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Sunday, November 18, 2007

LeanBlog Podcast #33 -- Jim Huntzinger, Lean Accounting Summit

Here is LeanBlog Podcast #33, a new interview with Jim Huntzinger, the President of the Lean Accounting Summit. In this Podcast, Jim gives us an update on the recent Summit and talks about some of the latest trends in Lean Accounting.

You can use the player (use the VCR-type controls) below to listen to a "streaming" version of the podcast (or click here for the streaming audio and RSS subscription). The streaming link is faster for one-time listening (hardly any delay to start listening). Or you can use the download link to put it on your computer or MP3 player.




MP3 File (Right Click to Save As)

For earlier episodes, visit the main Podcast page, which includes information on how to subscribe via RSS or via Apple iTunes.

If you have feedback on the podcast, or any questions for me or my guests, you can email me at leanpodcast@gmail.com or you can call and leave a voicemail by calling the "Lean Line" at (817) 776-LEAN (817-776-5326) or contact me via Skype id "mgraban". Please give your location and your first name. Any comments (email or voicemail) might be used in follow ups to the podcast

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Thursday, October 25, 2007

Updated Lean Line Question -- Cost Planning

Updated: Check out the comments for a lengthy reply (link) from Jim Huntzinger of the Lean Accounting Summit.

I finally got my first two "Lean Line" calls recently. Long-time Lean Blog reader, Bryan, left a message with a question about how Toyota does annual cost planning or budgeting cycles. It is that time of year for most everybody. You can use the player, below, to listen to his question.



I don't have a good answer for that question. If you have a question, either use the "comments" feature below, or feel free to leave an audio answer by calling the Lean Line at 817-776-LEAN.

Likewise, if you have a question, feel free to call and leave a message. The line is my "Skype" number, so it is going to roll right into voice mail. My Skype ID is "mgraban."


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Sunday, July 01, 2007

A Kaizen Event Story

By Jean Cunningham:

Just a quick story of a kaizen event….this one was in a service company. They wanted to improve cash flow by getting receivable more quickly. By mapping the current process with a few of the sales people, the accounts receivable clerk, and two interested others, in one day we were able to see that we:

  1. Did not have structure process for each activity
  2. Did not have clear customer supplier relationship
  3. Did not have a clear flow
  4. But were willing to improve through experimentation.

We had a process that had 3 value adding steps and 30 in total. But since we looped through the process so many times, we really had about 200 steps!

So we created a clear structure of gathering all key information up front (I call that “Once and be done”) and then ensuring we made contact very early in the process with our key supplier relationship….the accounts payable clerk at the customer!

So the steps were radically reduced, but even better, the entire team now understands what work was being performed, and why the new process is better.

Time will tell if they see the cash flow improvement they expect, but they already know they want to keep using the Kaizen approach.

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Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Updated: Free Lean Accounting Webcast

IndustryWeek : What YOU Need to Know About Lean Accounting (Hint: It's Not Just For Accountants)

Update: This is tomorrow, June 20.

Free 90-minute webcast, brought to you by Industry Week and SAP on Lean Accounting, featuring Brian Maskell and Jean Cunningham.

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Friday, May 11, 2007

Competition, Lean Accounting, and Baseball

By Andy Wagner:

Russell Roberts on Café Hayek had an interesting commentary the other day about the Power of Competition, relaying a bit of the story of Billy Beane and the Oakland A’s told in the book Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game. Moneyball is the story of how the Oakland A's Baseball Club was able to meet the New York Yankees in the major league playoffs despite having a payroll about one-third the size of what the Yankees were putting on the field.

It's a great story, but what does this tale have to do with the lean enterprise?

Baseball teams, like most companies, are run by the metrics. While business managers expect to get high profits and stock prices by picking factories with low labor rates and high inventories, ball clubs gain wins by collecting players with high batting averages and pitchers with low earned run averages. So long as conventional wisdom reigns across the entire industry, the teams with the highly-paid hotshots do just fine.

Unfortunately, as General Motors knows all too well, every once in a while, somebody doesn't play by the establishment rules. Somebody comes up with a new way of looking at things that has the potential to change the world.

