root cause and Pareto analysis
Kanban
Product variation funnel
Right First Time
FIFO