Continuous improvement plan
Introduction
A continuous improvement process is the activity of analyzing the processes used within an organization or administration, reviewing them and making adjustments to permanently minimize errors.[1].
As a concept, continuous improvement emerged in the century with the intention of improving products, services and production processes. It postulates that improvement is a general and stable attitude in the processes. When there is growth and development in an organization or community, the identification of all processes and measurable analysis of each step carried out is necessary. Some of the tools used include corrective and preventive actions and analysis of member or customer satisfaction. This is the most effective way to improve quality and efficiency in organizations.
In the case of companies, quality management systems, ISO standards and environmental evaluation systems are used to achieve total quality.
It basically uses 6 pillars for its development:[2].
Requirements
Continuous improvement requires:
Continuous improvement can be carried out as a result of an escalation in services or as a proactive activity by someone carrying out a process. Continuous improvement should be seen as a sustainable and regular activity over time and not as a quick fix for a specific problem.
To improve any process, several conditions must be met:
Continuous improvement can generally be achieved by reducing complexity and potential points of failure by improving communication to protect quality in a process.
KAIZEN, the effective method for managing continuous improvement.
References
- [1] ↑ «Qué es mejora de procesos y cómo beneficiarse con su aplicación». www.heflo.com. Consultado el 11 de agosto de 2019.: https://www.heflo.com/es/blog/optimizacion-procesos/la-mejora-los-procesos/
- [2] ↑ «¿CUÁLES HERRAMIENTAS UTILIZO: KAIZEN, 5S, 6 SIGMA, TPM, JIT?». C&E. diciembre de 2016. Consultado el 7 de noviembre de 2017.: https://cyecompetitividad.wordpress.com/2016/12/13/cuales-herramientas-utilizo-kaizen-5s-6-sigma-tpm-jit/
- [3] ↑ Miller, Frederic P.; Vandome, Agnes F.; McBrewster, John (2010). KISS Principle. VDM Publishing. p. 80. ISBN 6131658536. |fechaacceso= requiere |url= (ayuda).
- [4] ↑ Camp, Robert B. (2013). Sustainable lean : the story of a cultural transformation (1era edición). Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. p. 29. ISBN 9781466571686. |fechaacceso= requiere |url= (ayuda).
- [5] ↑ Korchilov, Igor (1997). Translating history : thirty years on the front lines of diplomacy with a top russian interpreter. [S.l.]: Scribner. p. 41. ISBN 9780684870410. |fechaacceso= requiere |url= (ayuda).
- [6] ↑ Norton, Robert S. Kaplan; David P. (2000). The balanced scorecard : translating strategy into action ([Nachdr.] edición). Boston, Mass.: Harvard Business School Press. p. 21. ISBN 9780875846514. Consultado el 8 de noviembre de 2017.: https://archive.org/details/balancedscorecar00kapl/page/21
- [7] ↑ Deming, W. Edwards (2000). The new economics : for industry, government, education (2. ed. edición). Cambridge, Mass. [u.a.]: MIT Press. p. 35. ISBN 0-262-54116-5. Consultado el 8 de noviembre de 2017.: https://archive.org/details/neweconomicsfori00demi_769