For baseball, that somebody was the General Manager of the Oakland A's, Billy Beane. Beane, discovering the work of assorted baseball fans/statisticians, figured out that most ball clubs weren't picking the highest quality players for their money. These statisticians had figured out that the traditional metric of batting averages didn't actually have a correlation to runs scored, while "on-base percentage" and "slugging percentage" did. "The thing...that we're trying to do" said Beane's statistician, Paul DePodesta, "is [to] ask the question why." Sound familiar? By picking players with strong records in these new numbers, Beane was able to draft players undervalued by the rest of baseball at bargin basement prices. Building a team along these lines, the Oakland A's were able to win a record 20 consecutive games, and finish the 2002 season with 102 wins, while spending less money than any of their competitors. "It's looking at process rather than outcomes," DePodesta said. "Too many people make decisions based on outcomes rather than process."

What was major league baseball's reaction to the book Moneyball, that exposed all of this? About how the Big Three reacted to The Machine that Changed the World. Most teams are still in denial, while a handful, the Toronto Blue Jays and the Boston Red Sox among them, have taken up the concepts to rebuild their teams in Oakland's image. In testament to Billy Beane's theories, it was this approach that led the Sox to their 2004 World Series Championship, after 98 years of trying it the old-fashioned way.

Roberts’ blog argues that the lessons of Moneyball were wasted on baseball because of the isolation the game has from true competition. For example, owners are usually hobbyists and not hardcore business people. I would argue differently. Competitive businesses do not like risk. Following non-traditional methods, such as lean, doesn’t come easily. It takes a true vision, which often comes only after severe loss.

The power of competition is that it ultimately makes companies without vision disappear. While the American auto industry has suffered an unusually long slow reduction in size and market share, the business world is littered with examples of bankrupt companies that failed to see fundamental changes in customers, processes, or technology.

I can't say that there are any ground breaking lean ideas in Moneyball, but if you're looking for a great story about rebuilding an organization by focusing on a set of ideas nobody else has embraced, or if you're trying to explain the importance of looking at competition in a new way to a resistant manager, who happens to be a ball fan, Moneyball might be the book for you.

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Monday, April 23, 2007

2007 Lean Accounting Summit "Agenda Reveal"

GoToWebinar : Link for Webinar

Click on the link above for a free web seminar about the upcoming Lean Accounting summit, including two good friends of the blog, Norman and Jean:
Lean Accounting Summit organizers are hosting a free webinar in which the 2007 Summit agenda will be revealed... live! Why join us? You'll hear from Brian Maskell, Jean Cunningham, Mark DeLuzio, and Norman Bodek!

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Tuesday, March 20, 2007

"Lean accounting is part of the management problem"?

Manufacturing Engineering December 2006

I was sent the link to this article by Professor Thomas Johnson, noted author of books including Profit Beyond Measure.

After reading the article, I’m a bit confused (although he makes some excellent points). Dr. Johnson begins by attacking “lean accounting” when it’s really traditional management accounting and traditional management thinking that he’s attacking throughout the piece, it seems. I guess maybe his point that “lean accounting” is just tweaking a harmful system, ala “putting lipstick on a pig?” I make that comment having nothing other than a surface understanding of the “lean accounting” movement.

Johnson says:

“Lean accounting is part of the management problem besetting US industry”

“The adjective "lean" merely denotes particular features of a business activity that presumably improve the activity's performance, but do not change the principles that shape how it is carried out.”

“But the improved business performance promised by these features can never be more than temporary, because "lean" does nothing to change a host of finance-driven practices that inevitably increase instability and diminish long-run business performance.”

“Examples of such practices include optimizing the efficiency of individual operations at the price of reducing efficiency in the whole; building work-arounds to keep work moving instead of solving problems that cause delay and interruptions; and sacrificing quality and lead time to increase output and meet standard cost-variance targets.”

Of course the things he mentions above are bad practices. However, what Johnson is describing is not “lean.” Sub-optimizing part of the process is not “lean.” Building workarounds is not “lean.” Honestly, I don’t know where Dr. Johnson gets his definition of “lean” from.

“A key reason why American companies fail to emulate Toyota's long-term financial results is their belief that managers can use financial targets as "levers" to control those results.”

I would tend to believe that statement. I would say it a little differently: traditional management focuses on the results, whereas “lean management” focuses on the process. Focusing on the process leads to better results than focusing on the results (and ignoring process) gets you.

