





Dates:
Tulsa, OK
To be Announced
Time:
8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Location:
Tulsa
TU Campus
Fee: *
$1,595 per person
$1,395 each for three or more persons from the same company
Early
Online Registration (10 days before seminar)
$1,495 per person
*subject
to change for future programs

Download
the brochure in PDF format
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Analyzing and Improving Operations
Increasing Operational
Efficiency in Hard Times
Earn 1.4 CEUs
14 CPEs
Does any of this sound
familiar to you?
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Customers are complaining
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Staff is frustrated
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There’s finger pointing and
blaming between departments
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We circumvent procedures to
expedite work
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Quality, service, and
timeliness need improvement
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Costs are too high
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If you said “yes” then this
program is for you.
Everyone needs increased
efficiencies. We were already doing more with fewer people. But
with
the current marketplace, perhaps there has never been a time when maximizing
operations and eliminating waste has been more important. Analyzing and Improving
Operations can help you sort out the problems (people, systems, work
flow, and information), find the root cause, and develop a course of
action to eliminate the issue. The workshop not only focuses on the
big-picture perspective of systems and organizational structure, but
also will also delve into the specifics by analyzing workflow,
information, and job issues.
Choose from a variety of
improvement methodologies based on the type of problem and the
organization’s goals and constraints. Often, organizations are trained
in one problem solving approach and then use this approach on every
problem. In other words, “Now that we know how to use a hammer,
everything looks like a nail.” In this workshop you will be able to use
the correct methodology for specific problems, including: lean
manufacturing principles, basic six sigma techniques, business process
reengineering, organizational restructuring, continuous improvement,
workflow redesign, eight key problem classes, fast cycle time, and
creating cooperation between departments. By the end of the seminar, you
will know when and how to use each one.
As a part of this workshop,
you’ll bring one or more problems to class to analyze and then create an
improvement plan using the tools and methodologies presented.
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Testimonials:
“Great!
Everything I expected.
Lot’s of hands on and a very
good notebook.”
Doug Paynter, Plant Manager
Inland Telco
“Excellent seminar!
Great interaction!
The “war stories” as examples really help.”
Rob Dunn, Engineering Designer
Automated Systems
“The best training I have attended in years.
Great, no nonsense class! Very prepared and
knowledgeable instructor. Thanks!”
Fernando Pontes, Sr.
Procurement Analyst
Merck
“Everything was relevant!!The outline and design tools will help me
organize an action plan and review our progress."
Nick Nichols, Plant Manager Kronos Products, Inc
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Learn How To:
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Benchmark your operational improvement efforts against
the Malcolm Baldrige Award winners and take your organization to the
next level |
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Focus efforts where you can
make both high impact and immediate improvements |
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Evaluate and then partner with suppliers |
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Create breakthroughs visa vie your customers to help surpass the
competition |
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Use Activity Based Costing on processes to discover “true”
profitability |
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Uncover and then calculate your quality costs |
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Design elegant operational work flows using powerful design principles |
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Use basic Six Sigma tools to improve quality |
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Create a fast cycle time organization using lean techniques |
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Overcome the eight major barriers to operational improvement |
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Boost retention of your work force |
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Create higher levels of interdepartmental cooperation |
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Select the right measurement system that will build operational
excellence |
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Solve the most difficult operational problems through eight distinct
problem types |
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Get “buy-in” for your operational improvement effort |
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Understand the basics of organizational change and plan your change
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Compare your operational improvement effort against “best practices”
Click Here for a
Detailed Seminar Outline
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Who Should Attend:
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Operations directors and
managers;
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Finance directors and
managers;
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Plant managers;
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Manufacturing engineers and
production managers;
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Quality assurance engineers
and managers
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Instructor:
Shelley Sweet
is founder and principal of Intercept Management Consulting in Palo
Alto, CA. As a management consultant, she has worked with a variety of
public, non-profits, as well as corporate clients on strategic planning,
assessment, organizational efficiency and business process design. Her
clients range from the mega-corporations of Cisco Systems, Chevron, Bank
of America and Microsoft to the California Council on Economic and
Environmental Balance, Community Legal Services of San Jose, the Los
Angeles Unified School District and the USC, Los Angeles.
Prior to
founding her company in 1991, Shelley was Director of Management and
Employee Development for Saba, Marketing Director and Senior Consultant
for Omega Performance Corporation and VP of Corporate and Retail
Training at Bank of America, San Francisco.
Shelley
received a Bachelor of Economics degree from Wellesley College in
Massachusetts and a Masters in Management from John F. Kennedy
University in California. |