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A
Day in the Lean Journey
Fountain Powerboats
Pick Up Lean Speed
By Jane
Albright
A true
lean transformation
doesn't happen in a
day. It takes consistent,
persistent willingness
to change and improve.
Fountain Powerboats
in Washington, NC, can
now make one of their
famous boats in three
days when it used to
take five days. The
change didn't come easily
and it took more than
a day, but here is a
typical day on that
journey
The group
of jean-clad managers
huddled together in
the parking lot outside
Fountain Powerboats
on a breezy fall morning.
The workday had started
hours ago and problems
had developed. They
needed to talk outside,
away from the employees
inside, who were building
some of the fastest
boats on water. The
managers needed guidance,
and leaned toward Sam
MacPherson, the IES
lean specialist standing
in the middle of the
huddle.
"You
don't take problems
to the leadership,"
he told them. "You
take solutions."
Morning
So
began another lesson
in the philosophy of
lean manufacturing.
Problems are handled
as they occur, when
they occur, by the people
doing the work. Some
of the employees were
blossoming, showing
leadership and capabilities
unknown before. Other
employees still looked
to management to make
most decisions.
This latest
lean event had started
on a Monday, and now
it's Thursday morning.
Visible progress had
been made, but the hours
had been long. David
Knight, president of
Fountain Powerboats,
led the leadership team
that had set ambitious,
yet reachable goals:
to increase the gross
margin from approximately
18 percent to 25 percent
by reducing the time
it takes to build a
boat from 250 hours
to a potential120 hours.
Or, it should be done
in three days, not five
days, without overtime
and while maintaining
the highest quality.
This one
day was many in a long-term
commitment to lean,
Knight said.
Fountain
Powerboats is a publicly-traded,
leading manufacturer
of high performance
fishing boats, express
cruisers and sport boats
that are sold around
the world. Net sales
for fiscal year 2006
were $79.2 million.
The 65-acre site on
the Pamlico River currently
has 12 buildings where
45 boats are in various
stages of construction
by 430 employees.
Static
Station
Fountain
makes its fleet of power
boats one at a time
by a team at a static
station, not in an assembly
line, which is the basis
of most lean manufacturing.
Managers spent hours
watching and timing
the building sequence
to determine the most
efficient order. Supplies
were rearranged and
only what was needed
for the next couple
of hours was brought
to a station. This discouraged
one team "borrowing"
from another team. A
tool kit was brought
on board for the team
to use instead of relying
on their personal tools.
Beside
each station stood a
new yamazumi board,
a four-sided kiosk that
visually and colorfully
shows who is working
on the boat and at what
stage they are in the
boat-building process.
The
Fountain leadership
team had already gone
through the first of
the four stages of
leader kaizen, which
begins with standard
work analysis. They
ran a paper kaizen from
observations against
goals and objectives.
They conducted a mock-up
of potential solutions.
Finally, they had reached
the delivery phase of
the plan-do-check-act
cycle, which then documents,
standardizes and works
out the bugs.
This week,
they had reached gemba
kaizen, the solving
of problems on the floor.
The team building the
boat reviews business
goals daily. "Where
people fail in lean,"
MacPherson said, "is
they do the what and
the how, but they never
understand the why."
It takes confidence
to change things.
Afternoon
After
lunch, the teams in
the gemba kaizen gathered
in the now empty eating
area to compare notes
and share their progress
with managers.
Team leader
Eric Toften, a Fountain
employee for 11 years,
stood before the group
and read from his clipboard.
He praised the new "crane"
the team had made to
get material on the
boat. He emphasized
that his team shouldn't
be building parts, but
that parts should come
to the team ready for
installation. Several
heads nodded in agreement.
"Boats are not
the only thing that
requires innovation,
it's the tools,"
he said.
Eighteen
major issues have been
resolved this week,
Toften said, "not
planned to be resolved,
but thought out and
resolved." Another
five problems have been
tagged for elimination
later.
Team leader
Jessie Whitaker reported
that boats are going
out quicker. "When
my team has a problem,
we bring it up that
day, and by noon it
has probably been solved.
We see the change in
the next boat, and by
the third boat we see
the changes have been
made."
After
listening to the team
reports, human resources
manager Carol Price
said she has a greater
appreciation for floor
employees. "The
people who build the
boats know what needs
to be done first,"
she said. "I'm
more excited about where
we go next. It's been
a tough struggle
but at the end we will
have a better quality
of life."
Do
It Yourself
Marty Boosinger, vice
president of quality,
has seen several management
initiatives come and
go over his 22 years,
including a brief stint
with lean. All had been
personality-driven,
he said, and when those
enablers left, the initiatives
died away. "Now
we know the only way
to understand it is
to do it yourself,"
he said.
"Floor
personnel have bought
into it," Toften
said. "It's more
of a system than a management
dictate, which is one
of the failures of the
other systems."
Late that
afternoon, Fountain
president David Knight
sat behind his desk
in an office filled
with trophies and press
clippings from his boat
racing career. Knight
has worked at Fountain
for two years, but has
been racing Fountain
boats for 17 years.
He brought decades of
business acumen to the
position, including
an appreciation for
what can be accomplished
with lean manufacturing.
"I
relate to Sam (MacPherson)
and his approach,"
Knight said. "Mr.
Fountain relates to
Sam, so we have 100
percent support from
the leadership."
He admits to being a
bit impatient to see
the results that the
paper kaizen said were
possible.
A Lean
Legacy
At that
moment, Reggie Fountain
entered the office.
While his business card
says "test driver,"
the founder of Fountain
Powerboats is unmistakable
dressed in his trademark
black. He wants Fountain
Powerboats, which he
started in 1979, to
outlive him. Lean manufacturing
will help.
"We
are not in this for
the short haul,"
he said. "We are
prepared to see it through."
As the
shadows of the colorful
flags on the grounds
lengthened at the end
of the day, Fountain
took a boat out on the
Pamlico River for a
test drive. The lean
boat-building teams
continued to work through
problems past quitting
time.
Tomorrow,
and for weeks to come,
the employees of Fountain
Powerboats will continue
to grow lean.
Just
a few weeks later, the
goal of making a boat
in three days was reached.
But the lean transformation
continues as Fountain
Powerboats seeks more
efficiency.
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