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Chapter 1: Lean Manufacturing Concepts and Overview

CHAPTER 1: LEAN MANUFACTURING CONCEPTS


AND OVERVIEW
Objectives
The objectives are:

Explain Lean basic concepts.

Explain the Value Stream theory.

Describe the production flow concept and how it is used in Microsoft


Dynamics AX 2012.

Explain the Kanban concept and how it is used in Microsoft


Dynamics AX 2012.

Describe the Simple Production Flow example and introduce the


Contoso scenario.

Describe the High Level Production Flow example and introduce the
Contoso scenario.

Set up time units to be used in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012.

Set up the production flow model and explain the capacity settings.

Set up work cells as resource groups.

Set up Lean schedule groups.

Describe the new inventory breakdown concept for Lean


manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012.

Describe standard costing and backflush costing and how they are
used for Lean manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012.

Introduction
Lean Manufacturing Concepts and Overview is designed to introduce students
to Lean principles and how Lean manufacturing for Microsoft Dynamics AX
2012 can be implemented to support those principles. The topics discussed are:

Lean basic concepts

Value Stream theory

Introduction to production flows

Introduction to Kanbans

Setup specific to Lean manufacturing and interconnectivity with


other modules

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Lean Manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012


Scenario
As a systems developer and consultant for Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, you
are embarking on a new project for Contoso Entertainment Systems (C.E.S.), a
manufacturer of home entertainment systems. Recognizing that their existing
ERP system is outdated, slow, and costly to maintain, Contoso has decided to
replace it with a new system. The new system must be able to support the
company in its transformation from traditional manufacturing to Lean
manufacturing to remain competitive in the world market.
Your company specializes in Lean manufacturing, and your intention is to
implement the value of Lean manufacturing for Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 to
support C.E.S. in their initiative to transform their business.
You and the Value Stream Manager, Pierre, go through the process of modeling
Contoso's Value Streams within Lean manufacturing for Microsoft Dynamics
AX 2012 and architecting a solution to support their Lean processes now and in
the future.

Core Concepts
The core concepts for Lean manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012
provide a base level understanding of Lean concepts necessary to understand the
system functionality within Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012.

Five Lean Principles


In their fundamental work for Lean, Womack and Jones defined the five Lean
principles:

Customer Value

Identify the Value Stream

Flow

Pull

Perfection

(Womack & Jones, 2003)

Lean Principle: Identifying Value


When identifying the value, you would specify what creates value from the
customer's perspective.

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The customer defines the value of product in a Lean supply chain.

Value-adding activities transform the product closer to what the


customer actually wants.

An activity that does not add value is considered to be waste.

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Chapter 1: Lean Manufacturing Concepts and Overview


Lean Principle: Understanding the Value Stream
The Value Stream is the sequence of processes all the way from raw material to
final customer or from product concept to market launch. If possible, look at the
whole supply chain.

The Value Stream is the sequence of processes from raw material to


the product provided to the customer that creates value.

The Value Stream can include the complete supply chain.

Value Stream Mapping is an important tool to help model the Lean


transformation.
The Value Stream is those set of tasks and activities required to design and
make a family of products or services that are undertaken with a group of linked
functions or companies from the point of customer specification right back to the
raw material source.
(Hines et al., 2000)

Lean Principle: Creating Flow


Create flow wherever possible in the process.

Make the value process flow.

Using one piece flow by linking all the activities and processes into
the most efficient combinations to maximize value-added content
while minimizing waste.

The waiting time of work in progress between processes is


eliminated; hence, adding value more quickly.

Lean Principle: Introducing Pull


Make only what is needed by the customer (short term response to the customers
rate of demand).
Pull: response to the customers rate of demand, that is, the actual
customer demand that drives the supply chain.
With a pull concept, based on a supply chain view from downstream to upstream
activities, nothing is produced by the upstream supplier until the downstream
customer signals a need.

Lean Principle: Striving for Perfection


The last Lean principle is to strive for perfection. In striving for perfection, Lean
is a journey of continuous improvement. The goal is to produce exactly what the
customer wants, exactly when the customer wants, economically. Perfection is
an aspiration, anything and everything is able to be improved.

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Lean Manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012


Lean Enterprise
The Lean enterprise is defined as [a] group of individuals, functions, and
sometimes legally separate but operationally synchronized organizations (The
Association for Operations Management [APICS], 2005, p.60)

Lean Enterprise: Value Stream


The objectives of the Lean enterprise are to correctly specify value to the
ultimate customer, and to analyze and focus the Value Stream so that it does
everything from product development and production to sales and service in a
way that actions that do not create value are removed and actions that do create
value proceed in a continuous flow as pulled by the customer. (APICS, 2005,
p.60)
Therefore, the Value Stream, alongside a new concept of the production flow, is
used to model the structure of the Lean enterprise in Microsoft Dynamics AX
2012. It is used to support these operations of the Lean enterprise:

Lean planning and forecasting (takt, cycle time, throughput,


schedules)

Cellular manufacturing

Flow manufacturing

Lean accounting /Value Stream costing

Six Sigma

Cell and Line Design


In The New Lean Toolbox, John Bicheno describes the process for cell and line
design:
Cell and line design is a hierarchical process, from factory layout to detailed
workstation ergonomics:

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Product family or Value Stream identification

Value Stream Mapping

Strategy and subcontract issues

Plant layout and location of supermarkets

Activity timings and sampling

Calculate takt and cell cycle time

Identify any constraints

Paper kaizen

Theoretical minimum activity times

Theoretical minimum operators

Cell reference cost and savings calculation

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Chapter 1: Lean Manufacturing Concepts and Overview

Cardboard simulation

Cell layout design

Operator balancing

Workstation ergonomics

Pull system design

(Bicheno, 2004, p. 31)


In opposition to the classical MRP approach, where individual items are linked to
individual and independent resources or resource groups (work centers, groups),
the Value Stream unifies the process for a product family in a top down
approach, before defining (or possibly eliminating) exceptions on the item level.

Lean Terminology
There are ten basic Lean core elements that will be used throughout the training
course. These are:

Value Stream

Kaizen

(Work) Cell

Cycle time

Takt time

Supermarket

Production flow

Backflush costing

Kanban

Heijunka leveling

Definitions of these core elements are presented in these sections:

Lean Terminology: Value Stream, Kaizen, and (Work) Cell

Lean Terminology: Cycle Time and Takt Time

Lean Terminology: Supermarket and Production Flow

Lean Terminology: Backflush Costing, Kanban, and Heijunka


Leveling

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Lean Manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012


Lean Terminology: Value Stream, Kaizen, and (Work) Cell
These are the definitions of the Lean core elements of Value Stream, Kaizen,
and (Work) Cell.

