Steven Bonacorsi is a Senior Master Black Belt instructor and coach. Steven Bonacorsi has trained hundreds of Master Black Belts, Black Belts, Green Belts, and Project Sponsors and Executive Leaders in Lean Six Sigma DMAIC and Design for Lean Six Sigma process improvement methodologies.
Steven Bonacorsi, President
Bonacorsi Consulting, LLC.
14 Clinton Street Salem NH 03079 sbonacorsi@comcast.net
603-401-7047
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/1/624/6b5
One of the greatest complaints we hear from senior managers is “projects are successfully completed, but I’m not seeing a significant change to the bottom line.” That’s because in the Define stage of (DMAIC), Six Sigma experts don’t have enough information to quantify the benefits. They are predicting a bottom line financial benefit without truly understanding how the process behaves, let alone how it would behave after the change. Without seeing the big picture you may complete a successful Six Sigma project and see no impact in dollars for your organization. There is a better way. With Process Modeling you create a simple simulated model of the process. You will visually see which projects will affect the total output and which will sub-optimize the system.
Key advantages of integrating Six Sigma phases (DMAIC) with Process Modeling are provided below:
Overall interdependencies in processes
- The standard Six Sigma toolbox has no way of showing the interdependencies between one area of the process and another. In complex change initiatives where there are interdependencies between processes, when incidents happen that cause delays, bottlenecks, variability etc., if you can’t show the interdependencies, understanding the system and resolving issues is very difficult. If you can’t understand the system and pinpoint the waste and bottlenecks, changing the system could be risky and typically does not provide the desired results. A simulated model shows those interdependencies, which allows you to uncover changes that will affect the overall system.
Risk free experimentation
- It is proven that real-time experiments are costly and can have an enormous negative impact on the system. If you are experimenting with a simulated model of the system, the only cost is setting up the experiment and reviewing the results. There are no negative impacts to system output or to the morale of the workforce in trying new process experiments. You can change the parameters, run various scenarios and if the desired outcome is not achieved, you can pinpoint the root causes, all the while gathering more information about system behavior – without any disruption to the real system.
Reduced experimentation time
- You can run hundreds of experiments a day rather than hundreds of days per experiment. Many processes have a cycle time of weeks or even months. Running enough replications of an experiment to validate the results can be overwhelming. With a simulated model, you can run as many computer simulations as you want and develop plans based upon the review of results.
Impact of change on the existing process
- Processes that achieve the goal of Six Sigma (or a high sigma level) fall out of spec if the volumes change. For example a 50% change to incoming calls to a call center may cripple a customer-oriented sales process. Planning for change in your system by using a simulated model to understand the effects of volume change, product stream substitution, staffing policy or other changes can significantly reduce project risks and the associated costs.
- Related Videos
- Related Articles
- Ask / Related Q&A
- brainmeasures-Reduce waste and earn ,become lean certified
- Organizational Development: the Missing Link in Lean Transformations
- Application of Lean Six Sigma in the Public Sector:
- Lean and Erp - Can They Co-exist?
- What is Lean
- Frequently Asked Questions On Lean Six Sigma
- Barriers To Lean Six Sigma
- Lean Six Sigma and the Navy




Smart Grid Micro Grid Energy T&D and Storage
By: Bharat Book Bureau | 08/01/2010Bharatbook.com added a new report on "Smart Grid Micro Grid Energy T&D and Storage" which gives (T&D) system automation, energy storage, microgrid applications and markets, as well as projected market sizes and trends through 2014.
Legal Adulterers, Belief Systems & Crescentologism: The Case of Muslims
By: hasan yahya | 08/01/2010This article about philosophy of interpretation of Muslim belief systems and other ideologies worldwide, compared with Crescentologism as a Philosophical approach to deal with interpretation and terrorist actions.
Is Your Job Your Life?
By: Dan Hart | 06/01/2010Sometimes it's easy to forget how much of our life is actually consumed by making a living. If you work a mere 40 hours per week-in reality it's probably a lot more-and add additional 10 hours for commuting, plus other work-related activities, you spend about a third of your life working. But add to that another six hours a day for sleeping, and you spend over half of your life asleep or at work. (For the people who actually sleep at work the number is actually higher.)