“If such a linear cause and effect relationship connects the parts to the whole, then to change the whole by a desired magnitude requires no more than changing one or more of the parts by the same magnitude. In other words, to reduce operating costs and increase profit by $1 million requires no more than reducing payroll in that amount by steps such as laying off personnel, reducing wages and salaries, or outsourcing work to a lower-wage region. It doesn't matter how the reduction is accomplished, since removing a dollar in one part of the business has the same impact as removing a dollar in any other part. All that is required is to change the financial size of some part or parts by the magnitude of the desired total financial change.”

I agree with his point there that the traditional finance driven management looks at labor as a “cost” as something to be reduced, the results of that loss of talent be damned. Toyota treats people as an asset since that asset can improve the process, which can potentially lead to more cost savings than laying off the employees would have accomplished. The layoffs as cost-savings view ignores the work that those employees did, the value they created, etc. Very sad – the race to the bottom, the death spiral of layoffs hasn’t really been successful for anyone, has it?

He says Toyota’s view of the world recognizes the complexity of our living business systems:

“In that context, the company's long-term financial results emerge from countless nonlinear feedback loops in a complex, self-adaptive, and self-corrective living system.”

Systems Thinking!! Great stuff.

“For example, the money saved by replacing high-paid experienced employees with low wage contract workers in another country is likely to result in more defects, longer lead times, and increased customer dissatisfaction.”

Exactly! That’s the sad view of how traditional management “improves” the company.

“It's hard for Americans to understand the idea that a business organization cannot improve its long-run financial results by working to improve its financial results.”

Yes, why is that so hard to understand? It’s heresy in some management circles to say you cannot focus solely on the results of the process. I guess that’s why the lean management system and mindset is so much tougher to embrace than the “cost cutting” lean tools (such as 5S, kanban, etc.).

“Toyota focuses its operations on continuous system improvement through endless rapid problem solving. And they emphasize genchi genbutsu, or "going to the place," to see where a problem occurs, firsthand. They don't rely on second-hand reports or tables and charts of data to achieve a true understanding of root cause. Instead, they go to the place (gemba) where you can watch, observe, and "ask why five times." This attitude shows a deep appreciation that results (and problems) ultimately emanate from, and are explained by, complex processes and concrete relationships, not by abstract quantitative relationships that describe results in simple, linear, additive terms.”

Exactly! I like how he said that.

I visited a healthcare organization recently that was processing billing for insurance and Medicare reimbursement. Their management, while caring and competent, was oriented around managing metrics rather than “genchi genbutsu.” I spent days directly observing the process, different employees in different departments, and saw the employees spend most of their time inspecting paperwork, fixing errors created upstream, and generally struggling with problems. Employees showed me their “error logs” with some amusement. Some of them filled them out diligently and said “I get tired of writing the same errors down all the time” while other employees admitted not filling out the reports at all (since filing reports hadn’t led to any action that actually eliminated the problem.”

When I sat with management and told them my estimate was approximately 50% of employee time as spent fixing errors or dealing with the aftermath of errors was met with friendly surprise.

“But our reports say the error rate was only 1.8%!!!!!!!!!”

The manager promised to spend the entire next week doing as I had done – directly observing the process herself.

“We see better today—when we understand more fully what Toyota does—that reducing manufacturing overhead costs requires a better way to organize work, not better cost information.”

Again, brilliant.

“One step was to ignore all but abnormal variation in results and work to improve the system itself, thereby narrowing the control limits and improving long-term performance. The other step, a less desirable but more common way of managing, was to try to improve long-term performance by intervening in the system every time results varied from a desired target. The inevitable consequence of the second step, Shewhart and Deming proved, is to widen the system's control limits, and thus impair its long-term performance.”

Healthcare is just as guilty of overreacting to changes in metrics and “tampering” with the system as anyone back in manufacturing was. I’m giving a presentation at a healthcare workshop in April that explains the use of control charts for analyzing management data to avoid overreacting and tampering (much of the material is based on the outstanding book “Understanding Variation” by Donald Wheeler).

“If a company requires cost information of any kind to show the "savings" from "going lean" it is lost, and will never get there.”

Another brilliant point. Calculating an “ROI” on a lean effort (including my own consulting work) is difficult or based on altogether faulty logic (or unknowable numbers).

Lots of provocative thoughts, what do you think?

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Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Lean Accounting Resources

By Jean Cunningham:

The topic of Lean Accounting has been getting quite of bit of interest the last few months. The Institute of Management Accounting (www.ima.org ) had their first webinar on the topic of lean and had their largest audience. The AICPA (www.aicpa.org) had their first web cast on Lean, and again had very strong participation. The Association for Manufacturing Excellence, (www.ame.org) which is a national organization with a strong focus on lean, has had very good turnout for its events on Lean Accounting.