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Core elements

Definition

Value Stream

A Value Stream is "the processes of creating, producing


and delivering a good or service to the market" (APICS,
2005, p.121).
In Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, the Value Stream is
represented by one or multiple production flows. It can
also be modeled as an operating unit costing purposes.

Kaizen

Japanese for "continuous improvement." Kaizen is a


management philosophy emphasizing employee
participation, where every process is continuously
evaluated and re-evaluated to eliminate waste.

(Work) Cell

A (work) cell is a manufacturing or service unit


consisting of a number of workstations and the materials
transport mechanisms and storage buffers that
interconnect them (APICS, 2005, p. 16).
In Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, a work cell is a resource
group, where resources are grouped to execute a process
flow.
The work cell represents the effective capability of all
resources assigned to the cell. It is handled as a black box,
meaning that the internal structure of the cell is not
documented in the system.

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Lean Terminology: Cycle Time and Takt Time
These are the definitions of the Lean core elements of Cycle time and Takt time.
Core elements

Definition

Cycle time

The cycle time of a product refers to the time between


completion of two discrete units of production. For
example, the cycle time of motors assembled at a rate of
120 per hour would be 30 seconds. In materials
management, it refers to the length of time from when
material enters a production facility until it exits (APICS,
2005, p. 27).
In Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, the average cycle times
for each activity of a production flow are determined at
the validation of a production flow version based on the
takt requirement of a production flow version. The actual
cycle times are calculated for a defined period and
compared to the average through the cycle time
performance control.

Takt time

Takt time "sets the pace of production to match the rate of


customer demand and becomes the heartbeat of any Lean
production system. It is computed as the available
production time divided by the rate of customer demand.
For example, assume demand is 10,000 units per month,
or 500 units per day and planned available capacity are
420 minutes per day. The takt time = 420 minutes per day/
500 units per day = 0.84 minutes per unit. This takt time
means that a unit should be planned to exit the production
system on average every 0.84 minutes (APICS, 2005, p.
115).
In Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, the takt requirements
are defined on a production flow version. For production
flows that feed into other flows, the takt requirements can
be calculated based on the target cycle times of the
consuming activities.

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Lean Terminology: Supermarket and Production Flow
These are the definitions of the Lean core elements of Supermarket and
Production flow.
Core elements

Definition

Supermarket

"In essence, a supermarket is a central storage location


where (raw) materials are stored near their point-of-use so
customers (or consumers) can pull them as needed.
Supermarkets are used to:
Minimize transaction costs

Facilitate visual management

Establish the framework for a point-of-use Kanban


system (pull)"

(Gross & McInnis, 2003, p. 185).


Supermarket areas should be grouped together to enable
the material handler to visit on his or her regular routes. It
is called a supermarket because that is where the material
handler goes shopping for parts (Bicheno, 2004, p. 104).
Production
flow

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The production flow is a part of a Value Stream that


covers the door to door production flow inside a plant,
including shipment to the plants customers and delivery
of supplied parts and material (Rother & Shook, 2003, p.
3).
The flow of material and products throughout work cells
and locations for a specific production or supply scenario
can be described as a sequence or small network of
process or transfer activities, called a production flow. In
Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, a production flow is linked
to an operating unit that plays the role of the Value
Stream.

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Chapter 1: Lean Manufacturing Concepts and Overview


Lean Terminology: Backflush Costing, Kanban, and
Heijunka Leveling
These are the definitions of the Lean core elements of Backflush costing,
Kanban, and Heijunka leveling.
Core elements

Definition

Backflush
costing

A cost accumulation method where the application of


costs is based on the output of a process. Backflush
costing is usually associated with repetitive manufacturing
environments (APICS, 2005, p. 8).
Backflush costing omits recording some or all of the
journal entries that relate to the stages from the purchase
of direct materials to the sale of finished goods. Since
some stages are omitted, the journal entries for a
subsequent stage use normal or standard costs to work
backward to flush out the costs in the cycle for which
journal entries were not made.

Kanban

Japanese for visible record. Kanbans have been adopted


by many industries as a method of controlling production
and internal supply. A Kanban can apply to a paper ticket
or a physical container.
A Kanban is [a] method of Just-in-Time production that
uses standard containers or lot sizes with a single card
attached to each. It is a pull system in which work centers
signal with a card or other device that they wish to
withdraw parts from feeding operations or suppliers. The
Japanese word Kanban, loosely translated, means card,
billboard, or sign, but other signaling devices such as
colored golf balls have also been used. The term is often
used synonymously for the specific scheduling system
developed and used by the Toyota Corporation in Japan
(APICS, 2005, p. 58).
In Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, a Kanban is a pull
signal that represents demand and triggers process and
transfer activities for a unit of a specific item or item
family.

Heijunka
leveling

A production leveling technique using either volume or


product mix.
In Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, the Kanban schedule
board is designed to be used as a Heijunka board to level
production load on a cell

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Lean Manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012


Supported Lean Principles in Microsoft Dynamics AX
2012
This section helps you understand how Lean manufacturing for Microsoft
Dynamics AX supports Lean principles and processes.

Supported Lean Principle: Value Streams


The future state Value Stream can be modeled in Microsoft Dynamics AX as a
production flow. All processes of the Value Stream are modeled as process
activities. Movements or transfers can be modeled as transfer activities, if the
transfer status has to be registered or if an integration to inventory picking or
consolidated shipments is required.
The Value Stream is modeled as an operating unit in Microsoft Dynamics AX.
This allows the use of the Value Stream as a financial dimension.

Supported Lean Principle: Production Flows


To establish a production and cost context for the various Kanban scenarios that
are proposed in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, the activity-based production
flows are introduced as the backbone of Lean manufacturing. All Kanban rules
refer to this pre-defined structure. The activity-based model allows the setup of a
wider range of scenarios than supported by previous versions of Lean
manufacturing for Microsoft Dynamics AX, without adding complexity for the
shop floor workers, because all scenarios use the same activity-based user
interface.

