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Lean six sigma supply chain case study: aircraft shipment improvement in a pharmaceutical company

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

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Standard

Lean six sigma supply chain case study: aircraft shipment improvement in a pharmaceutical company. / Rocha Lona, Luis; Alvarez-Reyes, Silvia Edith; Eldridge, Stephen et al.
Advances in Sustainable and Competitive Manufacturing Systems : 23rd International Conference on Flexible Automation and Intelligent Manufacturing. ed. / Américo Azevedo. Vol. V Springer, 2013. p. 1457-1487 (Lecture Notes in Mechanical Engineering).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Rocha Lona, L, Alvarez-Reyes, SE, Eldridge, S, Garza Reyes, J & Kumar, V 2013, Lean six sigma supply chain case study: aircraft shipment improvement in a pharmaceutical company. in A Azevedo (ed.), Advances in Sustainable and Competitive Manufacturing Systems : 23rd International Conference on Flexible Automation and Intelligent Manufacturing. vol. V, Lecture Notes in Mechanical Engineering, Springer, pp. 1457-1487. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-00557-7_119

APA

Rocha Lona, L., Alvarez-Reyes, S. E., Eldridge, S., Garza Reyes, J., & Kumar, V. (2013). Lean six sigma supply chain case study: aircraft shipment improvement in a pharmaceutical company. In A. Azevedo (Ed.), Advances in Sustainable and Competitive Manufacturing Systems : 23rd International Conference on Flexible Automation and Intelligent Manufacturing (Vol. V, pp. 1457-1487). (Lecture Notes in Mechanical Engineering). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-00557-7_119

Vancouver

Rocha Lona L, Alvarez-Reyes SE, Eldridge S, Garza Reyes J, Kumar V. Lean six sigma supply chain case study: aircraft shipment improvement in a pharmaceutical company. In Azevedo A, editor, Advances in Sustainable and Competitive Manufacturing Systems : 23rd International Conference on Flexible Automation and Intelligent Manufacturing. Vol. V. Springer. 2013. p. 1457-1487. (Lecture Notes in Mechanical Engineering). doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-00557-7_119

Author

Rocha Lona, Luis ; Alvarez-Reyes, Silvia Edith ; Eldridge, Stephen et al. / Lean six sigma supply chain case study : aircraft shipment improvement in a pharmaceutical company. Advances in Sustainable and Competitive Manufacturing Systems : 23rd International Conference on Flexible Automation and Intelligent Manufacturing. editor / Américo Azevedo. Vol. V Springer, 2013. pp. 1457-1487 (Lecture Notes in Mechanical Engineering).

Bibtex

@inbook{1fddf80464674ce8bcf45d75104aecdf,
title = "Lean six sigma supply chain case study: aircraft shipment improvement in a pharmaceutical company",
abstract = "Distribution is an important activity in the integrated supply-chain management for pharmaceutical products, especially when these goods have to travel long distances from manufacturing facilities to the consumer markets. This paper presents the case of a pharmaceutical company in which the quality assurance and the management teams set an objective of reducing their distribution costs to less than 0.16 Euros per unit. The quality assurance (QA) team has decided to optimize sample shipments as a high priority in order to reduce costs. The methodology used in this study was supported through a series of experiments using a Lean Six Sigma approach that implemented the Define Measure Analyze Improve Control (DMAIC) phases. The QA team analyzed the previous state of sample shipments and then suggested improvements based on an optimized process. The results showed a set of non-value added activities specifically in transportation, motion, waiting, defects, and the sub-utilization of people. Based on Lean tools, the improvements achieved a 26 % reduction in the cycle time spent and no complaints from customers have been reported since implementation of the new process. In addition, a control plan was also developed to track shipments and maintain open and close communication with the customer. Finally, the resulting processes that have been implementation have a significant impact on reducing distribution costs.",
author = "{Rocha Lona}, Luis and Alvarez-Reyes, {Silvia Edith} and Stephen Eldridge and {Garza Reyes}, Jose and Vikas Kumar",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-319-00557-7_119",
language = "English",
isbn = "9783319005560",
volume = "V",
series = "Lecture Notes in Mechanical Engineering",
publisher = "Springer",
pages = "1457--1487",
editor = "Am{\'e}rico Azevedo",
booktitle = "Advances in Sustainable and Competitive Manufacturing Systems",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Lean six sigma supply chain case study

T2 - aircraft shipment improvement in a pharmaceutical company

AU - Rocha Lona, Luis

AU - Alvarez-Reyes, Silvia Edith

AU - Eldridge, Stephen

AU - Garza Reyes, Jose

AU - Kumar, Vikas

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Distribution is an important activity in the integrated supply-chain management for pharmaceutical products, especially when these goods have to travel long distances from manufacturing facilities to the consumer markets. This paper presents the case of a pharmaceutical company in which the quality assurance and the management teams set an objective of reducing their distribution costs to less than 0.16 Euros per unit. The quality assurance (QA) team has decided to optimize sample shipments as a high priority in order to reduce costs. The methodology used in this study was supported through a series of experiments using a Lean Six Sigma approach that implemented the Define Measure Analyze Improve Control (DMAIC) phases. The QA team analyzed the previous state of sample shipments and then suggested improvements based on an optimized process. The results showed a set of non-value added activities specifically in transportation, motion, waiting, defects, and the sub-utilization of people. Based on Lean tools, the improvements achieved a 26 % reduction in the cycle time spent and no complaints from customers have been reported since implementation of the new process. In addition, a control plan was also developed to track shipments and maintain open and close communication with the customer. Finally, the resulting processes that have been implementation have a significant impact on reducing distribution costs.

AB - Distribution is an important activity in the integrated supply-chain management for pharmaceutical products, especially when these goods have to travel long distances from manufacturing facilities to the consumer markets. This paper presents the case of a pharmaceutical company in which the quality assurance and the management teams set an objective of reducing their distribution costs to less than 0.16 Euros per unit. The quality assurance (QA) team has decided to optimize sample shipments as a high priority in order to reduce costs. The methodology used in this study was supported through a series of experiments using a Lean Six Sigma approach that implemented the Define Measure Analyze Improve Control (DMAIC) phases. The QA team analyzed the previous state of sample shipments and then suggested improvements based on an optimized process. The results showed a set of non-value added activities specifically in transportation, motion, waiting, defects, and the sub-utilization of people. Based on Lean tools, the improvements achieved a 26 % reduction in the cycle time spent and no complaints from customers have been reported since implementation of the new process. In addition, a control plan was also developed to track shipments and maintain open and close communication with the customer. Finally, the resulting processes that have been implementation have a significant impact on reducing distribution costs.

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-319-00557-7_119

DO - 10.1007/978-3-319-00557-7_119

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9783319005560

VL - V

T3 - Lecture Notes in Mechanical Engineering

SP - 1457

EP - 1487

BT - Advances in Sustainable and Competitive Manufacturing Systems

A2 - Azevedo, Américo

PB - Springer

ER -