Improving work processes by making the invisible visible

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Publication date

2012

Authors

Bakker, ArthurORCID 0000-0002-9604-3448ISNI 0000000392965936
Hoyles, C.
Kent, P.
Noss, R.

Editors

Livingstone, D.W.
Guile, David

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Supervisors

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Part of book

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Abstract

There is a growing movement for industrial companies to modify their production practices according to methodologies collectively known as process improvement. After World War II, Japanese companies such as Toyota developed new manufacturing paradigms (e.g., lean manufacturing) under the guidance of American experts, particularly W.E. Deming. Since the 1980s, the Japanese methodologies have been spreading to the West in a major way, in the form of programmes such as Total Quality Management (TQM) and Total Productive Maintenance (TPM) (Deming, 1986; Nakajima, 1988).

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Citation

Bakker, A, Hoyles, C, Kent, P & Noss, R 2012, Improving work processes by making the invisible visible. in D W Livingstone & D Guile (eds), The knowledge economy and lifelong learning : a critical reader. The knowledge economy and education, no. 4, Sense Publishers, Rotterdam, pp. 257-275. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-6091-916-2_13