Supported Lean Principle: Lean Accounting - Production


Flow Costing
Lean manufacturing disrupts the traditional cost concepts of job costing, because
the context of a production order is not available. Lean manufacturing for
Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 uses the production flow as the cost accumulator.
Cost of material, and semi-finished and finished products are tracked for each
item and cost group. Work in process (WIP) is tracked for every production flow.

Supported Lean Principle: Pull Based Manufacturing Kanban


In Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, Kanban is implemented as a framework to
plan, track, and process based on pull signals. The Kanban framework supports
Lean processes in combination with the other Lean modules:

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Value Stream, Production flow, and Cell

Visual planning boards (Heijunka)

Kanban schedules

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Supported Lean Principle: Semi-Finished Products
In previous versions of Microsoft Dynamics AX, Kanban rules cannot be set up
for semi-finished products. A common mitigation for this issue is to introduce
additional BOM levels, which in the worst case, results in a non-Lean explosion
of BOM levels and thereby inventory transactions. Lean manufacturing for
Microsoft Dynamics AX integrates Kanbans for inventoried products and semifinished products in a single framework, offering a unified user experience for all
use-cases.

Supported Lean Principle: Capable to Promise


The Capable to Promise (CTP) functionality provides the order takers with
accurate information at the point of order entry about the availability of products,
material, and resources needed to satisfy a specific customer demand.
This is implemented with two sub-features:

Delivery date control CTP: The CTP delivery date control helps in
verifying the requested ship date and potential of updating the
confirmed ship date on a sales line.
This is enabled by extending the existing delivery control with a CTP
option that will trigger a Master Scheduling explosion and the
returned futures date is used as the suggested ship date.

Sales event Kanbans with CTP check on the work cell schedule:
In Lean manufacturing, the availability of resources can be
determined by loading the Kanban jobs on the Kanban job schedule
that are related to a work cell. The availability of material is
determined by explosion and pegging within Microsoft Dynamics
AX 2012.

Supported Lean Principle: Kanban Quantity Calculation


Determining the Kanban quantity is one of the most important tasks of Kanban
planning. Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 provides the capability to calculate the
Kanban quantity by taking forecast, material demands from open orders, and
historical demands into account.

Supported Lean Principle: Barcoding


The Kanban boards integrate standard barcoding operations with Lean
manufacturing. Barcodes can be used to manage Kanban transactions and
provide visibility of material flow.

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Supported Lean Principle: Mixed Mode Manufacturing
Lean manufacturing can be introduced in different ways. While some companies
start with the Lean philosophy and try to apply the Lean principles, Value Stream
by Value Stream, others take a more local approach and start from specific work
cells where resources and demand structure allow or even require a Lean
approach.
Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 supports mixed mode manufacturing
environments where both Lean manufacturing and traditional manufacturing
exist. Mixed mode scheduling within Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 uses Master
Planning to reconcile and manage master planning approaches where a mixture
of traditional production orders and Kanbans are used.
Where Lean transformations are currently in progress, the concept of the pull
point is supported throughout the Kanban architecture. Within the pull point, the
buffer is the limit of push and its size and method of fulfillment are under the
control of traditional techniques, such as forecasting and MRP. Beyond the
buffer, inventory will be pulled through Lean processes. Microsoft Dynamics AX
2012 has provided various Kanban scenarios to help link traditional push and
Lean pull systems.

The Value Stream


The Value Stream is defined as the sequence of processes from raw material to
final customer or from product concept to market launch. The Value Stream
should encompass the entire supply chain.
In Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, the Value Stream is represented by one or
multiple production flows. It is also represented as an operating unit in the
organization hierarchy of the enterprise. The Value Stream should be analyzed
to eliminate any non-value adding activities. Value Stream mapping is the
process of identifying and charting the flows of information, processes, and
physical items across the entire supply chain, from the raw material supplier to
the possession of the customer.
Value Stream mapping is not part of Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 functionality,
but provides the needed setup inputs into Lean manufacturing for Microsoft
Dynamics AX 2012.

Support of Operations
In Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, the Value Stream is used to support these
operations of the Lean Enterprise:

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Lean planning and forecasting (takt, cycle time, throughput,


schedules)

Cellular manufacturing

Flow manufacturing

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Chapter 1: Lean Manufacturing Concepts and Overview

Lean accounting/Value Stream accounting

Six Sigma

When you are considering an implementation of Lean manufacturing in


Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, the ground work must be laid through defining
the Value Streams, mapping them, and eventually setting this up within the
system.
In Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, the Value Stream is configured as an operating
unit. This allows you to use the Value Stream as a financial dimension. Multiple
production flows can exist for a company that uses this operating unit for each
company.

Demonstration 1.1: Setting up Value Streams


Scenario: After defining and mapping the Lean Production Value Stream for one
of the C.E.S. companies, Contoso Entertainment United States (CEU), Pierre, the
Value Stream Manager, creates the Value Stream within Microsoft Dynamics
AX 2012.
To set up a Value Stream as an operation unit, use this procedure:
1. Click Production Control > Setup > Organization > Value
Streams.
2. Click the New button to create a new Value Stream.
3. Enter the Name of Value Stream (for example, Lean Production).
4. Enter the Search Name for the Value Stream (for example, Lean
Production).

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Lean Manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012


5. Select the Value Stream Manager in the Manager field (for
example, Allison Brown).
6. Enter address and contact information if applicable in the Addresses
and Contact information FastTabs.

FIGURE 1.1 VALUE STREAM OPERATING UNIT

Introduction to Production Flows


A Lean manufacturing scenario is usually more than an accumulation of
unrelated Kanban rules or material-supply policies. The flow of material and
products throughout work cells and locations for a specific production or supply
scenario can be described as a sequence or small network of process or transfer
activities, called a production flow.

Value Stream and Production Flow


The result of the mapping process, the future state Value Stream, can then be
modeled in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 as a production flow version. All
processes of the Value Stream are modeled as process activities. Movements or
transfers can be modeled as transfer activities, if the transfer status has to be
registered or if an integration to inventory picking or consolidated shipments is
required.
Many production flows can make up the Value Stream. The production flow can
produce products for consumers or other production flows. In the case where the
products of a production flow are used in another flow, this is called a Feeder
Flow.

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Chapter 1: Lean Manufacturing Concepts and Overview


Production Flow Function
Production flows are introduced as the backbone of Lean manufacturing, as they
perform these functions:

Define the process and transfer activities of the Value Stream.

Support the Kanban rules in defining the activities a Kanban goes


through.

Provide an activity-based context for the planning and production


processes.

Establish a cost context for the various Kanban production scenarios.

