understanding the role of lean...
TRANSCRIPT
10/23/2014
1
UnderstandingThe Role of
Lean Accounting SummitO b 2 20
Lean Leadership
October 21, 2014
Orest J. FiumeRetired VP – Finance
The Wiremold Company1Copyright 2012 Orest J Fiume-All
rights reserved
Wiremold Results: 1987 – 1990
1987 – 1990
Sales 20%
Operating Profit (82%)Operating Profit (82%)
2
10/23/2014
2
Wiremold’s Status in 1990-1991• Low Profits• No Cash• Bad Customer Service (< 50%)Bad Customer Service ( 50%)• Losing Market Share• But… We raised the awareness of everyone (including the union) of the need for change We believed that the Toyota way of doingbusiness was the right waybusiness was the right way
Time for a Change
Sept 1991:Hired Art Byrne as President3
LEAN
ISA Business Strategy
Not
A Manufacturing Tactic
Not
A Cost Reduction Program4
10/23/2014
3
Wiremold Before and After Lean1990 2000
Assessed Value $30 Million $770 Million
West Hartford:
Sales per Employee $90K $240K
Gross Profit 37.8% 50.8%
Throughput Time 4-6 Weeks 1 Hours – 2 Days
Product Dev’l Time 2-3 Years 3-12 Months
# Suppliers 320 43
Inventory Turns 3.4 17.0
Working Cap % Sales* 21.8% 6.7%* W/C = A/R + Inv – Trade Payables
1990-2000 Wiremold Stock CAG = 34.7% per year1990-2000 S&P500 CAG = 15.5% per year
5
Lean is Not something you do while you run yourLean is Not something you do while you run your business…
Lean is the Way you run your business
The Goal is Not to implement Lean…it is to accelerate operational excellence to create sustainable
titi d tcompetitive advantage
10/23/2014
4
Why Doesn’t Everyone Do “Lean”?
• Easy to Agree With
• Hard To DoHard To Do
Why Is It So Hard?7
Most CEO’s View Lean as “Some Manufacturing Thing”
• Just an Element of Strategy• Just an Element of Strategy• Delegate it Down in the Organization - But
Don’t Remove the BarriersMake the MonthStandard Cost Absorption Accountingp gMRP and Other Computer SystemsInappropriate Performance Measurement
Must Be Company Strategy To Be Successful8
10/23/2014
5
Implementing Lean Thinking
It is a Cultural Change That Requires Leadership…
Because in the End It’s All About People
9
Fundamental Wiremold Premise
C i j t ll tiCompanies are just collections(teams) of people trying to
outperform other collections ofpeople to satisfy a set of
customerscustomers
The best, most motivated and focused team wins
10
10/23/2014
6
Leadership: Three Models
• Old Dictator Style:
• 1970’s Empowerment Style
• Lean Style
• “Do it My Way”
• “Do it Your Way”
• “Follow me and we will figure this out together”figure this out together
11
Question: Poker and business seem to have a lot in common. Would a good CEO make a good poker
The Learning Leader
g g pplayer?
Answer: I’ve played poker with CEO’s. They have to set their egos aside and say, “I’m obviously a very talented individual. I could become good at poker, but I have to be willing to learn. I have to be willing to open my mind to the possibility that I’m wrong and to listen to other people.” That’s hard for someone who’s gotten to the top.
Annie Duke, World Championship Poker Player
12
10/23/2014
7
The Lean Leaders’s Role• Learn Lean Thinking• Out Front - Hands On - Don’t Delegate• Set Stretch Goals• Set Stretch Goals• Create an Environment Where it’s OK to Fail• Have a “no-layoff” policy• Eliminate Concrete Heads• Organize around Value Streams
h h d ’• Change compensation systems that don’t support Lean
• Change Metrics• Adopt Lean Accounting
13
Learn Lean Thinking
• “Lean is a personal journey as well as p j yan institutional one”
--Jones, Aguirre and Calderon
• “If the CEO doesn’t know Lean and how to do it, you’re not going to behow to do it, you re not going to be successful at implementing it in that company”
--Art Byrne14
10/23/2014
8
Plunge into Operations’ Lean Activities
Learn Lean by Doing Lean
15
“ Leaders that participate in Kaizen quickly begin to realize that most of their beliefs about the conduct of business are incorrect, from which new beliefs behaviors andwhich new beliefs, behaviors, and competencies can arise…Unfortunately, most leaders embarking on the lean path do not participate in Kaizen and thus miss important opportunities to learn and explicitly support the establishment of new beliefs.”
