Takt time is a metric commonly used in lean manufacturing to measure the pace at which you should produce your product to meet customer demand. The term takt comes from the German word “taktzeit,” which means “cycle time,” but it’s not exactly the same. Unlike cycle time, which measures how long it takes to convert raw materials into a finished product, takt time helps you measure the production time between units, divided by customer demand.
In this blog post, we will delve into the importance of takt time, how you can measure it and how to leverage the calculation to improve your standard operating procedures.
A typical day shift is composed of roughly 420 minutes. That is, 8 hours minus 1 hour for lunch and small breaks. In manufacturing, each of these minutes counts. Even small delays in a process can derail operations and ultimately affect customer orders. For instance, if you fulfill customer orders daily, you have to ensure that your process runs in a consistent beat to deliver on your daily commitments.
Let’s take an example:
This is a simple example. Your takt time may be influenced by factors like labor regulations and safety measures.
In any case, when you use takt time as a metric, you need to consider that a takt time that is too short might increase the likelihood of injury. Sharp increases in demand also mean you need to revisit your takt time or potentially restructure your processes.
Speaking of processes, takt time can also be an important metric to assess the effectiveness of your standard operating procedures and work instructions.
If you notice that your takt time is too slow to meet demand, it might be time to revisit your SOPs or communicate work instructions in a better way. Effective SOPs should help your team work as efficiently as possible. But how do you measure their effectiveness?
A platform for standardizing work and creating digital work instructions can help manufacturers measure the time spent on each step of their processes and monitor completion rates. These tools offer powerful data analytics and integrate with 3rd party systems to optimize data visualization.
Assessing how long each task takes to complete not only increases your overall efficiency, but it can help you improve your takt time.
If you identify bottlenecks, you can use a digital work instruction platform to crowdsource and standardize best practices from the frontline.
The best work instruction platforms will allow you to share optimized standards across sites throughout your value chain so that improvements made to metrics like takt time can be reproduced where they’re needed most.
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