Continuous Improvement
To support continuous improvement, the production flows are implemented in
time-effective versions. This allows you to copy an existing production flow
versionincluding all related Kanban rulesto a draft version of the production
flow, and model the future-state production flow before validating and activating
it for production.

Semi-Finished Products (Non BOM levels)


In many inventory transaction-based Kanban solutions, Kanban rules cannot be
set up for semi-finished products. A common mitigation for this issue is to
introduce additional BOM levels, which in the worst case results in a non-Lean
explosion of BOM-levels and thereby inventory transactions. Lean
manufacturing for Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 integrates Kanbans for
inventoried products and semi-finished products in a single framework, offering
a unified user experience for all cases.

Products and Materials in Work in Progress


The reduction of batch sizes down to the ideal state of a single piece flow in Lean
manufacturing can cause a dramatic increase of inventory transactions if each
picking process or Kanban registration causes transactions for the consumed
items.
The production flow architecture allows the transfer of material to the production
flow with withdrawal Kanbans in storage or transport handling unit sizes. The
value of the issued material is added to the Work in Progress (WIP) account that
is related to the production flow, similar to material that is issued to a production
order. The same principle can be applied for products and semi-finished
productsunless they are created, transferred, or consumed within a production
flow; inventory transactions are optional, not mandatory. Once the products are
posted to inventory, the WIP account to the production flow is deducted by the
related standard cost.

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Introduction to Kanbans
The word Kanban means visible record in Japanese. Kanban has been
adopted by many industries as a method of controlling production and internal
supply.
Kanban is an essential part of a pull system of supply, which is a critical element
of Lean production/supply. When a Kanban has been consumed, it should be
passed (triggered) to the source of supply to replenish it. This source of supply is
defined through the production flow activities that the Kanban is linked to,
providing the definition of how the Kanban is filled. Kanban rules in Microsoft
Dynamics AX 2012 are essential to production flows, as they define the activities
that a Kanban rule goes through.

Kanban Types
Lean manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX provides two Kanban types that
are used to define how the empty signal is filled: manufacturing and withdrawal.

Kanban Type: Manufacturing


A Kanban of the type manufacturing is assigned to at least one process that
adds value. The Kanban is assigned to a production flow activity and thus a
resource group with the role of a work cell, where the value is added.
Manufacturing Kanbans relate to at least one process activity. The first activity of
a manufacturing Kanban must be a process activity. A process activity can be
followed by a transfer or another process activity, allowing a Kanban to span
multiple activities.

Kanban Type: Withdrawal


A Kanban with the type withdrawal creates a transfer job that is based on a
single transfer activity. Withdrawal Kanbans are used to move a Kanban of a
specific item between supermarkets, warehouses, and production locations.
Withdrawal Kanbans do not add value.

Kanban Replenishment Strategies


Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 Kanban rules can be set up to support a variety of
make-to-stock and make-to-order scenarios through various Kanban
replenishment scenarios:

Fixed quantity Kanbans to support traditional fixed card and two bin
type systems.

Several Kanban types to support variable quantity scenarios


including:
o
o

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Minimum on-hand inventory triggered Kanbans


Planned Kanbans calculated by Master Scheduling from
requirements

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o
o
o

Sales order entry triggered Kanban generation


Kanbans generated from production order BOM line
requirements
Kanbans generated from Kanban line requirements

Fixed Quantity Kanbans


A fixed quantity Kanban rule relates to a fixed number of bins or Kanban cards,
meaning that the number of active Kanbans is constant. Whenever a material
handling unit related to a Kanban is consumed (emptied), a new Kanban of the
same type is recreated. Fixed quantity Kanbans are often used with fixed
circulating cards, but can also be used with single use cards. When circulating
cards are used, the card is detached from the consumed Kanban and assigned to
the new created Kanban.
Single Use Kanbans: A fixed quantity Kanban is a make-to-stock scenario.
Additional single use Kanbans can be used to cover additional demand to level
specific exceptional demand. Single use Kanbans are only (and always) based on
fixed quantity rules and no specific rules need to be created for this
replenishment strategy. Instead, the Kanbans have a flag that marks them as
manual. You can also use event Kanbans for exceptional demand above a certain
quantity to maintain the buffer stock of a fixed Kanban.

Scheduled Kanbans
Master Planning creates scheduled Kanbans automatically for planned Kanban
orders to cover the requirements within the firm horizon of the production
forecast. Scheduled Kanbans can also be manually created.

Event Kanbans
Event Kanbans are only created out of the related demand, so event Kanbans
belong to the category make-to-order. The creation of event Kanbans is
initiated when certain events occur. In Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, these
events include when you create sales lines, when estimating production orders,
upon creation of upper level Kanban demand, or when reaching a certain level of
on hand inventory.

Event: Sales Line and BOM Line Events


The descriptions of the Kanban events of sales line and BOM line events are:

Sales line event: This event creates the pull for final assembly,
packaging, or simply shipping out of the sales orders. When a sales
order is entered, the Kanbans that are needed to produce or withdraw
the goods to satisfy the customer order are created automatically or
by the pegging event processing batch job.

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Lean Manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012

BOM line event: In a mixed mode environment (that is, a company


is using Kanbans and production orders in the same facility), a
picking list is created based on a production order to withdraw
material from warehouses or other upstream processes. If the
warehouse or the upstream process is controlled by event Kanbans,
the picking list creates the related Kanbans (manufacturing or
withdrawal) of the related item source.

Event: Kanban Line Event and Stock Replenishment


Event
The descriptions of the Kanban events Kanban line and stock replenishment
events are:

Kanban line event: Similar to a picking list, the creation of Kanbans


that pull components to Kanbans is used to pull the required material
to a downstream manufacturing process. This is only needed when
the material is varying by event and a high number of variants
(strangers) are required (otherwise, a fixed quantity Kanban
environment is recommended).

Stock replenishment event: Whenever on-hand inventory is


reduced for an item on a coverage dimension that is covered by an
event Kanban rule, and inventory falls under the minimum stock as
designated on the item's coverage, an event Kanban is created to
replenish that minimum stock. The pegging event processing in Lean
manufacturing checks minimum inventory for selected Kanban rules
and creates the needed Kanbans to replenish.

Diagram: Kanban Type/Replenishment Strategy


This diagram shows the Kanban types and replenishment strategies available in
Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012.

