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7 Wastes of Lean: How to Optimize Resources

The 7 forms of waste is a concept that is an integral part of Lean management. Learn what costs you money and resources as well as how to eliminate waste from your work processes.

Eliminating wasteful activities is one of the most important prerequisites for building a successful company. This concept is an integral part of Lean thinking and Lean management, and it helps you increase profitability.

The idea of eliminating waste originates from the Toyota Production System. Taiichi Ohno, who is considered one of the founding fathers of Lean manufacturing, dedicated his career to establishing a solid and efficient work process.

During his journey, Ohno described three major roadblocks that can influence a company’s work processes negatively: Muda (wasteful activities), Muri (overburden), and Mura (unevenness).

Based on his observations and deep analysis, he categorized the 7 types of waste (7 Mudas), which later became a popular practice for cost reduction and optimizing resources.

muda mura muri

What Is Muda (Lean Waste)?

Waste in Lean is any activity that consumes resources but brings no value to the end customer. 

In reality, the activities that indeed create value for the customers are only a small portion of the whole work process. This is why businesses should focus on reducing wasteful activities as much as possible. By doing so, companies can identify significant opportunities to improve their overall performance.

Don’t make a mistake. Not all wasteful activities can be eliminated from your work process. Some of them are a necessity.

For example, testing software is not an activity that your customers are willing to pay for. However, without it, you may deliver a low-quality product that will harm your economic performance. Therefore, there are two major types of waste: 

Necessary waste – non-value-adding, but necessary to get things done in a quality manner. Such activities can be testing, planning, reporting, etc. 

Pure waste – non-value-adding and unnecessary. Anything that doesn’t bring value and can be removed from the process immediately. Any form of waiting (known as "waiting waste") can be described as pure waste.

After we clarified what waste is in Lean, let’s explore the seven wastes in detail.

The 7 Wastes of Lean

Optimizing processes to eliminate waste is crucial for the success of your company. Having wasteful activities can lower profitability, increase customer costs, decrease quality, and even employee satisfaction. For this reason, you need to identify the non-value adding activities and try to improve the process where they appear or ultimately eliminate them.

7 wastes of lean

The Lean theory describes 7 major areas where you can identify Muda activities, more popular as the seven wastes of Lean.

1. Transportation

This type of waste is when you move resources (materials), and the movement doesn’t add value to the product. Excessive movement of materials can be costly to your business and cause damage to quality. Often, transportation may force you to pay additionally for time, space, and machinery.

2. Inventory

Excessive inventory is often the result of a company holding “just in case” inventories. In such cases, companies overstock themselves in order to meet unexpected demand, protect from production delays, low quality, or other problems. However, these excessive inventories often don’t meet customer’s needs and don’t add value. They only increase storage and depreciation costs

3. Motion

This kind of waste includes movements of employees (or machinery), which are complicated and unnecessary. They can cause injuries, extended production time, and more. In other words, do whatever is necessary to arrange a process where workers need to do as little as possible to finish their job.

4. Waiting

This is probably the easiest waste you can recognize. Whenever goods or tasks are not moving, the "waiting waste" occurs. It is easily identifiable because lost time is the most obvious thing you can detect. For example, goods waiting to be delivered,  equipment waiting to be fixed, or a document waiting for executives' approval.

5. Overproduction

Keeping in mind that waste is anything that the customer is unwilling to pay for, it is easy to realize why overproduction is Muda. Producing more means that you exceed customer’s demand, which leads to additional costs. Actually, overproduction triggers the other 6 wastes to appear. The reason is that excess products or tasks require additional transportation, excessive motion, greater waiting time, and so on. Furthermore, if occasionally a defect appears during overproduction, it means your team will need to rework more units.

6. Over-processing

This type of waste usually reflects on doing work that doesn’t bring additional value, or it brings more value than required. Such things can be adding extra features to a given product that nobody will use, but they increase your business costs. For example, if a car manufacturer decides to put a TV screen in the back trunk of a vehicle, probably nobody will use it or find value in it. Even more, it will cost resources, and it will increase the end price of the product for something that customers are not willing to pay for.

