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Toyota’s pedal troubles: result of too much or not enough lean manufacturing?

By | February 1, 2010, 9:13 AM PST

SmartPlanet colleagues Andrew Nusca and Larry Dignan have been doing a great job following the debacle involving Toyota’s sticky gas pedals, and point to discussions about how the automaker’s aggressive adherence to efficiency collided with its aggressive global expansion.

Toyota issued a public apology for the faulty parts, and has announced details on how it will fix the problem. (Larry provides details here.)

The Toyota gas pedal snafu also puts a taint on the auto manufacturer’s legendary emphasis on lean manufacturing. Some analysts are speculating that the company’s relentless drive to lean processes may have undercut quality in an increasingly complex enterprise and product line. In a new Wall Street Journal analysis, Daisuke Wakabayashi speculates that “Toyota’s recent problems highlight how certain elements of this approach—eliminating overlap by using common parts and designs across multiple product lines, and reducing the number of suppliers to procure parts in greater scale—can backfire when quality-control issues arise.”

David Olive of the Toronto Star, however, says the trouble is that Toyota may have abandoned its lean principles as it grew into a global powerhouse with many moving parts. As Toyota grew, it fell prey to the same “big-company disease” that humbled General Motors:

“As Toyota quickly ramped up production of its vehicles, its employees strayed from the automaker’s ‘Toyota Way’ of exacting quality control and continuous improvement in manufacturing methods.”

Toyota’s more long-term track record over the decades — along with many other companies — demonstrate that lean manufacturing is very effective at improving quality overall while wringing inefficiencies out of supply chains and operations. But these principles need to cover today’s highly extended enterprises.

In fact, cost-cutting itself, the prime mission of every C-level executive these days, essentially becomes a secondary consideration of the lean approach. As organizations adopt lean methodologies and practices, streamlined costs become a natural byproduct of the process. I recently spoke with Steve Bell, author of Lean Enterprise Systems: Using IT for Continuous Improvement, about the philosophy behind lean, and he points out that you don’t cut costs simply because costs need to be cut, Steve adds. “The quickest way to lose weight is to give blood, but the patient isn’t very healthy when you’re done. You’re weakened, and you’ve lost a lot of your intellectual capital. If you simply try to attack cost, and short-term cost reduction, all you end up doing is killing the patient.”

Lean means more than simply cutting costs or streamlining, Steve says. Lean, as successfully applied to manufacturing, means doing things “simpler, faster, better, cheaper,” he says. “Notice that the last item on the list is cheaper. If you adopt a systems perspective into every business process. You find where the waste is and you drive it out, focusing on doing things faster and with higher quality, cost will naturally be driven out of the system.”

In lean, the focus is on collaborative teamwork—represented by all parts of the business—to deliberatively and systematically tackle problems.

The Toyota issue points to one of the risks in today’s loosely coupled organizations — which rely on networks of contractors to provide products and services. In Toyota’s case, the errant gas pedal assemblies were produced by U.S. firm CTS Corp., which says it manufactured the pedals based on Toyota’s design specifications. But there are large networks of providers that underpin many products and services these days, and the core companies need to better provide ways to build in quality, testing, and accountability.

Ann All provides additional analysis, and agrees that Toyota needs to apply its lean manufacturing principles to its extended supply chain, to get back on track with quality and customer satisfaction. She notes, however, that lean practices such as using common parts and designs across multiple product lines and reducing the number of suppliers in order to procure parts in greater scale are extremely effective in reducing waste, but also introduce greater risk into processes. A supplier not adequately addressing a quality issue will be felt far more deeply, as it has been with Toyota.

In the WSJ article, Wakabayashi quotes Yoshinori Iizuka, a University of Tokyo engineering professor and former head of the Japanese Society for Quality Control, who advocates good design and adequate testing to minimize quality-control problems resulting from widely used parts.

The problem in its bigness, Olive notes, is that by the 2000s, a majority of its employees were outside of Japan. Thus, company managers Toyota “could no longer rely on word of mouth to convey the firm’s managerial and manufacturing methods.” And it showed in slipping quality — “from 2004 to 2007, Toyota recalled a staggering 9.3 million vehicles – a number exceeding its total annual output, and up from 2.5 million recalls in the three years previous to 2004.”  To put things in further perspective, Olive notes that in 2005, “Toyota’s rate of recalls as a percentage of vehicles on the road hit 10.1%, compared with 6.8% from GM and 2.5% cent at Chrysler Group.”

In 2007, Olive also observes, then-CEO Katsuaki Watanabe acknowledged that Toyota was aware that quality issues were jeopardizing the company. “The world-class quality that we’ve built is our lifeline.” Three years on, the vaunted Toyota Way had still lost its way.

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Joe McKendrick

About Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick

Contributing Editor, Business

Joe McKendrick is an independent analyst who tracks the impact of information technology on management and markets. He is the author of the SOA Manifesto and has written for Forbes, ZDNet and Database Trends & Applications. He holds a degree from Temple University. He is based in Pennsylvania.