While we are seeing some companies actually adopting Lean Accounting, I think more important is the growing awareness that Lean is a total business system and needs appropriate measures that support lean activities. The implementation will come; even if only division by division at the start.

To learn more about Lean Accounting, you can see the webinar/webcasts from the the sites above, or plan to go to the largest event with the most speakers at the Lean Accounting Summit (www.leanaccountingsummit.com ) which will be in Orlando again this fall. The AME annual conference in Chicago will also have Lean Accounting breakout sessions.

In terms of newsletter there is a free newsletter that you can subscribe to at the Lean Accounting Summit website above, some white papers at the IMA website, and a new website called www.igetleanaccounting.com to check out.

Remember….if you have measures that contradict the lean efforts, like those found in nearly every standard cost accounting system, you will be working against yourself. Go learn more!

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Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Lean Accounting Webcast Today, March 7

Real Numbers through Lean Accounting... The evolution of accounting in support of "lean" operations

This webcast is not free ($79) but might be worth checking out, as it includes Lean Blogger Jean Cunningham.

Live AICPA Webcast
Wednesday, March 7, 2007
1-3PM ET

Recommended CPE Credit: 2

Can't make the live event? Pre-order the Webcast on CD-ROM now.

Overview:
The business enterprise has evolved dramatically over the past 100 years. Many claim that traditional accounting practices have not evolved and no longer support modern operations. This has most clearly been demonstrated in manufacturing, where manufacturers have moved from batch processing to single-piece flow processing, a result of applying lean principles. Modern operations - and "lean" operations specifically - have now taken root in most industries. Healthcare, service, construction, government, and countless other industries successfully apply lean concepts to eliminate waste and get more from fewer resources.

So why are accounting and operations at odds and how can you overcome this?

Find out on March 7th. See how three former CFOs became change agents and aligned accounting with lean operations. You'll learn about the financial impact that resulted as they share lessons learned and provide practical recommendations to start your own lean accounting journey.

Register now and join the thousands of CPAs who already have participated in an AICPA Webcast and see firsthand why they are a TERRIFIC way to stay current on today's professional issues.

Presenters:
Jean Cunningham, MBA
President
Jean Cunningham Consulting

Mark Deluzio, MBA, CMA, CPIM
President
Lean Horizons Consulting

Jerrold M. Solomon, MBA
Vice President of Operations
MarquipWardUnited

Moderator:
John F. Hudson, CPA
President
Hudson Consulting Group, LLC

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Monday, January 01, 2007

Book Review +: Profit Beyond Measure

By Jamie Flinchbaugh

One of the most underrated voices in the “lean” world is Tom Johnson. I still regularly recommend his latest book, now 6 years old, Profit Beyond Measure. It’s a little hard for some to read, but the point and purpose of the book is such an essential message. We’ve had reviews from The Lean Library before, a site we’ve contributed to for content. Here’s a portion of the review for Profit Beyond Measure but the entire review can be found here.
Profit Beyond Measure establishes "True North", or the ideal state, for the growing lean accounting movement, a growing sub-set of lean. Tom Johnson, the lead author, has a rather aggressive view having stated that "it is time to take the accounting out of management." Although extreme and not necessarily adopted by other lean accounting authors, there is no question that Profit Beyond Measure sets the standard. There are two primary messages that best summarize the content of this book. The first is MBM, or Management by Means. This is a direct counterattack to MBR, or Management by Results. MBR focuses on quantity. It focuses on the outcomes of processes, using motivation, incentives and trial and error to achieve the desired outcome. In contrast, MBM focuses on relationships and processes. Means are ends in the making. If you get the processes and relationships right, you will get the desired outcomes.

