The document describes seven types of waste that can occur in production processes: overproduction, excessive inspection, unnecessary transportation or double handling of goods, waiting time due to lack of supplies or poor utilization of worker time, excessive motions that harm health, unnecessary processing steps that add no value and increase costs, and reworking items that should have been done correctly the first time. It provides definitions and examples of each type of waste.
The document describes seven types of waste that can occur in production processes: overproduction, excessive inspection, unnecessary transportation or double handling of goods, waiting time due to lack of supplies or poor utilization of worker time, excessive motions that harm health, unnecessary processing steps that add no value and increase costs, and reworking items that should have been done correctly the first time. It provides definitions and examples of each type of waste.
Original Description:
kaizen waste collection
Original Title
Copy of Upload Kaizen Waste Data Collection Form 1 Pg
The document describes seven types of waste that can occur in production processes: overproduction, excessive inspection, unnecessary transportation or double handling of goods, waiting time due to lack of supplies or poor utilization of worker time, excessive motions that harm health, unnecessary processing steps that add no value and increase costs, and reworking items that should have been done correctly the first time. It provides definitions and examples of each type of waste.
The document describes seven types of waste that can occur in production processes: overproduction, excessive inspection, unnecessary transportation or double handling of goods, waiting time due to lack of supplies or poor utilization of worker time, excessive motions that harm health, unnecessary processing steps that add no value and increase costs, and reworking items that should have been done correctly the first time. It provides definitions and examples of each type of waste.
Overproduction Making more than the next process needs (ie - INVENTORY) Inspection Excessive inspection wastes time and doesn't find all defects Transportation Long distances traveled in the process and double-handling of goods Waiting Time Lack of Supplies or Poor Utilization of Time for a Person Motion Excessive movements in the process that may cause health defects Processing, itself Unnecessary production adds no value and may drive up costs Reworking and correcting items, such as forms or orders, that should Defects / rework be done right the first time