A simple application of Little’s Law shows why this matters: if a cell ships four units per hour with 40 pieces of WIP, lead time is 10 hours; cut WIP to 12 through single-piece flow and lead time falls to three. That difference releases cash, reduces expedite chaos, and clarifies scheduling.
Running one builds flexibility because any part can be next. There is no colossal setup debt to recover, so planners can resequence to satisfy urgent requests or engineering changes. Operators stay within standard work instead of inventing workarounds, protecting quality while still serving volatile customers quickly.
In a Midwest sheet‑metal job shop, a small pilot cell grouped ten frequently ordered brackets with similar forming and hardware steps. By switching to single‑piece transfer and nine‑minute changeovers, quoted lead time dropped 62 percent, expediting vanished for those items, and the team gained two freed operators for training.
Choose a family with stable demand, manageable risk, and supportive leaders. Limit scope to a few routings and shifts. Co-design with operators, maintenance, quality, and planning. Define before/after metrics, document cost assumptions, and agree on a review date so you can pivot quickly if reality behaves differently.
Choose a family with stable demand, manageable risk, and supportive leaders. Limit scope to a few routings and shifts. Co-design with operators, maintenance, quality, and planning. Define before/after metrics, document cost assumptions, and agree on a review date so you can pivot quickly if reality behaves differently.
Choose a family with stable demand, manageable risk, and supportive leaders. Limit scope to a few routings and shifts. Co-design with operators, maintenance, quality, and planning. Define before/after metrics, document cost assumptions, and agree on a review date so you can pivot quickly if reality behaves differently.
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