FIGURE 1.2 KANBAN TYPE/REPLENISHMENT STRATEGY

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Kanban Boards
Visual planning and implementation is important for companies that are on the
Lean journey. Many companies spend considerable time and effort updating the
data on manually-created visual boards on the shop floor (Kanban boards, Kaizen
boards). The Kanban boards, which are available within Microsoft Dynamics AX
2012, are designed to automate many of the manual and time-consuming visual
systems by leveraging the data within the enterprise system and integrating Lean
concepts into system generated visuals.

Kanban Schedule Board


The Kanban schedule board is designed to be used as a Heijunka board to level
production load on a cell. The planner drags and drops the Kanbans on the
desired production day or week depending on the period type related to the Lean
production flow model. The work cell capacity is shown and decremented as
additional Kanbans are added to a bucket on the schedule. Once planned, Kanban
jobs will be available to process on the Kanban board for process jobs form.
Kanbans that are automatically scheduled do not require manual dragging and
dropping, but rather will load onto the period.
This figure shows an example of the Kanban schedule board.

FIGURE 1.3 KANBAN SCHEDULE BOARD

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Kanban Board for Process Jobs
Manufacturing Kanbans are performed on the shop floor using the Kanban board
for process jobs. Once planned, the Kanbans will appear on this board.
Specifically for the shop floor in Lean manufacturing, three user profiles have
been evaluated in an extensive customer field research that included visits to a
variety of different manufacturing companies in Europe, the United States, and
Canada.

The shop floor supervisor needs a complete overview of what goes


on in a specific work cell, and decides on priorities and sequences of
jobs.

The waterspider replenishes supermarkets on the shop floor,


prepares handling units and picks material for Kanbans or production
orders, puts away finished products, or moves semi-finished products
to the next work cell or supermarket.

The machine operator / shop floor worker is reporting the start and
end of jobs.

In the manufacturing floor, these three roles often have some overlap. Dependent
on throughput and importance, waterspiders have been found to be dedicated for
a single work cell or for a group of work cells. Some Lean organizations remove
the system interaction for the machine operators and use the waterspiders to
report the finished goods.

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Kanban Board for Process Jobs: User Interface
The result of this research is a new user interface for Lean manufacturing that
combines all requirements for the three manufacturing roles into a single,
configurable, and scalable user interface.
This figure shows an example of the Kanban board for process jobs.

FIGURE 1.4 KANBAN BOARD FOR PROCESS JOBS

Kanban Board for Transfer Jobs


Withdrawal Kanbans are performed on the shop floor using the Kanban board for
transfer jobs.
The Kanban board for transfer jobs form is designed to enable a waterspider the
visibility to gather materials to replenish line side supermarkets and to support
the picking of materials from supermarkets. Physical traceability requirements
are also supported. The waterspider can filter the board in a variety of ways,
including:

Production flow

Activity name

Transfer from: site, warehouse, and location

Transfer to: site, warehouse, and location

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An example of the Kanban board for transfer jobs is shown in this figure.

FIGURE 1.5 KANBAN BOARD FOR TRANSFER JOBS

Simple Production Flow


The simplest form of a production scenario for Lean manufacturing is a
production flow where all operations are grouped to a single process activity in a
single work cell.

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Scenario: Simple Production Flow
Scenario: Pierre has set up a production flow to model the process of painting
covers. The speaker cover paint shop is picking unpainted covers from the
warehouse. The painted covers are supplied to a supermarket where they can be
picked for other manufacturing processes or for sales.

FIGURE 1.6 SIMPLE PRODUCTION FLOW

Scenario: Simple Production Flow: Setup


The production flow is set up for the general activity painting, no matter what
item variant, color, or specific painting process is applied, providing it is
happening in the same group of resources at the same physical location. The
activity times and cycle times for a production flow activity are initially set for an
average process.
A fixed quantity Kanban rule is then created for the process activity for
painting, which manages the Kanban signal for the painted speaker covers that
replenish the painted speaker cover supermarket.

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High Level Production Flow


The high level production flow introduced in this topic provides a more detailed
production scenario of assembling and packaging car speakers. The high level
production flow shows the interconnection between activities and Kanbans.

Scenario: High Level Production Flow


Scenario: Pierre has set up a production flow and Kanban rules for CEU to
model the process of assembling and packaging car speakers to be sold to the
customer. Pierre now goes through the production flow together with you to
review the basic setup of the process activities, transfer activities, and Kanban
rule relationships to understand the basic scenario.

FIGURE 1.7 CEU SPEAKER ASSEMBLY AND PACKAGING PRODUCTION


FLOW

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Scenario: High Level Production Flow - Replenish the VMI
Warehouse
Beginning with the customer pull in Figure 1.7 CEU Speaker Assembly and
Packaging Production Flow, the various elements of the production flow are
broken down in Figure 1.8 CEU Packaging and Transfer to VMI Activities.
There are two scenarios for the end pull to the customer. The first scenario
(shown in this figure) replenishes the VMI warehouse where material is
packaged and transferred to the customer.

FIGURE 1.8 CEU PACKAGING AND TRANSFER TO VMI ACTIVITIES

A process activity controls the packaging and a transfer activity controls the
transfer to VMI. A sales event Kanban is used to trigger the Kanban based on
sales order demand and pulls the finished good through the Packaging process to
the VMI warehouse.

Scenario: High Level Production Flow - Replenish the


Sales Warehouse
The second scenario shown in Figure 1.9: CEU Packaging and Transfer to VMI
Activities replenishes the Sales warehouse where material is packaged to fill the
Sales warehouse to be sold to the customer.

FIGURE 1.9 CEU PACKAGING AND TRANSFER TO SALES ACTIVITIES

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A process activity controls the packaging, and a transfer activity controls the
transfer to the Sales warehouse. A scheduled Kanban is used to trigger the
Kanban based on demand and pulls the finished good through the Packaging
process to the Sales warehouse.

Scenario: High Level Production Flow - Packaging


Materials Replenishment
The Packaging process requires packaging materials stored in another warehouse
to be used in the process. A transfer activity moves the packaging parts from a
Packaging material warehouse to the Packaging work cell. A fixed quantity
withdrawal Kanban is used to control this movement.

FIGURE 1.10 CEU PACKAGING MATERIALS REPLENISHMENT

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Scenario: High Level Production Flow - Assembly and
Packaging Activities
A process activity controls the car speaker assembly process that is performed
before the packaging process. A sales line event Kanban is used to trigger the
Kanban based on the upper level sales demand to perform the assembly.

