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  Home > Resources
Source Newsletter summer 1999  
 

Getting Clean, as Much Fun as Getting Dirty

Okay, getting your facility clean may not be as fun as Mr. Bubbles claims, but keeping it clean has its rewards. Maintaining a clean and orderly workplace improves:
Safety. A dirty, disorganized workplace has more opportunities for slipping, falling and injuries.
Image. Cleanliness is a great sales tool; customers see cleanliness as a reflection of pride in work. Environmental regulators believe it tells a lot about a company's compliance attitude.
Quality. A clean, well organized shop decreases the opportunity for mistakes. Product is less likely to become contaminated with dirt or other particles. Less waste is generated.
Productivity. Employees don't loose time looking for materials and tools. Most employees feel better working in a clean environment. It also takes less time to stay clean than it does to get clean once dirty.

5S's
The key components of housekeeping in the visual workplace (a concept developed in Japan) are known as the 5S's; each S is a Japanese word. Adopting the 5S's doesn't mean doing an annual cleanup. It means keeping a facility clean all the time—and changing bad habits.

1. Organization seiri
Remove unnecessary items from the workplace and create measures to prevent their accumulation. Discarding unnecessary materials may be costly. Contact the Minnesota Materials Exchange (page 7) if some of the items could be useful to someone else. A system to prevent future accumulation will save in the long run.

2. Order seiton
Create functional storage systems so employees can find what they need when they need it. Processes should be laid out to maximize efficiency.

3. Cleanliness seiso
Regularly maintain a clean workplace by picking up trash, sweeping floors and cleaning machines. Have everyone perform a five-minute daily cleanup. In the five minutes, people should have dedicated tasks to carry out efficiently.

4. Standardized Cleanup/Neatness seiketsu
Once clean, equipment and the facility should remain clean. Keeping a shop clean must be part of normal work flow. Prevent things from getting dirty in the first place to minimize the need to clean. Machinery that leaks fluids should be repaired. Cleaning up spills takes time away from making product.

5. Conduct shitsuke
Train employees to maintain cleanliness standards. It may take some time for people to change messy ways and make clean habits.

Sources: Visual Control Systems, 1995; and 5S for Operators: 5 Pillars of the Visual Workplace, 1996.

Going Clean
Like any new philosophy, time is needed for all employees to adopt it. Management support and regular evaluation is necessary. A two-year time frame is recommended to fully implement the plan—and integrate the philosophy.

When Chad Vogel started his job as manufacturing manager at Control Products in Chanhassen, he brought with him the philosophy of cleanliness. He got management approval to implement the 5S's.

"We just said we don't accept a dirty facility any more," Vogel said. Control Products put the cleanliness standard in writing and made sure it was put in place on the shop floor with supervisors and all employees. "We cleaned and arranged and got out there and did it all. We said this is what we expect." The company's cleanliness reflects the quality of their products.

 

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