BIBLIO is the largest independent book marketplace in the world, with over 100 million books.

Skip to content

Learning to See: Value Stream Mapping to Add Value and Eliminate MUDA

Learning to See: Value Stream Mapping to Add Value and Eliminate MUDA

Learning to See: Value Stream Mapping to Add Value and Eliminate MUDA
Stock photo: cover may vary

Learning to See: Value Stream Mapping to Add Value and Eliminate MUDA Spiral bound - 1999

by Mike Rother; John Shook; Jim Womack [Foreword]; Dan Jones [Foreword];

Add to wish list
  • Used
  • Good
Used - Good

Description

Lean Enterprise Institute, 1999-06-01. Spiral-bound. Good. Textbook, May Have Highlights, Notes and/or Underlining, BOOK ONLYNO ACCESS CODE, NO CD, Ships with Emailed Tracking
Ask the seller a question Add to wish list
A$168.05
A$5.69 Delivery within USA
Standard delivery: 4 to 14 days
More delivery options
Ships from SGS Trading Inc (New Jersey, United States)

Details

About SGS Trading Inc New Jersey, United States

Specialising in: Reference Books, Textbook
Biblio member since 2009

Textbook and Reference Books Discounted

Terms of Sale: 30 day return guarantee, with full refund including shipping costs for up to 30 days after delivery if an item arrives misdescribed or damaged.

Browse books from SGS Trading Inc

Reader reviews for Learning to See: Value Stream Mapping to Add Value and Eliminate MUDA

From the publisher

Much more important, these simple maps - often drawn on scrap paper - showed where steps could be eliminated, flows smoothed, and pull systems introduced in order to create a truly lean value stream for each product family.

In 1998 John teamed with Mike Rother of the University of Michigan to write down Toyota's mapping methodology for the first time in Learning to See. This simple tool makes it possible for you to see through the clutter of a complex plant. You'll soon be able to identify all of the processing steps along the path from raw materials to finished goods for each product and all of the information flows going back from the customer through the plant and upstream to suppliers. With this knowledge in hand it is much easier to envision a "future state" for each product family in which wasteful actions are eliminated and production can be pulled smoothly ahead by the customer.

In plain language and with detailed drawings, this workbook explains everything you will need to know to create accurate current-state and future- state maps for each of your product families and then to turn the current state into the future state rapidly and sustainably.

In Learning to See you will find:

  • A foreword by Jim Womack and Dan Jones explaining the need for this tool.
  • An introduction by Mike Rother and John Shook describing how they discovered the mapping tool in their study of Toyota.
  • Guidance on identifying your product families.
  • A detailed explanation of how to draw a current-state map.
  • A practice case permitting you to draw a current-state map on your own, with feedback from Mike and John in the appendix on how you did.
  • A detailed explanation of how to draw a future-state map.
  • A second practice case permitting you to draw a future-state map, with "the answer" provided in the appendix.
  • Guidance on how to designate a manager for each value stream.
  • Advice on breaking implementation into easy steps.
  • An explanation of how to use the yearly value stream plan to guide each product family through successive future states.

More than 50,000 copies of Learning to See have been sold in the past two years. Readers from across the world report that value stream mapping has been an invaluable tool to start their lean transformation and to make the best use of kaizen events.

tracking-