FIGURE 1.11 CEU CAR ASSEMBLY AND PACKAGING ACTIVITIES

Scenario: High Level Production Flow - Mechanical Parts


Replenishment
The Car Speaker Assembly process requires Mechanical parts that are stored in
another warehouse to be used in the process. A transfer activity moves the
packaging parts from a Mechanical parts warehouse to the Car speaker assembly
work cell. A fixed quantity withdrawal Kanban is used to control this movement.

FIGURE 1.12 CEU MECHANICAL PARTS REPLENISHMENT

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Scenario: High Level Production Flow - Electrical and
Speaker Assembly
The Electrical Assembly process supplies a supermarket in WIP for the Car
Speaker Assembly process. The parts are not posted in inventory. A fixed
quantity manufacturing Kanban replenishes the supermarket for these mechanical
pre-assembly parts. The Car Speaker Assembly process posts this material to
WIP.

FIGURE 1.13 CEU ELECTRICAL ASSEMBLY AND CAR SPEAKER


ASSEMBLY WIP ACTIVITIES

Setup and Interconnectivity


As with all modules in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, there is a high degree of
integration and interconnectivity between the Lean manufacturing functionality
and other modules. This interconnectivity allows the production flow to act as the
mainstay for Lean manufacturing and maintain important relationships for the
planning, scheduling, and implementation pieces of the production process. The
processes described in this lesson are listed in the order that they need to be
conducted.

Time Units
As production flow activities and resource group capacity settings require
definition in time units, these must be set up properly as a unit with a new
concept in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 of Unit class referring to Time.
Time units for days, hours, minutes and seconds should be present with the Unit
class of Time. Proper unit conversions should also be created for these time
units.

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These time units can then be set up as the defaults within the production
parameters Unit of Measure tab to establish the default units of measure that are
used to define activity times and lead times. The Default time unit for
production flows should be set on the Lean manufacturing tab of the
Production Parameters.

Production Flow Model


The production flow model predefines the calendar and capacity usage for a
group of work cells and for the detailed settings in the production flow processes.
It also predefines the structure and behavior of the Kanban schedule for the cells.
A unique production flow model should be defined for a category of work cells
that have similar behavior.

FIGURE 1.14 CEU CAR SPEAKER PRODUCTION FLOW MODEL

Production Flow Model: Model Type


The most important property of the production flow model is the model type,
which selects the method to measure capacity for the work cell. The production
flow model defines the capacity settings for the work cell. The options are:

Throughput: The capacity and load of a work cell are measured in


quantities of product that are produced.

Hours: The capacity and load of a work cell are measured in periods
of hours and minutes.

NOTE: After you create a production flow model, you cannot change the value
of this field.

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Production Flow Model: EPE Cycle in Days
Every Product Every (EPE) defines the number of days within the EPE cycle that
is used in automatic planning. The value in this field is used to calculate the
period when a Kanban job is scheduled:
Start date = Due date EPE cycle.
NOTE: After you create a production flow model, you can change the value of
this field. The change does not affect jobs that were previously created.

Production Flow Model: Capacity Shortage Reaction


The Capacity shortage reaction defines the method of Kanban scheduling to
use if there is no capacity available during the required period. This parameter is
only used when the Kanban auto planning is used for Process jobs. The options
are:

Postpone: The job is postponed until the day that throughput


becomes available.

Cancel: Automatic planning of the Kanban job is cancelled.

Add to the requested period: The job is added to the scheduled


period of the required date. The result is that the work cell is
overloaded during the scheduled period.

Distribute: The Kanbans of a single event are distributed to the


available production periods, starting with the first available period.

Production Flow Model: Planning Period Type


The planning period is used for planning Kanbans automatically and using the
Kanban schedule board. The options are:

Day: The Kanban schedule consists of periods of calendar days. The


Kanban schedule board displays days for each column for
scheduling.

Week: The Kanban schedule consists of periods of weeks. The


Kanban schedule board displays weeks for each column for
scheduling.

Production Flow Model: Planning Time Fence


The Planning time fence defines the number of planning periods that are defined
in the Planning period type to use in the planning time fence. Planning periods
can be either days or weeks. The Kanban schedule board displays the Kanban
jobs that are scheduled during the defined planning time fence. Kanbans can only
be scheduled within this planning time fence.

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NOTE: The Capable to promise (CTP) based on the work cell schedule only
covers the schedule horizon that is set in the Planning time fence field of the
production flow model. Outside of this horizon, only CTP Explosion applies.

Demonstration 1.2: Creating A Production Flow Model


Scenario: Pierre has come to a logical grouping of work cell capacity that has
similar behavior in capacity load for the work cells that are used to model his Car
Speaker production flow.
Use this procedure to create a production flow model:
1. Click Production Control > Setup > Lean manufacturing >
Production flow models.
2. Select New button or select CTRL+N to create a new line.
3. In the Production flow model field, enter an alphanumeric identifier
up to fifty characters in length (for example, PFModel).
4. In the Model type field, select Throughput or Hours (for example,
select Throughput).
5. In the EPE Cycle in days, enter a numeric value (for example, enter
1).
6. In the Capacity shortage reaction field, select Postpone, Cancel,
Add to the requested period or Distribute (for example, select
Add to the request period).
7. In the Planning period type field, select Day or Week (for example,
select Day).
8. In the Planning time fence field, enter a numeric value (for
example, enter 10).

Work Cells
Lean work cells are modeled in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 using resource
groups, where resources are grouped to initiate a process flow. Activities within a
production flow are assigned to a work cell.
A work cell has a determined capacity that is typically expressed in throughput.
All manufactured items can be mapped to that throughput by setting a ratio
within the Lean schedule groups, which is described further in this topic.
The work cell represents the effective capability of all resources that are assigned
to the cell. It is handled as a black box, meaning that the internal structure of the
work cell is not documented in the system.
NOTE: Resource groups that are designated as work cells cannot be used for
long term capacity planning. To model long term capacity planning, a route must
be set up using resource groups that are not designated as work cells.

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Example: Creating Resource Groups as Work Cells
To create a resource group as a work cell, these actions are performed:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

The resource group is marked as a Work cell.


Input and Output Warehouses and Locations are specified.
A Run time category is defined if direct labor is tracked in costing.
A Calendar is assigned to the resource group.
The work cell capacity is defined using a Model type to define
capacity as Hours or Throughput to define the throughput capacity of
the work cell.
6. Work cells managed by a subcontractor are marked as resource type
Vendor.

