How I applied Lean ideology at my workplace
This week’s articles are related to “lean manufacturing and
total quality management”. They discuss process improvement ideologies through various
techniques like lean, six sigma and theory of constraints. I didn’t know until
now, but I realized after reading these articles that I applied lean ideology during
my internship and I am going to explain how.
“Lean” thinking, in simple words, is a process where
emphasis is laid on removing waste time. This means that resource spending on
an activity other than the one that provide value to the end consumer is a
target for elimination (1).
I interned at a Healthcare information systems company where
my job revolved around developing and testing healthcare applications. We were
developing applications in a an Agile framework, which means we had a new build
ready every 2 weeks, which had to be tested by the QA team.
We spend nearly 40 man-hours each week retesting the same
features, data from incoming servers, etc. every week, as data is critical in
healthcare and needs to be accurate. Also there was a process where developers conneted graphs created to the
servers manually. While doing this, they spend about an hour for every graph
they connected. To add to this there were 4 servers- test, dev, staging and
production. This meant they would spend about 4 hours for every script to be deployed
onto 4 servers.
Now under the “LEAN” ideology, any effort spent on
1.
manual inspection- testing data integrity manually
2.
manual process handoff – back end integration
3.
counting activities
would qualify as waste time(2).
Solution
Any process involving manual check is a waste of time and therefore
it made sense to automate these. I wrote automation scripts which tested integrity
of the data from the backend servers and displayed on the front end of the
application. Thus, saving valuable resources and time (40 man-hours, every 2 week).
I used automated scripts to hook the graphs in the servers too. This reduced
the time from an hour to a minute. This made the process more efficient by 98%.
Thus, using “lean” ideology, I removed the wasteful
processes and increased the efficiency of our test and deployment teams.
References:
1-lecture notes, week4, Introduction to Supply Chain Management,
Tim Zak, Heinz College
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