While we will be studying in class
about the Lean methods, I was curious about understanding the advantages Agile
and Lean methodology can offer in the service industry.
Some of the key differences between
manufacturing and service industry could be :
- Input in the manufacturing
industry includes labor and all other raw material production costs, whereas
the only major investment in service industry is for labor. Hence the capital
investment would be very much less in service industry.
- The optimization in case of
manufacturing can be done at various stages like inventory management, the lean
time. The speed can be improved by proper inventory management, improving transportation. Whereas
in case of the service industry, the main driving force is labor. The
optimization can be brought in the service industry by correct utilization of
labor force.
Out of
the 7 types of waste mentioned by the TPS(Toyota Production System), the two
major waste found in the service industry, offices to be more specific, are overproduction and waiting. The reason
behind this seems to be specialization. When an employee is specialized in a
particular field, unless he gets work pertaining to that field, he would have
nothing to do. Once he gets work related to his field, he would be overloaded
with work for some time. Having worked in a consulting firm for two years, I
have experienced this personally. There would be never a time in office, where
you will have consistent amount of work, any day. You might be either
overloaded with work or else, you will have nothing to do for the entire day.
This
inconsistency in work also leads to other waiting for your work to be finished
off, as their work depends on the completion of your work. Hence, when you are
overloaded with the work, there would be others who will be waiting for your
work to be completed.
One of
the solutions for this, as per the Agilean Company, is cross-functional
training. As per this method, the person will be trained in more than one
field, so that when he does not have work in the field he is specialized in, he
could take over the work belonging to some other field, he was trained on.One of the other approaches followed is also the CPI(Continuous Performance Imporvement), where each employee is encouraged to improve the process he is working on, reduce the waste in the processes he is working on.
This
leads me to thinking, would not this approach decrease the overall quality of
the work. The work now would be done not completely by the person specialized
in the field, rather other employees who might be recently trained, would be
doing the work. If we see from a different perspective, if the specialized
person would have been doing the work all alone, he would have been overloaded
with work and then he also might not be so efficient in delivering the work he
was best in. Hence, cross-functional training might be a good option to reduce
waste.
As we saw
in the readings, the main scope of improvement in Agile methodology is project
management whereas for Lean it is the process management. Hence, the Agilean Enterprise
combines both the methodologies and leverages the benefits of them.
The Agile
method improves the processes of creating customer value. It helps in creating
self- organized teams, which requires less management, specialization, more
modularity, and can produce range of services.
Whereas
the Lean methodology, improves the way each individual improves the customer
value. It focuses on what would be the next most important thing the person
would be working on, and ensures that maximum value is obtained from each
resource.
Having
worked for two years, I have personally seen the advantages of Agile
methodology as mentioned above. It increases the level of confidence of each
employee when they are allowed to work independently, allowed to give opinions,
and are not constantly managed by the management.
But I
have yet not seen the effective application of Lean in the offices to a greater
extent. We could consider, the approach to be applied in the cases where, if a
person is not having much work in Project X, he would be asked to work for
Project Y, where the resources might not enough or each resource is overloaded
with work. Here, the firm definitely benefits from the approach, but in my
experience there were no distinguished benefits for the employee himself. In
many cases, his extra efforts would not be even recognized by the firm, when
the year-end evaluation comes into picture. Many a times, you could see an
employee jumping from one to another project in similar scenarios, and he would
always end up working on an on-going project on temporary basis, rather than
being working for a particular project from scratch. This might not be liked by
the employee, and it discourages him. Is this due to the wrong implementation
of Lean methodology or excess implementation of Lean?
How could
this be changed so that the employee would also benefit from the Lean methodology
?
I think
one of the approaches could be rather than only higher management involved in
implementing the methodologies, the firm should even involve the employees who
are considered resources for implementation. This would increase mutual trust
in the company, the employees will be more responsible now, as they have also
played a part in the implementation of Agile and Lean methodology, and hence
they will try to make the implementation work towards success.
Looking
forward to your opinions or the articles you came across, where the firms would
have benefited from the application of Supply Chain Management in the Service
Area.
Sources:
An interesting and thoughtful post.
ReplyDeleteThere comes a point at which lack of resources, be they materials, manpower or machinery, limits a supply chain's ability to respond. The relationship between lean and responsiveness becomes inverted. Process and service industries tend to be more susceptible than assembly operations - one critical factor being the dependency on specialist resources.
Readers may be interested in my post "Lean vs Agile Supply Chain... or can we have both?" http://acuityconsultants.com/wp/2012/03/lean-vs-agile-supply-chain-or-can-we-have-both/
Hi Kairavi,
ReplyDeletePlease explain in detail on how to handle the situation(which you have mentioned) - 'Employee moved to another project on a temporary basis and thereby leading to employee getting discouraged'.
Probably a case study should help.
Thanks,
Arun