M.L Emiliani
10/23/2014
9
Hands-On, Can’t Delegate
17
But, Naturally, We Are All Above Average
18
10/23/2014
10
The Disconnect Between What Senior Managers Believe and Reality
Senior MiddleManagers Managers
The company has good leadership
82% 52%
The company’s “espoused values” are reflected in what i t ll h i
74% 25%
is actually happening
Roffey Park Institute 2008 study
“When you are a leader there is no such thing as a trivial act; our actions speak volumes to our organizations”
Anand Sharma19
Set Stretch Goals
“ Anyone can achieve a 5-10% improvement just by working harder. The purpose of a stretch goal is to challenge people and making them realize that they have to do things differently.”
--Art Byrne
20
10/23/2014
11
Create an Environment where it is OK to Fail
Failure vs. Making Mistakes
“Every failure teaches a man something ifEvery failure teaches a man something, if he will learn”
--Charles Dickens
21
“It’s fine to celebrate success, but it is more important to heed the lessons of failure”
Bill Gates
22
Bill GatesRichest person in America for
21 consecutive years
10/23/2014
12
Have a “No Lay-off’ Policy
No one will lose their employment as a
result ofresult of productivity gains!
23
Eliminate Concrete Heads…No Excuses, No Exceptions
10/23/2014
13
Organize Around Value Creation
• Traditional organizational structure• Traditional organizational structure hides problems
• Value streams look at the organization horizontally, not vertically
25
Change compensation systems that don’t support Lean
Factory:Factory: – piece work incentives– narrow job classifications and many pay grades
Middle management:– Bonus based on individual performance
Sales:– Bonus based on meeting quota
26
Bonus based on meeting quotaSenior Management:
– Incentive Compensation based on individual performance
10/23/2014
14
Change MetricsWhy are Metrics Important?
• Metrics send a message to employees as to what management thinks is important
• Employees want to appear to beEmployees want to appear to be doing what management wants them to do
• METRICS SHAPE BEHAVIOR 27
When Should Metrics be Addressed?
AT THE BEGINNING OF THE LEANOF THE LEAN
TRANSFORMATION28
10/23/2014
15
Who are the Principal Users of Metrics
The Workers
29
How should ManagementUse Metrics?
• “Leaders may be judged by he numbers they deliver, but that’s not the way they should run the company”
--Rowan Gibson
• “The winners will be those companies that focus on their processes not their results”focus on their processes, not their results
--Art Byrne
A Lot Easier to Say Than Do for Most Managers 30
10/23/2014
16
What is Process Focus
• Focus of a Traditional CompanyR lt R lt R lt– Results, Results, Results
• Focus of a Lean Company– Process, Process, Process…and Results
• Lean Companies care about how the get Results in order to make them Repeatable
31
Performance Measurement• Support the Strategy• Not too many• Mostly non financial• Mostly non-financial• Motivate the right behavior (i.e., eliminate waste)• Simple, easy to understand• Measure the process, not the people• Measure Actual vs. Goals• Don’t use Ratios … they’re too confusing• Don’t combine measures of different things into a single
index• Must be timely … hourly, daily, weekly ...• Must be visual and tracked over time to show trends
32
10/23/2014
17
Wiremold High Level Measurements
• 100% Customer Service
• 20% Annual Productivity
• 20x Inventory Turns
• 50% Annual Reduction in defects (quality)(quality)
• 5c’s and degree of visual management
• 20% Profit sharing33
Understand the difference between Efficiency and Productivity
PRODUCTIVITY = WEALTH
Arthur P. Byrne
34
10/23/2014
18
Productivity Is The Relationship Between Quantity of Output vs.
