Waste Elimination
“The Seven Deadly Wastes”

Waste (“muda” in Japanese) is “anything other than the minimum amount of equipment, materials, parts, space, and worker’s time which are absolutely essential to add value to the product.
Shoichiro Toyoda,
Founder of Toyota

Visit TBM Video Archive

(photo)

The relentless elimination of waste is as important today in your LeanSigma® Transformation as it was when Taiichi Ohno, pioneer of the Toyota Production System, identified the primary sources of waste, which he called “The Seven Deadly Wastes.”

  1. Defects
    Any production that results in rework or scrap.
  2. Overproduction
    Producing more than is needed for immediate use.
  3. Inventory
    Any work-in-process that exceeds what is required to meet customer needs.
  4. Excess Motion
    Unnecessary movement of people, such as walking, lifting, reaching and stretching.
  5. Over-processing
    Using more energy or activity than is needed to produce a product – or adding more value than customers will pay for.
  6. Transportation
    Unnecessary movement of products, materials or information.
  7. Waiting
    Any delay between the end of one process activity and the start of the next activity.

 

One thing you can’t recycle is wasted time.
Taiichi Ohno, Toyota Production System pioneer

LeanSigma®, The Perfect Engine®, LeanStrategy®, and the TBM Consulting Group logo
are registered trademarks of TBM Consulting Group, Inc.
Contact the TBM Consulting Group | Site Map