Lean Manufacturing Initiatives at Boeing

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Case Details:
Case Code : OPER014
Case Length : 12 Pages
Period : 1993 - 2002
Organization : Boeing
Pub Date : 2002
Teaching Note : Available
Countries : USA
Industry : Airplane Manufacturing
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Please note:
This case study was compiled from published sources, and is intended to be used as a basis for class discussion. It is not intended to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a management situation. Nor is it a primary information source.
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Excerpts
Lean Manufacturing at Boeing
Boeing began implementing lean manufacturing principles in 1993. The company
employed a Japanese consulting firm to assist in the task at its commercial
aircraft division. However, because of Boeing's decades-old operational
inefficiencies, it failed to reap the benefits of lean manufacturing. Analysts
felt that Boeing's corporate culture was one of the reasons for the above
failure. Though executives knew about the manufacturing problems, the
company-wide attitudinal problems thwarted any corrective measures. This
attitude was due to the environment in which the company was doing business for
a long period. Its major customers – mostly state owned airlines, protected by
regulation, and the free spending US Department of Defense – never cared about
the prices.
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Also, Boeing never had an efficient competitor challenging its market share.
When Airbus came into the picture, Boeing believed that Airbus was doing
well because of the government subsidies it was receiving from the European
Union rather than its engineering efficiency...
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Reaping the Benefits
As a result of the above initiatives, Boeing was able to reduce its
inventory levels by $1 billion since January 1999, and was also
successful in reducing the manufacturing time by 60% and manufacturing
floor space by more than 50%. This helped the company to lower the
production cost and also freed the manufacturing capacity. Boeing
utilized this opportunity by entering into contracts with Delta Airlines
and Alaska Airlines to manufacture replacement floor panes for their
airplanes.
Boeing was able to release tens of thousands of square feet of floor
space for new business production... |
Extending Lean Manufacturing
In 2000, Boeing introduced an innovative manufacturing technique called
'Moving Line' that further improved its production efficiency and quality levels (refer Figure II). Though Boeing had used this technique earlier, the new aspect of this technique was the fusion of the moving line techniques with the lean manufacturing techniques...
Exhibits
Exhibit I: About Lean Manufacturing
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