Follow him on Twitter.

Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick

Joe McKendrick is an independent consultant and editor. Joe has performed project work for the following companies in the IT marketspace: IBM, Systinet/HP, Teradata. He has performed project work for the following organizations in partnership with Unisphere Research (Unisphere Media): IBM, Oracle Corp., International Oracle Users Group, Oracle Applications Users Group, Professional Association for SQL Server, International DB2 Users Group, International Sybase Users Group.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Toyota's pedal troubles: result of too much or not enough lean manufacturing?
Maybe there are other issues. Glad I don't own a Toyota!
Posted by skicatdave
1st Feb 2010
0 Votes
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Cultural bias knows no boundaries
For too long Americans have been accused of being insensitive to and ignorant of cultural differences when they go to another country. This shows that the problem is universal. The Japanese simply do not always understand the intricut nuances of other cultures well enough to realize that the wording of verbal or written instructions that convey the exact requirements in their culture will not always work in other cultures. Like us, they too will have to overcome cultural myopia to work effectively with international suppliers.

Whoever figures out how to do that is the one is who is going to best work for the long haul in an international market.
Posted by LarryPTL
2nd Feb 2010
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not floor mats, not gas pedals - it's Toyota's electronic systems control.
This would be a good article except it has the wrong premise.
Toyota keeps declaring fixes for problems that don't exist. It's
not floor mats or gas pedals -- the problem of the runaway cars
(some from a complete STOP) is related to electronic system
controls. Toyota engineers are apparently too incompetent to find
the true problem to they keep pushing out other fixes until the
public finally believes one.

"Remove all the floor mats!" then the 2008 Avalon in Dallas went
straight into a pond with no signs of braking -- and the floor mats
were in the trunk. In California, the off-duty state trooper melted
his brakes on his runaway car going 120mph before he and his family
died. You can find their 911 call on the internet. the car just
would not stop. Many other people who have experienced it said it's
like a ghost has taken over the car. It's not a "sticky" gas pedal.
In Las Vegas, Toyota car in a parking deck went from a complete stop
to flying off the top of a parking deck, killing the couple in the
vehicle. There's even a class action lawsuit right now on another
case where a Toyota went from a COMPLETE STOP, zooming off without
the owner touching the gas pedal.

It's like a runaway cruise control system that can't be disabled,
going as pedal to the floor acceleration speeds.

There's buggy software in the their electronic controls and they
don't want to admit it's there because they can't sell cars that
have not been "FIXED". So, it's fixed. Wink wink.
Posted by ChazzMatt
2nd Feb 2010
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RE: Toyota's pedal troubles: result of too much or not enough lean manufacturing?
The problem is in U.S. manufactured Toyotas using U.S. company (CTS) parts. It is not in vehicles built in Japan using Japanese parts. This shift to U.S. suppliers for U.S. assembled cars has made them vulnerable to the same quality control problems with outsourced components that has plagued U.S. car manufacturers for years.
Posted by cestrauss
2nd Feb 2010
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RE: Toyota's pedal troubles: result of too much or not enough lean manufacturing?
As a electrical engineer for 38 years who worked in reliability engineering and QA on military computers these are my thoughts: this is unlikely a quality problem (i.e., product not meeting design or manufacturing requirements). The problem is likely a reliability problem (i.e., product having a software or hardware design problem resulting in premature failure). I won?t second guess Toyota because they are a world leader in quality and reliability, but I would hire a consulting firm to conduct an independent analysis to rule out other causes. I would require the firm to conduct a sneak circuit analysis (a sneak condition is a latent hardware, software, firmware or integrated condition that may cause an unwanted event to occur, as well as EMI/EMC testing to rule out electromagnetic interference. Toyota can?t afford to later find a third independent cause of sudden acceleration.
Posted by billlb@...
2nd Feb 2010
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RE: Toyota's pedal troubles: result of too much or not enough lean manufact
I can't imagine it's from too much lean, because lean is about
simple, effective, and error-free work. The idea that it has to
do with it's supplier network (which you don't actually know)
has nothing to do with lean. Every single auto manufacturer is
dependent upon a supply network, and it's been that way for
over a century. In fact, Toyota is much more integrated with
most of their suppliers, sharing more information, and taking
more involvement in quality systems, than most of their
competitors.

I have been resisting writing about the Toyota case because so
little is actually know about the defect itself, and cause and
effect isn't clear. But I have been getting enough questions
about it. I don't think this changes anything about Toyota's
success. They still have dramatically fewer recalls than others.
And of course no one that knows lean would say they were
anything close to perfect.

I did write up some of my thoughts and lessons in observing
the story on my blog here:
http://jamieflinchbaugh.com/2010/02/the-fall-of-the-
mighty-toyota/
Posted by JamieWF
17th Feb 2010
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