Insights | 42 Technology

‘Going to Gemba’ helps accelerate product and process innovation

Written by Adrian Swinburne | Jun 14, 2021 7:42:49 AM

By Adrian Swinburne, Head of Consumer

42 Technology is regularly asked by FMCG brand owners to help develop new manufacturing processes or to improve existing product development strategy.

For example, to enable the manufacture of new product variants. Or to accommodate changes to product recipes or new materials that can introduce unexpected challenges to existing production lines.

But these projects often come with one major restriction: that any new processes proposed should involve minimal changes to the company’s existing high-value manufacturing assets. Although at first glance this might seem to be an almost insurmountable barrier to innovation, in reality it can be transformed into a highly potent catalyst for the innovation process.

In a previously published article (see below) Adrian Swinburne shared insights on why Gemba walks are an essential first step when starting out on any asset-constrained innovation programme.

Why there is a need

  • Properly understand existing asset performance and capabilities
  • Understand how specific product ingredients influence the design and operation of manufacturing assets
  • Explore degrees of freedom and options for process changes with associated costs
  • Understand how assets have evolved over the years, and most importantly why
  • Establish empathy and shared vision with the engineering teams. This is so they become an integral part of the innovation team, not isolated from it

One outcome of considering manufacturing assets in this way is that any new concepts or process improvements are much more likely to make it all the way. They will be supported from the start by the brand owner’s marketing group and the engineering team in the factory. Also, its existing equipment suppliers.

Making it work in the real world

For example, in one project, 42 Technology worked closely with the manufacturer of a client’s existing process development and their equipment. A theoretical model of how it could be improved to reduce processing times was created.

Following successful simulation, the supplier was able to evolve its existing equipment design to deliver a significant increase in production throughput rather than completely re-designing it from the start.

See article: Step By Step - Manufacturing Management

If you’d like to discuss the article or need specific advice on your product development or process development, then please email answers@42t.com.