This idea of adding value to products and services is a key


To provide any product or service, you have to use resources like money, materials, labor, time, and information. The goal is to provide the greatest amount of value to customers while utilizing the least amount of your resources.

This idea of adding value to products and services is a key concept of Lean. It is defined as anything for which the customer would be willing to pay. If what you are providing is not something the customer would be willing to pay you for, then you are not providing value to the customer.

Any time you begin analyzing a process, you want to look at each step and determine if it is contributing to the value of the desired output. Each step can be classified into one of three categories:

Value-added

Non-value added, but necessary

Non-value added (waste)

Value-Added Steps

Value added steps in a process are those in which you add something to a product or service for which the customer would be willing to pay. These activities are where you gain the most from expending your resources when providing a product or service. Take the Sun Card, for example.

There are several steps in the process for applying for and receiving a Sun Card, but the customer is only willing to pay for the physical card with their name, ID number, and photo on it. In this case, only those steps in the process that contribute to the actual creation of the card would be considered value added steps.

Non-Value Added But Necessary Steps

Just because a process step is not value-added does not mean it is a bad thing. Processes all include steps that do not add value, but are necessary to make the product or service happen. It has been my experience that the majority of activities in service processes fall into this category.

They do use resources, so you want to reduce the amount of non-value added work whenever possible. Often, this type of activity fulfills some sort of administrative purpose such as enabling value added steps, maintaining organizational records, or meeting legal or regulatory requirements.

Looking at the Sun Card example, when a person wants a Sun Card they must fill out an application. As far as the customer is concerned, this is a non-value added step because it does not directly result in the creation of the physical card itself and they would not be willing to pay to fill out a form.

This step is necessary because it enables the Sun Card staff to start the process, verify that the customer is eligible to receive a Sun Card, and locate their information in ASU's database. Without this step, the creation of the physical card would not be able to happen.

Non-Value Added Steps (Waste)

The third category that process steps can fall into is pure waste. In these steps resources are expended, delays occur, and no value is added to the product or service. Customers are absolutely not willing to pay for these activities. These steps should be eliminated from the process.

The Sun Card process does not contain any pure waste steps.

Lean identifies seven or eight types of waste, depending on whom you talk to. I am one of those who identify eight types of waste. These are:

Unnecessary processing or steps in a process

Transporting materials or information over long distances

Delays / waiting

Idle inventory / resources

Unnecessary or excessive motion/movement of staff

Rework/ fixing defects that should not have occurred in the first place

Producing more than needed to meet demand

Underutilization of staff, their knowledge and/or skills

Use the data in the table above and answer the following questions in the space provided below:

What are the sources of value-added and non-value-added work in this process?

Where are the main opportunities to improve the cycle time of this process, with respect to both actual time used and the potential best times? What strategy would you use?

Step 10: Resolve Open Issues required 104 hours (potential) versus 106 hours (actual). Is there an OFI here? Why or why not? If so, how would you attack it?

What do you think are the most difficult critical issues to deal with when designing a sound cycle time study such as this one?

3 pages

Request for Solution File

Ask an Expert for Answer!!
Operation Management: This idea of adding value to products and services is a key
Reference No:- TGS02941958

Expected delivery within 24 Hours