The middle of this book explores three examples, two based on companies and one solution set, based on the concept of Management by Means. The first is titled Product to Order and focuses on Toyota. Johnson’s over 30 visits to Toyota help him relate the concept of Management by Means to Toyota’s production system. He discusses concepts including jidoka, takt time, standardized work, just in time and Heijunka, but not in great detail. He equates the Toyota Production System to a living, organic system. Perhaps the most revealing section of this chapter focuses on Management accounting at Toyota in Georgetown versus in Japan, explaining that the Toyota Production System in Japan succeeded in spite of their traditional standard cost systems, and took the time to design a new system when launching in the U.S. The next chapter is Design to Order, and it focuses in on Scania, the Swedish heavy truck manufacturer, as a case study. The case places a heavy emphasis on modular design, which by itself is not that original, but emphasizes the design and management system designed around the modular design as the key to their sustained success, which the company truly has had. The next chapter, Assess to Order, returns to the primary author’s roots with a focus on measurement systems. This chapter is significantly more theoretical than the previous two chapters. A section heading "moving managers from targets to pathways" gives you a good idea of the message, but it focuses much of its time on analysis by order-line, which is almost a unit-by-unit, not average unit, costing system. The details are sorely lacking, however, and while helpful conceptually leaves many of the details to the reader.

The final section of the book brings it all together with an emphasis on living systems. The most valuable element of this are the principles of living systems. While applying these principles is no trivial task, they could be used in organizational and process design and management. The first principle of living systems is self-organization. A living system is able to organize itself naturally towards its objective. From the book: "creative energy continually and spontaneously materializes in self-organizing forms that strive to maintain their unique self-identity." The second principle of living systems is interdependence. Everything is dependent on something else. Every action has some reaction. And you can’t just do "your thing." In the words of the authors: "interdependent natural systems interact with each other through a web of relationships that connects everything in the universe." The third principle of living system is diversity. This is not in the human-resources sense, although that would be included, but diversity of all kinds. Diversity is a positive outcome of natural systems and the relationships build within. As stated in the book: "diversity results from the continual interaction of unique identities always relating to one another."

The reason I’m writing about this now because Tom has just provided us with more to think about with a new article in Manufacturing Engineering titled Managing a Living System, Not a Ledger. Tom makes it very clear that we do not need better lean accounting, such as is promoted through the Lean Accounting Summit. What we need is to be better able to manage the living systems of our organization. He states that “lean accounting embodies a fatal flaw common to all ‘lean’ activities.” That fata flaw is that these activities “do not change the principles that shape how [the work] is carried out.” I couldn’t agree with that point more wholeheartedly. Lean must change the principles that shape peoples’ beliefs, behaviors and actions. This is such an important point it is the central theme in The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Lean and our flagship course The Lean Experience. Johnson goes on to describe a lean organization as “countless nonlinear feedback loops in a complex, self-adaptive and self-corrective living system.” As an engineer and a scientist, I find that to be an incredibly descriptive and insightful articulation. As a manager, my response is more like “uh…what?!?”

In an act of either poor editing or incredibly ironic contrast (and knowing the editor, I’m sure it’s the latter) the very next article in the magazine is on the very topic that Johnson has such disdain for, lean accounting. It is titled Accounting for Lean and is writing by Mark DeLuzio, a contributor like myself to the Lean Accounting Summit. This article attempts to describe accounting for lean.

Here’s my personal low-down on this. I believe Tom Johnson’s view is right-on. I believe we need to better understand our systems, our people and how work is done, and accounting is rarely the lens to achieve this. That being said, my major quesiton or problem the point is this: how do we get there from here? If someone wanted to learn to fly and half-way down on a parachute jump cut off their chute, that wouldn’t not be a good path. How do we get to Tom’s vision of how a company should work and think? You can’t just rip off the bandaid and the organization is different. For me, this question is what should drive the “lean accounting” community.

Coming full-circle, I’ve always strongly recommended Profit Beyond Measure. For any serious student of lean, it’s a must read. To miss it would be to miss important perspective in shaping the mind of the lean thinker. Read more about it at The Lean Library or find it on Amazon below.

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Tuesday, October 31, 2006

LeanBlog Podcast #8 -- Jim Huntzinger

Here is LeanBlog Podcast #8, an interview with Jim Huntzinger, the President of the Lean Accounting Summit. In this Podcast, we will talk about the notion of "Lean Accounting" and some of the ways that traditional cost accounting and managerial accounting can come into conflict with our lean transformation efforts. You might think, "I'm an engineer, what do I need to know about accounting?" But trust me, you need to learn about this topic so you can understand what drives some of the decisions your management might make and how they might need to change their approach to be more compatible with lean.

You can use the player (use the VCR-type controls) below to listen to a "streaming" version of the podcast (or click here for the streaming audio and RSS subscription). The streaming link is faster for one-time listening (hardly any delay to start listening). Or you can use the download link to put it on your computer or MP3 player.