7. Defects

Defects can cause rework, or even worse, they can lead to scrap. Usually, defective work should go back to production again, which costs valuable time. Moreover, in some cases, an extra reworking area is required, which comes with additional exploitation of labor and tools. 

As you can see, the 7 types of waste are toxic to your business. However, you can see them more as an opportunity to improve work processes and, most importantly, optimize resources. For different businesses, the 7 forms of waste may have different aspects.

So let’s explore some real-life examples of the 7 types of waste.

The 7 Types of Waste in Different Environments

Identifying wasteful activities is something that should start from the top of the company. Usually, high-level management has a broad overview of all processes. In this line of thought, we can say they manage a portfolio of different activities, functional areas, and projects, and it is their obligation to improve processes and spread a culture of continuous improvement.

However, wasteful activities may vary from business to business. In the following examples, you will see how particular types of waste may differ in various functional areas.

just in time manufacturing Toyota

7 Wastes of Lean Manufacturing

  • Transportation – in production, it may mean moving parts and materials from one place to another
  • Inventory – undelivered products or parts. Overstocking with equipment that may be in need somewhere in the future
  • Motion – unnecessary movement of employees or machinery
  • Waiting – waiting for goods to be delivered
  • Overproduction – too many items produced “just in case”
  • Over-processing – Spending a lot of time on a given task. Adding a feature that doesn’t bring value
  • Defects – broken parts or defective parts that need to be reworked

7 Wastes in Software Development

  • Transportation – switching between tasks too often, countless interruptions from colleagues.
  • Inventory – undelivered code or undelivered features
  • Motion – unnecessary meetings or extra effort to find information
  • Waiting – waiting for testing to complete, waiting for code review, and so on
  • Overproduction – producing features that nobody is going to use
  • Over-processing – unnecessary complex algorithms solving simple problems
  • Defects – bugs

7 Wastes in Marketing

  • Transportation – task switching, interruptions, unnecessary long marketing funnel
  • Inventory – fully-prepared marketing campaigns which stay unlaunched. Licensed tools that nobody uses
  • Motion – unnecessary meetings, extra effort to find information, attending events without clear agenda
  • Waiting – waiting for approval from higher management
  • Overproduction – performing many different marketing activities without having a clear vision and strategy
  • Over-processing – generating countless marketing reports manually, while they can be automated
  • Defects – wrong brand communication, mistakenly branded materials

7 Wastes in Project Management

  • Transportation – task switching, interruptions, unnecessary long marketing funnel
  • Inventory – purchased online tools that teams rarely use, office supplies that exceed needs.
  • Motion – badly structured workspaces and lack of organizational paths, too many meetings, extra effort to find information, and so on
  • Waiting – waiting for approval from higher management
  • Overproduction -filling unnecessary great amount of documents
  • Over-processing – multiple levels of approval for small tasks
  • Defects – an incorrect collection of data

project meeting

This is a never-ending list, and the 7 wastes of Lean will differ from business to business. In some theories, you can even find more types of Muda added to the initial seven. The important aspect is to start exploring all your company processes and try to find as many wasteful activities as possible. Afterward, do whatever it takes to eliminate everything that can slow down your cycle time, damage quality, cost additional resources, or decrease profitability.

Tools You Can Use to Tackle the 7 Forms of Waste

There are different tools in Lean you can use to identify and eliminate wasteful activities. They will guide you through the work process you want to examine and show you the weak spots.

Probably, the most appropriate tool for identifying Muda is the Gemba walk. It is a technique that allows you to go and see where the real work happens. This way, you can observe different processes in action and see where wasteful activities appear.

a3 reportExample of the A3 report

Other tools you can use are the 5 whys and the A3 report. Initially, both tools are used for root cause analysis and problem-solving. However, they are more than useful when you need to detect waste. The first one is a simple method that includes a sequence of “why” questions, while the second is a bit more complicated process that encourages cross-organizational knowledge sharing. Both will help you examine any big or small process and find where you can reduce or completely eliminate waste.

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In Summary

The seven wastes or Muda is a key concept in Lean management.

  • Identifying the 7 types of waste will help you optimize resources and increase profitability.
  • It will also help you realize the exact parts of the work process where you can improve.
  • It will enable you to see if an activity is a necessary or pure waste.

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