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How Toyota Changed The Way We Make Things - YouTube
Channel: Bloomberg Quicktake: Originals
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Toyota knows how to make cars.
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It does it so well it became the first company
to produce more than 10 million a year.
[12]
Its success is rooted in a special system
and began what is now known as ‘Lean Manufacturing’,
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an ethos emulated by companies around the
world to make products faster, cheaper
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and better.
[32]
Following the Second World War, Japan was
left in a precarious economic position.
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"Steel and other metals are scarce"
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Already disadvantaged by lacking natural resources,
materials were hard to come by and companies
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had to be creative to compete.
[46]
Toyota’s founder Sakichi Toyoda had started
a loom business, but it was his son Kiichiro
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who founded the motor company in 1937.
[54]
They were used to working within narrow margins
- as the shortage of materials increased during
[59]
the war, the number of headlamps on its Model
K truck was reduced to one
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and it only had brakes on one of the axles.
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The turning point for Toyota's Production
System would come in the early fifties, when Kiichiro's
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cousin Eiji would travel to the U.S. with
a veteran loom machinist, Taiichi Ohno.
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They visited Ford's River Rouge plant in Michigan
and were impressed by the scale of the operation,
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but knew that in cash-strapped Japan companies
didn’t have the resources for such a system;
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Having months’ worth of stock sitting in
a warehouse would tie up precious capital
[90]
they didn’t have.
[92]
Instead, what truly impressed Ohno was a visit
to a supermarket, a Piggly Wiggly, according
[97]
to legend... Japan didn’t really have self-service
stores at this point - and he was struck by
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the way customers could choose exactly what
they wanted, when they wanted.
[106]
He decided to model his production line on
a similar idea; With a "supermarket formula,"
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only enough parts were produced in the first
phase to replace what was used in the second,
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and so on.
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This is where the ‘Just In Time’ system
really took shape.
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Toyota was able to eliminate much of the waste in Ford's system,
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making
smaller numbers of parts to be used when it
[128]
needed them, allowing the company to operate
on a tighter budget.
[132]
As part of this Ohno developed ‘Kanban’
- a sign-based scheduling method which shows
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goods in, goods in production, and goods out.
It’s now seen as a precursor to bar codes.
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Ohno and Toyoda also noticed that American
car companies were still employing many of
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Henry Ford’s early production techniques
-
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They kept operations at full tilt in order
to maximize efficiencies of scale, and then
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repaired defective cars after they rolled
off the line.
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Ohno believed this caused more problems and
didn’t encourage workers, or machines, to
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stop making the mistake.
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So he placed a cord above every station which
any worker could pull to stop the entire assembly
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if they spotted a problem. The whole team
would work on it, to prevent it from happening
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again.
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As teams identified more problems, the number
of errors began to drop dramatically.
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Combined with a culture of continuous, incremental
improvement -- called `kaizen' -- the Toyota
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Production System built a brand known for
making reliable and affordable cars.
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But Toyota was also getting good at producing
cars quickly.
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In 1962, the company had produced one million
vehicles.
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By 1972, they had produced ten million.
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It was around that time the efficiencies of
their factories enabled Toyota to produce
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a car every 1.6 man hours - much lower than
their competitors in the U.S., Sweden and
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Germany
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And as the oil crises of the decade sent gas
prices higher, cheap-to-run Japanese cars
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became much more appealing to Americans, whose
powerful, but gas-guzzling vehicles suddenly
[223]
became very expensive to run.
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Today, Toyota has made over 250 million vehicles…
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Others have looked to them to learn the lessons
of ‘Lean’- combining craft with mass production,
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avoiding waste, while striving for constant
improvement.
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Boeing is perhaps the most famous, restructuring
a plant to better suit TPS.
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Intel is another long-time lean ambassador,
and is exploring the principles in the context
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of AI and IoT.
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A Canadian Hospital even used Toyota’s system
to decrease wait times in its ER.
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The Toyota Production System changed not just
how cars are made globally but how we approach
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making things full stop.
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It also showed there is always a better way
to make a product.
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