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About Dan Markovitz

Dan Markovitz is the founder and president of TimeBack Management. Prior to founding his own firm, Mr. Markovitz held management positions at Sierra Designs, Adidas, CNET and Asics Tiger. Learn More...

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Leveling; smoothing out the flow; e.g., doing two performance evaluations a day for 3 weeks, rather than ten a day for three days -- and then needing to take a vacation because you're so burned out.
Overburdening people, process, or equipment; e.g., people working 100 hour weeks for months on end -- come to think of it, like most lawyers and accountants.
Uneveness or variability; e.g., leaving work at the normal time on Thursday, but having to stay at the office till midnight on Friday because the boss finally got around to giving you that project...at 4:30pm.
Waste; activities that your customer doesn't value and doesn't want to pay for; e.g., billing your customer for the really expensive 10am FedEx delivery because you didn't finish the document on time.


TIMEBACK BLOG Syndicate content

5S Ain't Just About Hammers

Posted May 10, 2007 @ 8:10 AM

The Wall Street Journal reported this week that Chevron and Credit-Suisse are taking a new approach to data storage. Chevron noticed that digital files (including emails) stored on their servers were growing at 60% per year, with negative effects on the business:

Besides the cost of buying new storage systems, Chevron's employees were spending between 1 1/2 to three days a month just searching for the correct information they needed to do their jobs, taking a toll on productivity, the company found. "We haven't adequately managed all our information," says Lynn Chou, Chevron's general manager of global technology and strategy, adding that the 59,000-person company processes one million emails a day. "There's been a digital tidal wave."

(For those of you who need help with the math, that's from 35-70 minutes per day looking for critical information. Or from 18-36 work days per year. Think about the muda from the customer's perspective. Hell, think about the fun stuff you could do with that time.)

Waste; activities that your customer doesn't value and doesn't want to pay for; e.g., billing your customer for the really expensive 10am FedEx delivery because you didn't finish the job on time.

There's no stopping the increase in information, of course. So these companies are changing the way people manage their information:

Credit-Suisse, for example, began categorizing its data into different "tiers" of importance in 2003, with critical information such as stock-trading information classified as tier-one data while personal spreadsheets might be classified as less important tier-three data. Tier-one data can be accessed at all times and also more quickly than tier-three data "in recognition of the fact that not all data is created equal."

And Chevron is doing something similar:

Chevron's system will require new office documents to be tagged according to their type and importance, such as noting whether the document is confidential, classified or just informational. As a result, the company expects to delete some documents of lesser importance as soon as 90 days after creation.

Although neither company uses lean terminology, they're really applying elements of a 5S program. They're setting standards for sorting and organizing their information so that employees can immediately retrieve the critical stuff. The less-important information -- tier-three, old reference material, trivia and lyrics from Underdog -- is moved elsewhere or deleted so that it doesn't impair employees' ability to work. (It's gratifying to know that this approach is very similar to my recommendation for managing both paper and electronic files. Read about it here.)

While the specifics may vary, Toyota applies 5S principles to its employees' files as well. The former president of the Toyota Technical Center in Michigan used to do spot checks of file cabinets to ensure that information was organized properly. And even now a vice-president audits each employee's email system to ensure that messages are well-organized and that old messages with no value are deleted.

As I mentioned in an earlier post, applying 5S to the information you manage means making decisions about what to do with it. Whether you choose to actually use it for something, archive it for the future, or toss it, you're finally assessing your work and analyzing your needs. And this analysis will give you greater clarity about what's required on a daily basis to move forward with your responsibilities.

Being an electronic packrat is so easy when storage is cheap and people are afraid to discard anything lest they need it one day. But the costs to the company (even an oil company!) are real. More importantly, the costs to you (35-70 minutes per day) are also real.

I like this Article

Companies which maintain data ,files or E-mails definitely save lot of time and money by using 5S method.Irrelevant E-mails are just for wastage then why we should spend lot of time for managing then.I think good software can save your time.

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