Building Blocks of Business Intelligence
By: Abhijeetsingh Hazare | 06/01/2010This article will help you understand “how information transforms into intelligence” and then “how this intelligence can be used to take critical business decisions”. Further this article will enlist a step by step approach in explaining data collection & utilization for building intelligence.
How To Choose A Home Business Computer Opportunity
By: Benjamin Hübner | 05/01/2010Whether technology like computers is your forte or not, it is a means to make money if you have some skills to offer in specific areas. Some people are great at marketing, or at building web sites, so they sell online design and SEO services.
How To Choose A Home Business Computer Opportunity
By: Benjamin Hübner | 05/01/2010Whether technology like computers is your forte or not, it is a means to make money if you have some skills to offer in specific areas. Some people are great at marketing, or at building web sites, so they sell online design and SEO services.
The Online Postcard Printing
By: Katie Marcus | 05/01/2010Online postcard printing has never been easy. It has a lot of advantages over the traditional printing. The first of these is the convenience it gives to its consumers.
5s - Foundation for Continuous Improvement
By: Steven Bonacorsi | 09/02/2009 | Management5s is a continuous improvement methodology that is simple to understand and easy to implement and considered a foundation for continuous improvement. Sort, Set in Order, Shine, Standardize, and Sustain
Mistake Proofing
By: Steven Bonacorsi | 02/10/2008 | ManagementMistake proofing is a technique for eliminating errors. It is based upon the premise that it is good to do something right the first time; it is even better to make it impossible to do it wrong the first time. The idea is to make it impossible to make a mistake. You may also hear the term, Poka-Yoke or Error Proofing applied to mistake proofing.
Cause and Effect Diagrams (fishbone Diagrams)
By: Steven Bonacorsi | 25/04/2008 | ManagementThe first such cause-and-effect diagram was used by Kaoru Ishikawa in 1943 to explain to a group of engineers at the Kawasaki Steel Works how various work factors could be sorted and related. In recognition of this, these diagrams sometimes are called Ishikawa diagrams. They are also called fishbone diagrams, because they look something like fish skeletons.
Critical Path Mapping
By: Steven Bonacorsi | 24/04/2008 | Project ManagementThe activity network diagram has had a relatively long history, dating back to the 1930s. In the 1950s, the technique emerged as the Program Evaluation Research Technique (PERT) and as the Critical Path Method (CPM). There are several ways to represent the output of the PERT/CPM process.
Box Plots
By: Steven Bonacorsi | 21/04/2008 | ManagementBox-and-whisker diagrams, or Box Plots, use the concept of breaking a data set into fourths, or quartiles, to create a display. The box part of the diagram is based on the middle (the second and third quartiles) of the data set. The whiskers are lines that extend from either side of the box. The maximum length of the whiskers is calculated based on the length of the box. The actual length of each whisker is determined after considering the data points in the first and the fourth quartiles.
Dot Plots
By: Steven Bonacorsi | 20/03/2008 | ManagementA dot plot graphically records variable data in such a way that it forms a picture of the combined effect of the random variation inherent in a process and the influence of any special causes acting on it. To understand the power of dot plots as a basic tool, it first helps to visualize how variation occurs.
Run Charts
By: Steven Bonacorsi | 13/03/2008 | Project ManagementRun charts can be very valuable in helping your search for sources of variation. They are easy to plot and easy to interpret. The sampling is uncomplicated, and there are no statistical computations to make. They can also be applied to almost any process or any data.
Scatter Diagrams
By: Steven Bonacorsi | 10/03/2008 | TrainingA scatter diagram shows the correlation between two variables in a process. These variables could be a Critical-To-Quality (CTQ) characteristic and a factor affecting it, two factors affecting a CTQ or two related quality characteristics. Dots representing data points are scattered on the diagram. The extent to which the dots cluster together in a line across the diagram shows the strength with which the two factors are related.