Thrashing out mistakes in
manufacturing engineering was developed by the Japanese as a tool of mistake
proofing that helps reduce waste in areas such as time, energy and resources.
The idea stresses on producing zero defects as a part of a quality tool kit to
prevent human errors. Although Poka Yoke is applied differently in different
situations, the common thread that binds them all is its simplicity; it uses
small tools at the point of the anticipated mistake generation itself.
Empowerment of Employees As A Tool of Poka Yoke Development
The beautiful part of
mistake-proofing is the empowerment of employees to identify, suggest ways out
and execute the plan to iron out the cause of the mistake at it’s point of
origination. In fact, anybody from a manager to a line employee can be allowed
to complete mistake proofing planning. It applies to every other area,
including commercial transactions, in the same way.
How Can Activities Be Mistake-Proofed?
Mistake proofing is simply
managed by presence of mind. Sometimes it so happens that an employee notices a
mistake in the way things are done in his section or line. Generally, exposure
to multiple aspects such as work content and execution procedures let the
employee think about ways of rectifying the mistake.
One who has noticed the mistake
will come up with suggestions for eliminating the mistakes by rather simple
methods. Empowered environments nurture enthusiasm in employees, which
ultimately results in success.
Let’s take different simple
examples. Colgate Palmolive was losing its market share to a rival toothpaste
producer and the people in their marketing department could hardly help reverse
the trend, despite their best efforts.
This was until an employee in the packing department suggested a rather
‘simplistic’ idea that ultimately has shown results. The employee suggested
enlarging of the tubes’ opening, which increased the amount of paste issued
each time the consumers wanted to brush.
Where does mistake proofing
figure into the equation in this instance? The mistake was not in the manufacturing,
packing or quality of the product but in the way it was marketed. The marketing
was centered around an emphasis on quality and not on the quantity the
consumers should use, which was irrelevant in the absence of severe
competition.
Mistake elimination need not
have complex solutions that consume lot of time and resources. Simple solutions
can sometimes be arrived at by those who work on the shop floor. Let us look
into another example which significantly explains Poka Yoke. Take a small mistake
in the assembling of pens, such as a forgotten spring for operating the writing
tip by a button located on top of the pen. The assembly worker would not have
forgotten if he was given all of the components in sets rather than each part
like springs, refills etc separately.
The Simplicity Of Poka Yoke
Quite evidently, Poka Yoke is
pretty simple. It does not involve spending huge sums of money, time and
complex procedures. It employs making the best use of empowered human minds. If
it is used on a continuous basis with the goal of eliminating many smaller
mistakes, the results can be wonderful.