Work Cells: Input/Output Warehouses and Locations


Default Input and Output warehouses and locations are placed on the work
cell. The default Input warehouse and Input location define warehouses and
locations to use as the supplying warehouse and location for the work cell. The
default Output warehouse and Output location define warehouses and
locations that designate the target warehouse and location for items produced in
this work cell.

Work Cells: Calendar


Calendars are assigned to the selected work cell. You can also set the expiration
and start dates for the assigned calendars. The active calendars are used for
calculating capacity. Depending on the Model type of Throughput or Hours,
the calendar is used in calculating capacity in different ways.
A new concept called Standard workday has been added to the calendar to help
define the capacity for Throughput. Standard workday defines the length of a
standard workday in hours for a work cell.
The standard workday hours describe the length of a workday related to the given
throughput (capacity) of a work cell. According to the working time template,
every day could have a different length.
The standard workday also defines the scaling range of a workday in the Kanban
schedule board.

Work Cells: Work Cell Capacity


The work cell capacity defines the capacity settings for the work cell. The
production flow model is attached to the work cell and defines the basic capacity
settings discussed in "Chapter 1: Lean Manufacturing Concepts and Overview:
Production Flows: Setup and Interconnectivity: Production Flow Model: Model
Type".

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Work Cells: Work Cell Capacity - Model Type
When you are defining the work cell capacity, the Model type selected from the
production flow model is how capacity is expressed for the work cell. A work
cell can be of two different capacity models:

Throughput - the average throughput capacity of the work cell for


the capacity period.

Hours if this option is chosen, the Capacity period and Average


throughput quantity and unit are inactive. The related capacity is
then determined through the calendar.

Work Cells: Work Cell Capacity - Throughput Model


Settings
If the capacity model is Throughput, the Capacity period is used to define the
period that is related to the given capacity. If the capacity model is hours, this is
not defined.

Standard workday The capacity is the quantity produced during a


standard workday (related to the hours given in the Standard
workday hours field on the Calendar).

Week The capacity is the quantity produced in one week. The


available hours of a week can be determined through the calendar
assigned to the production flow model.

Month The capacity is the quantity produced in one month.

The Average throughput quantity defines the quantity that is produced in the
work cell during the selected Capacity period. If the capacity model is Hours, this
is not defined. The Unit of measure defines the unit of measure to use with the
Average throughput quantity.
To calculate the actual throughput of a specific day, the available working hours
of this day need to be determined out of the calendar. The actual throughput is
calculated by:
Actual throughput = Average throughput * actual working hours /
available hours (capacity period)

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Work Cells: Work Cell Capacity - Cell Capacity Period
Effective and Expiration Date
The time periods defined by the Effective date to the Expires date, where a
resource group has a cell capacity assigned, are the periods where the resource
group is effectively acting as a work cell. The periods cannot overlap, but the
periods do not have to be consecutive.

FIGURE 1.15 EFFECTIVE DATES ON CELL CAPACITY

Demonstration 1.3: Creating a Work Cell


Scenario: Pierre uses these steps to begin setting up the resource groups that
define the work cells to model his Car Speaker production flow.
To designate a work cell from a resource group, follow these steps:
1. Navigate to Organization Administration > Common >
Resources > Resource Groups.
2. Create a new resource group (select the New button or Ctrl+N).
3. Enter an identifier for the Resource group in the Resource group
field (for example, enter WCell).
4. Enter a Site for the work cell (for example, select 2).
5. On the General FastTab, check the Work cell check box to
designate the resource group as a work cell.
6. Select the Input warehouse and location, designating the supplying
warehouse and location for this cell (for example, select Warehouse
PaCovers and Location Supermarke).
7. Select the Output warehouse and location, designating the target
warehouse and location for items produced in this cell (for example,
select Warehouse PaCovers and Location Supermarke).
8. Select the Calendars FastTab.
9. Select the Add button.
10. Choose a Calendar for the work cell (for example, select Standard).
11. Select the Work cell capacity FastTab.
12. Create a new line (select the Add button or Ctrl+N).
13. Select the Production flow model to use with the work cell (for
example, PF Model). The Model Type will default to Throughput
or Hours based on the selection on the Production Flow Model.
14. Choose the Capacity period type (for example, select Standard
workday).
15. Enter the Average throughput quantity if using Throughput
Model (for example, enter 100).

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Chapter 1: Lean Manufacturing Concepts and Overview


16. Enter the Unit of measure to use with the Average throughput
quantity (for example, select Pcs).
17. Enter an Effective start date and time (for example, enter today's
date).

Lean Schedule Groups


A work cell has a determined capacity that is typically expressed in Throughput,
as described in the Work cell capacity settings. All manufactured items can be
mapped to that throughput by setting a ratio within the Lean schedule groups.
The default ratio is 1. A ratio > 1 indicates the part is consuming more
throughput than a standard part, a ratio < 1 indicates the part consumes less
throughput.

Example: Creating a Lean Schedule Group


Scenario: Pierre has decided to use these steps to create a Lean schedule group
for his speaker covers to provide a throughput ratio to a specific item, in addition
to having the Kanban show up on the board with a color.
To create a Lean schedule group, these steps are performed:
1. Open the form Operations Resource Group from
Production control > Setup > Lean manufacturing > Lean
schedule groups.
2. Create a new Schedule Group by selecting the New button or press
Ctrl+N.
3. Name the new Schedule group.
4. Assign the Schedule color to the schedule group.
5. Save the record by pressing Ctrl+S or the File> Save button and
accepting the infolog.
6. Select the Assign items to group button.
7. Create a new line (New button or Ctrl+N), select the Item relation
type Item.
8. Enter the Item number.

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9. Select the appropriate Color dimension for the item.
10. Set the Throughput ratio for the item.

FIGURE 1.16 LEAN SCHEDULE GROUP

Warehouses
A new concept has been created within the warehouse location structure in
Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012. This concept, a Kanban supermarket, is a special
location type that has the inventory deduction policy on empty of the material
handling unit.
This type of supermarket is used for materialthat is, inventory controlled in the
supermarketbut will not be deducted by an inventory backflushing or manual
picking or transfer processes, but rather a Kanban empty signal that is registered
separately.
From a costing point of view, this behavior is similar to a supermarket in WIP,
with the exception that on-hand is shown in the supermarket.

