Reduction of Wiring Defect Rate in Electrical Panel Boards
14_LSS-Project_Reduction of Wiring Defect Rate in Electrical Panel Boards
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Explore MoreMost people think waste is just something tossed in a bin. But in reality, you’re surrounded by lean wastes all the time — in your daily routine, your work, perhaps even in your habits. The magic of Lean is seeing the invisible, then using it to make everything smoother, faster, more satisfying. Let’s dig into the 7 wastes of Lean, but in a way that makes you go: “Hey — I really see this daily.” 🔍 Why Waste Matters More Than You Think Before we list the wastes, here’s why recognizing them is a game changer: Waste lowers your energy, mood, and money — all at once. Each waste hides costs: time lost, frustration, delays, extra effort. Once you spot waste, you can stop it, and that’s when Lean starts working. 🧩 The 7 Wastes — With Real Everyday Scenes Here are the 7 wastes of Lean (aka Muda) — each mapped to things you see, probably daily. Waste Everyday Scene You’ll Recognize Why It’s Actually Costing You 1. Overproduction Cooking more food than needed, or printing extra copies “just in case.” You’ll toss or store the leftovers; energy, ingredients, effort go to waste. 2. Inventory Having a pantry full of items you’ve forgotten about, or digital files piling up unsorted. Money is tied up in things you aren’t using; storage, maintenance cost time. 3. Defects Ordering shoes online & getting wrong size or color; messages saved incorrectly. Fixing, returning, replacing — all extra cost, both time & money. 4. Waiting Sitting in line, waiting for approval, emails that go unanswered. Idle time kills productivity, creates bottlenecks. 5. Motion Reaching across the table for a charger, walking to get supplies because nothing’s in its place. Burned energy + wasted minutes, fatigue, inefficiency. 6. Overprocessing Over-formatting a report no one reads, adding features nobody asked for. You add complexity, risk errors, and waste effort. 7. Transportation Moving files between departments unnecessarily, commuting longer than needed. More steps = more chances of mistakes, delays, wear and tear. 🚪 Hidden Wastes — You Locks You In Without Realizing Here are a few: Necessary non-value work (things you must do, but maybe inefficiently, like repeated approvals). Human potential waste — people whose creativity/skills aren’t used properly. Waste in digital flow — software that requires many clicks, duplicated data, etc. 🔧 How to Spot & Eliminate Waste in Your Day-to-Day Seeing waste is one thing. Removing it is another. Here’s a practical Lean-inspired checklist to apply today: Walk through your space or workflow. Observe — maybe for just 15 minutes — and note steps that seem redundant. Ask “Does this add value?” For each step: if the answer is “no,” explore removing it. Use visual tools. Kanban boards, Value Stream Maps, flowcharts — making waste visible helps stop ignoring it. Standardize good habits. E.g., keep tools in fixed places; digital files in named folders. Show quick wins. Fix something small (like organizing your desk, or reducing back-and-forth), then celebrate it. It builds momentum. 🌱 Tiny Fixes That Yield Big Gains Here are some real tweaks people often overlook which deliver powerful results: Set up “go & get” stations at home or work: everything often used is within reach. Use digital templates so you don’t have to rebuild similar documents each time. Stop printing unless necessary — move to digital approvals to cut both waste and time. Batch similar tasks (emails, errands) — reduces “transport” and “motion” waste. Do regular “purge” days for files, pantry, supplies — cut inventory waste. 📈 Why Getting on This Now Is Worth It Saves you emotional energy. Less clutter, fewer delays = less stress. Improves your productivity. Small seconds add up — after a few tweaks, you notice the difference. Increases your credibility. Whether at work or in personal projects, others notice when you deliver better, faster. Builds a culture of continuous improvement. Once you start seeing waste, you don’t stop. Waste often isn’t obvious — sometimes, it’s hidden in convenience. (E.g., printing everything “just in case” is more convenient, but costly.) One person’s “irrelevant step” may matter. When addressing waste, involve all stakeholders (family, team members, coworkers). Elimination of one waste often reduces another (overproduction leads to inventory, motion, and waiting). These wastes cascade. Perfect is the enemy of good — sometimes “good enough” is more Lean. Overprocessing often sneaks in when we try to perfect every detail. ✨ Final Thought Every time you sigh at an email you have to re-send, or circle around looking for your charger, or stand waiting unnecessarily — that’s Lean waste knocking. Recognizing it is the first step. Acting on it is where transformation begins. You don’t need to redesign your life or office overnight. Remove one waste. See how much better it feels. Then another. Those tiny changes multiply — and before long, your workflow, peace of mind, and results are all better. 👉 Interested in more than becoming aware of waste? ICEQBS helps you build the skills to eliminate them. Explore our Lean Six Sigma programs and make your efficiency real.
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