A foundational document that outlines the project's purpose, scope, objectives, team members, and timeline. It serves as a contract between stakeholders and the project team.
An assessment tool to identify key stakeholders, evaluate their current vs. desired level of support, and plan communication strategies to manage change.
A specialized lean tool mapping the flow of materials and information required to bring a product or service to a customer, highlighting value-add vs. non-value-add time.
An experimental method to evaluate the amount of variation introduced by a measurement system, ensuring data accuracy, repeatability, and reproducibility.
A graphical tool and mathematical approach used to evaluate and model the relationship or correlation between an independent variable (X) and a dependent variable (Y).
A scoring matrix used to evaluate and compare multiple potential solutions against a set of predefined criteria or a baseline design to select the optimal solution.
Rigorous testing procedures executed to confirm that the designed product or process meets all engineering specifications (verification) and satisfies user needs (validation).
A high-level process map that captures Suppliers, Inputs, Process, Outputs, and Customers. Used to define project boundaries and identify key process elements.
A systematic, proactive method for evaluating a process to identify where it might fail, assess the relative impact of those failures, and prioritize risks using Risk Priority Numbers (RPN).
Statistical methods used to determine whether there is a statistically significant difference between datasets or process parameters to validate root causes.
A structured approach to testing a selected solution on a small, controlled scale (a pilot) to validate its effectiveness and uncover unforeseen risks before full rollout.
A written summary that describes the actions, metrics, and frequencies required to monitor and maintain the improved process at its optimal level over time.
A visual brainstorming tool (Ishikawa diagram) used to categorize the potential root causes of a problem into standard dimensions like Man, Machine, Method, Material, Measurement, and Milieu.
A specialized bar graph where factors are plotted in decreasing order of frequency, illustrating the 80/20 rule to prioritize the vital few problems over the trivial many.
A foundational Lean methodology consisting of five steps: Sort, Straighten, Shine, Standardize, and Sustain, used to create a clean, organized, and efficient work environment.
Time-series graphs (like I-MR, X-bar & R charts) used to monitor process performance over time and distinguish between common cause and special cause variation.
A structured transition roadmap and training document designed to formally hand over the process from the project team back to the operational Process Owner.