《When Toyota met e-commerce Lean at Amazon》.pdf
文本预览下载声明
F E B R U A R Y 2 0 1 4
When Toyota
met e-commerce:
Lean at Amazon
Marc Onetto
Amazon’s former head of global operations
explains why the company was a natural
place to apply lean principles, how they’ve
worked in practice, and where the future
could lead.
The spirit of lean management was already at Amazon when I
arrived in 2007. Since the day he created Amazon, Jeff Bezos has
been totally customer-centric. He knew that customers would not pay
for waste—and that focus on waste prevention is a fundamental
concept of lean. The company’s information technology was always
very good at understanding what the customer wanted and passing
the right signal down. For example, the selection of the
transportation method for a given package is driven, first, by the
promised delivery date to the customer. Lower-cost options enter the
equation only if they provide an equal probability of on-time delivery.
That’s basically a lean principle.
As a technology company, Amazon initially had the belief that most
issues could be resolved with technology, so it was not systematically
engaging frontline workers in a process of continuous improvement.
Part of lean is the strong engagement of the front line—with the
gemba1 workers—on continuous improvement. Amazon has more
people working in the fulfillment centers and customer-service
centers than it does computer-science engineers. We needed the
engagement of all these people to succeed, since they are the ones
who are actually receiving, stowing, picking, packin
显示全部