Standard Costing and Backflush Costing


Costing for Lean manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 is implemented
through backflush costing based on the standard cost framework. The production
flow is used as the cost accumulator for a costing period.
NOTE: For Lean manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, items must be
set up as standard cost.

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Backflush costing is defined as a cost accumulation method where the
application of cost is based on the output of the process. Backflush costing is
usually associated with repetitive manufacturing environments. Backflush
costing omits recording some or all of the journal entries relating to stages from
the purchase of direct materials to the sale of finished goods. Since some stages
are omitted, the journal entries for subsequent stages use normal or standard cost
to work backward to flush-out the cost for the activity where the journal entry
was not made.

Standard Costing and Backflush Costing: WIP


The material consumed by the production flow is added to WIP. The products
received from the production flow are deducted from WIP at their standard cost.
The periodic backflush costing determines the effective value of WIP to the end
of the period based on the Kanban handling units and the Kanban job status. The
deviation between the effective values and the actual WIP values for each cost
group and item are accounted and displayed as variances.
NOTE: When you are using multiple activities, it only records the cost
transaction on the final activity transaction.
Traditional cost accounting systems do not fit within a Lean environment without
some type of modification. The move to backflush costing integrates Lean
manufacturings production flow reporting system based off of Kanban execution
signals, and cost accounting under full absorption (direct and indirect
manufacturing cost) for the production flow, which simplifies reporting
procedures for direct resource usage.

References
Bicheno, J. (2004). The New Lean Toolbox (3rd ed.). Buckingham: Piscie
Books.
Blackstone, J., & Cox, J. (Eds.). (2005). APICS Dictionary (11th ed.).
Alexandria, VA: APICS The Association for Operations Management.
Gross J. M. & McInnis K. R. (2003). Kanban Made Simple: Demystifying and
Applying Toyotas Legendary Manufacturing Process. New York, NY:
AMAZOM, a division of American Management Association.
Rother, M. & Shook J. (2003). Learning to See: Value stream mapping to create
value and eliminate muda. Brookline, MA: The Lean Enterprise Institute, Inc.
Womack, J. P. & Jones, D. T. (2003) Lean Thinking: Banish Waste and create
Wealth in your Corporation. New York, NY: Free Press.

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Summary
Lean Manufacturing Concepts and Overview provided a broad overview of
some of the main characteristics of Lean manufacturing and the functionality
within Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 that supports Lean manufacturing. It
included these key points:

Lean manufacturing is a way of manufacturing that is based on the


five Lean principles.

It is important in Lean manufacturing implementations to understand


the Value Stream and map it to provide the proper inputs into the
system configuration.

The production flow is a new concept that is the mainstay of Lean


manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012.

Various types of Kanbans and replenishment strategies are used to


support Lean manufacturing processes in Microsoft Dynamics AX
2012.

The work cell is modeled as a resource group and provides different


mechanisms for understanding capacity with Lean manufacturing
processes.

Costing for Lean manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 is


implemented through backflush costing based on the standard cost
framework.

Lean manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX is highly interactive,


drawing upon information from other modules.

This lesson also introduced the Contoso scenario that will be used throughout the
course to help understand Lean manufacturing for Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012.
This lesson also summarized the ways in which Lean manufacturing in Microsoft
Dynamics AX 2012 supports Lean manufacturing processes.

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Chapter 1: Lean Manufacturing Concepts and Overview

Test Your Knowledge


Use these short answer questions to test your overall understanding of the course.
It would be beneficial to place each question into a familiar context and relate it
to a company or industry with which you are familiar.
1. List three Lean terms.

2. What are the five Lean principles?

3. What is a Value Stream, why is it important, and how is it modeled in


Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012?

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4. What is a production flow and how is it connected to Kanban rules?

5. How is a work cell modeled in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012?

6. Describe the two options for modeling capacity in Lean manufacturing for
Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012.

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Quick Interaction: Lessons Learned


Take a moment and write down three key points you have learned from this
chapter
1.

2.

3.

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Solutions
Test Your Knowledge
1. List three Lean terms.
MODEL ANSWER:
Any three terms from the chapter, such as: Value Stream - the set of all
actions (both value added and non-value added) that are required to bring a
specific product(s) or service from raw material through to the customer;
Kanban - Japanese for visible record. Kanbans have been adopted by many
industries as a method of controlling production and internal supply. It can
apply to a paper ticket or a physical container; Kaizen - Japanese for
continuous improvement. Kaizen is a management philosophy, which
emphasizes employee participation, and in which every process is
continuously evaluated and re-evaluated for the elimination of waste.
2. What are the five Lean principles?
MODEL ANSWER:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Identify value
Understand the Value Stream
Create flow
Introduce pull
Strive for perfection

3. What is a Value Stream, why is it important, and how is it modeled in


Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012?
MODEL ANSWER:
A Value Stream is the set of all actions (both value added and non-value
added) that are required to bring a specific product(s) or service from raw
material through to the customer. This is important because the Value Stream
has to be understood to eliminate any non-value added activities. When you
are considering an implementation of Lean manufacturing in Microsoft
Dynamics AX 2012, the ground work must be laid through defining the
Value Streams, mapping them, and eventually setting this up within the
system. Value Streams are modeled as an operating unit for costing purposes
and can be modeled as one or many production flow versions to enable the
activity-based planning, production, and costing in a Lean manufacturing
environment.

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4. What is a production flow and how is it connected to Kanban rules?
MODEL ANSWER:
A production flow is the mainstay of Lean manufacturing in Microsoft
Dynamics AX 2012, it defines the flow of material and products throughout
work cells and locations for a specific production or supply scenario and can
be described as a sequence or small network of process or transfer activities.
In Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, a production flow provides the activity
basis that Kanban rules are set up to be planned and initiated against.
5. How is a work cell modeled in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012?
MODEL ANSWER:
Work cells are modeled in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 using resource
groups, where resources are grouped to initiate a process activity.
6. Describe the two options for modeling capacity in Lean manufacturing for
Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012.
MODEL ANSWER:
The two ways of modeling capacity are set up on the production flow model
and resource groups. These are:
1. Throughput: The capacity and load of a work cell are measured in
quantities of product that are produced.
2. Hours: The capacity and load of a work cell are measured in periods of
hours and minutes.

Microsoft Official Training Materials for Microsoft Dynamics


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Lean Manufacturing in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012

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Microsoft Official Training Materials for Microsoft Dynamics


Your use of this content is subject to your current services agreement

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