MP3 File (Right Click to Save As)

For earlier episodes, visit the main Podcast page, which includes information on how to subscribe via RSS or via Apple iTunes.

LeanBlog Podcast #8 Show Notes and Approximate Timeline

  • 1:45 Jim gives an intro to lean accounting: leaning out accounting versus "accounting for lean".
  • 3:20 First experiences with inaccurate standard costing systems and how that was driving
    bad business decisions, distortions through overhead allocation.
  • 6:20 What bad decisions were being made through the lean journey - make/buy decisions.
  • 6:30 How can you know how inaccurate your costing is without knowing exactly what the
    cost is?
  • 7:15 The fundamental math of most accounting systems is wrong, so you're automating a bad calculation.
  • 7:50 What about the impact of inventory reductions being treated as a reduction in assets on the balance sheet? We still need to educate companies about this even after all this time working with lean.
  • 9:00 Prof. Tom Johnson and his books
  • 9:15 Some warnings about accounting go back to the start of the Industrial Revolution, that it could be used for incorrect decision making... you need to make decisions based on an intimate knowledge of the product.
  • 9:35 What is the impact of having many large major manufacturers being run by "finance people"?
  • 11:25 Again, accounting should be a support function for decisions you've made, rather than being the driving function of decisions.
  • 13:30 Is it easier as a private company if you can ignore Wall Street and your stock price?
  • 14:50 Some public companies have been successful with the long-term thinking... it comes down to leadership and leadership educating their boards and why the changes are good in the long term.
  • 15:33 Who are the success stories heard about at the Lean Accounting Summit? Almost anyone working with lean accounting is on the cutting edge.
  • 17:20 Over 500 attendees at the Summit this year, more than doubled from 2005.
  • 18:15 "Thought leaders" or "Learning leaders"?
  • 19:10 There's a good mix of very large public companies down to very small privately held companies attending the Summit, a variety of industries (manufacturing and healthcare),not just the U.S.
  • 20:15 Plans for the 2007 Summit
  • 20:50 Will also have a "TWI" summit (Training Within Industry) - a topic for a future podcast, maybe
  • 21:42 Training Within Industry: The Foundation Of Lean
  • 22:50 Other lean accounting resources are on Jim's website, as well as the AME website.

If you have feedback on the podcast, or any questions for me or my guests, you can email me at leanpodcast@gmail.com or you can call and leave a voicemail by calling the "Lean Line" at (817) 776-LEAN (817-776-5326) or contact me via Skype id "mgraban". Please give your location and your first name. Any comments (email or voicemail) might be used in follow ups to the podcast.


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Monday, December 05, 2005

SOX costs $6.1 billion in 2005

What a huge opportunity to implement some lean thinking! According to a report issued November 29 by AMR Research, SOX compliance cost $6.1 billion in 2005, and is expected to cost $6 billion in 2006.

Without getting into the argument for or against the need for SOX 'type' legislation to protect investors against malicious corporate activity (inherently non-value add), this is a huge expense that we all as consumers and investors must bear. There are some compliance management and continuous controls monitoring software applications that are becoming available to help ease the burden of compliance, but to the lean thinker there is so much more!

Lets start with the obvious. Lean processes that use pull systems and visual controls to manage minimal inventories definitely have an easier time maintaining and verifying an accurate count of that inventory than those who do not. It would be interesting to compare the SOX compliance costs a lean Vs a non-lean facility that are otherwise comparable in size, function, complexity etc. But I think this is just the beginning.

Specifically to SOX verification activities, leveling out the workload may ease the cost of compliance by providing an opportunity to stop and correct problems as they are found. This way SOX activities can ensure that all manufacturing, accounting and other processes are correctly following their standardized work plans – and that those work plans adequately prepare companies for necessary audits without any additional 'non-value add' activities to prepare.

These are just some quick ideas. I'm sure there are also many wastes that can be found and eliminated by looking specifically at the compliance process and setting up some teams to work through the value stream.

Any other ideas out there?

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Saturday, April 09, 2005

Lean Accounting Summit to Challenge Traditional Cost Accounting in the Lean Enterprise

Click for Information

I've seen Brian Maskell speak on lean accounting, he is very effective and informative. This is a conference being held in September in Dearborn MI. He also has a book on lean accounting, which I have not read though. Does anyone find traditional accounting interfering with lean transformation efforts? What have you done to counteract that?

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