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11 Jan 2011

Reaching the plateau of the U-curve, or:
When the 4 colors are not enough

(RRR)

The audit process is based on investigating “mysteries”; or as Eli Schragenheim had called them in his landmark presentation in Cambridge – surprises. A mystery is an effect in reality that contradicts a predicted effect of the S&T tree. In a recent audit of an MTO company (producing metal cables of the kind that is used for holding elevators), two mysteries were evident. But first a little background:

The company had already implemented, to the letter, the left part of the RRR tree and had quickly improved its DDP from around 50% (which is typical to its industry) to the satisfactory level of 98%. They proceeded by properly exploiting the resulting competitive edge of this extreme reliability, to the extent that the market is no longer the constraint. Actually they are winning so many orders that the “load control” pushed their promised due-dates to be later than the market lead time. Since it takes a long time to add capacity (about a year) they are now contemplating a mechanism that would enable them to safeguard their preferred clients (“When given delivery lead times are (much) longer than the industry standard lead time, not only may orders be lost, but clients may be lost.” – RRR S&T step 4.13.2 – Capacity Elevation).

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The importance of answering "What to change?"
Dr. Eliyahu M. Goldratt

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Dr. Goldratt explains the very first key question of improvement and why the Theory of Constraints considers its answer to be  so important.
7 min, English, Spanish

Tags: competitive edge, RRR, theory of constraints, U curve

This entry was posted on Tuesday, January 11th, 2011 at 7:29 PM and is filed under Nuggets. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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« Goldratt’s Golden Nugget #12
Light blue 2, or: A way to exploit the protective capacity using orders (as opposed to using stock)
Reaching the plateau of the U-curve, or:
When the 4 colors are not enough (part 2)
»
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