Condensed History Of Lean Manufacturing
To help increase company profits U.S. manufacturing companies have always searched for efficient strategies that will help improve their output, reduce costs and establish a competitive position to increase their market share. Early attempts can be traced to Eli Whitney and Henry Ford.
Japanese manufacturers re-building after the World War 2 had a difficult time. for one, they had a limited amount of people, a limited amount of raw material and money. These problems, born out of necessity led to the development of lean manufacturing practices, which they called on just in time manufacturing.
Japanese
manufacturing leaders like the Toyota Motor
Company's Eiji Toyoda, Taiichi Ohno, and Shingeo
Shingo developed a smart disciplined and
process focused production system now known as
the Toyota Production System, or lean
production. Which incorporated The Ford
production, Statistical Process Control and
other techniques into a system that minimized
the expenditure of resources that added no value
to the product.
In 1990 James Womack wrote a book called "The
Machine That Changed The World". Womack's book
was a straightforward account of the history of
automobile manufacturing combined with a study
of Japanese, American, and European automotive
assembly plants. The "lean manufacturing"
theory was made popular in American factories in
large part by the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology study of the process from mass
production toward production as written and
described in Womack's book.
A new phrase was coined, as to which is now commonly referred to as "Lean Manufacturing."