Quantity of Resources Consumed
• Sales $ = Quantity x Price• Material $ = Quantity x Price• Labor $ = Quantity x Price• O/H $ = Quantity x Price
35
Changing the “Q’s” Requires PhysicalChange -- It’s Not a Financial Thing
EFFICIENCY
The Relationship Between Two Inputs:
Standard Labor Hours vs. Actual Labor Hours
It Presumes That The Standards Are Right
36
It Presumes That The Standards Are Right
10/23/2014
19
IMPROVEMENT REQUIRES PHYSICAL CHANGE
• Physically group production by product families• Physically change process layout to facilitate onePhysically change process layout to facilitate one
piece flow• Physically eliminate central parts storage - store at
the point of use• Physically reduce set up time 95%+• Co-locate people:
37
p p– Marketing & Product Dev.– Purchasing, Production Control and Operations– Credit and Customer Service
Implement Lean Accounting
• Commit to break with traditional systems• Commit to break with traditional systems
• Provide education in Lean Thinking to all in Accounting
• Mandate that all professional accountants be on at least two Kaizens per year
38
10/23/2014
20
Apply Lean Principles to All Business and Accounting Processes
• Simplify:• Simplify:– Reduce clerical, non-value added activities
to free up time
– Reduce unnecessary reports to free up time
• Assign Accounting staff to Operating Teams
39
Eliminate Standard Cost AccountingHow are Standard Costs Calculated?
• Materials = Quantity x Unit Costs
– Material Quantity based on engineering design, modified for yield modified for yield
M t i l U it C t b d t t ???t t ???– Material Unit Costs based on quotes, current average or ???quotes, current average or ???
• Labor = Hours x Hourly Rate
– Labor Hours based on engineering studies, adjusted for PFD, etcstudies, adjusted for PFD, etc
– Labor Rates based on average rateaverage rate
• Overhead = Labor Hours x Overhead Rate
O h d R t b d B d t d O h dB d t d O h d di id d b B d t dB d t d
40
– Overhead Rate based on Budgeted OverheadBudgeted Overhead divided by Budgeted Budgeted HoursHours
Variance = Actual – Standard (estimates in RedRed)
10/23/2014
21
Provide Information that Non-Accountants can Actually Use*
This Year
Last Year
+(-)%
New Sales 100,000 90,000 11.1
Cost of Sales
Materials:
Purchases 28 100 34 900Purchases 28,100 34,900
Inventory (Incr)Decr: Mat’l Content 3,600 (6,000)
Total Materials 31,700 28,900 9.7
Processing Costs:
Factory Labor 11,400 11,500 (0.9)
Factory Salaries 2,100 2,000 5.0
Factory Benefits 7,000 5,000 40.0
Services & Supplies 2,400 2,500 (8.0)
Scrap 2,600 4,000 (35.0)
Equipment Depreciation 2,000 1,900 5.3
Total Processing Costs 27,500 26,900 2.2
Occupancy Costs:
Building Depreciation/Rent 200 200 0
Building Services 2,200 2,000 10.0
Total Occupancy Costs 2,400 2,200 9.1
Total Manufacturing Costs 61,600 58,000 6.2
Manufacturing Gross Profit 38,400 32,000 20.0
Inv Incr(Decr): Labor & Overhead Content (2,400) 4,000
GAAP Gross Profit 36,000 36,000 0
Plain English P&L By Value Stream
Educate to AvoidThe Two Big Surprises
• Reductions in WIP &FG inventory will result in a non-cash charge to earnings due to prior period’s capitalized labor and overhead coming off of the Balance Sheet
• Productivity gains don’t result in
42
Productivity gains don t result in increased profits until management does something to actualized them
10/23/2014
22
Lean Accounting and Finance Transformation
C lti
Consulting
Analysis
Consulting
Analysis
Transactions
43
Transactions
Ask yourself:
Are your Leaders creating aAre your Leaders creating a Lean Organization
Or An Organization Just Doing
Lean Stuff?
44
10/23/2014
23
“It is not the strongest species that survives, or the most intelligent but thesurvives, or the most intelligent but the most responsive to change”
--Charles Darwin
“It is not necessary to change…survival is not mandatory”not mandatory
--W. Edwards Deming
45
THANK YOU
46