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Value Stream Cheat Sheet

Agile Value Stream Crib Cheat Sheet

Value Stream Cheat Sheet
What is a Value Stream?
  • Definition: A value stream is the series of steps or activities an organization undertakes to deliver a product or service to the customer, from initial concept to delivery.

  • Goal: To maximize the value delivered to the customer while minimizing waste.


Types of Value Streams
  • Operational Value Stream: The steps involved in delivering products or services to customers (e.g., manufacturing, software delivery).

  • Development Value Stream: The processes used to develop new products or capabilities (e.g., research, design, development).


Key Components of a Value Stream
  • Customer: The end recipient of the product or service. The entire stream focuses on delivering value to them.

  • Value-Added Activities: Steps that directly contribute to creating or delivering a product/service that the customer is willing to pay for.

  • Non-Value-Added Activities (Waste): Actions that do not add value from the customer’s perspective, such as delays, rework, or excess inventory.


Value Stream Mapping (VSM)
  • Purpose: Visualizes the flow of materials and information through the value stream to identify bottlenecks and inefficiencies.

  • Steps to Create a Value Stream Map:Identify the product/service: Choose the specific value stream to map.
    Map current state: Outline the existing steps, including process times, delays, and information flow.
    Identify waste: Look for non-value-adding activities such as overproduction, waiting, or unnecessary movement.
    Create a future state map: Redesign the value stream to eliminate waste and optimize flow.
    Implement improvements: Use the future state map as a guide for process improvement.


Common Types of Waste (Lean 7 Wastes)
  • Overproduction: Producing more than needed.

  • Waiting: Idle time or delays between processes.

  • Transportation: Unnecessary movement of materials or information.

  • Overprocessing: Doing more work than necessary or redundant steps.

  • Inventory: Excess materials or products that aren't immediately needed.

  • Motion: Unnecessary movements of people.

  • Defects: Rework or corrections due to errors.


Benefits of Value Streams
  • Improves efficiency: Helps identify and eliminate wasteful activities.

  • Enhances customer satisfaction: Focuses on delivering more value to the customer.

  • Streamlines processes: Provides a clear view of how work flows, leading to better resource allocation.

  • Encourages continuous improvement: Enables organizations to make incremental improvements to the value stream over time.


Key Metrics for Value Streams
  • Lead Time: The total time it takes to deliver a product or service from start to finish.

  • Cycle Time: The time spent on actual value-added activities.

  • Work in Progress (WIP): The amount of work currently being processed.

  • Throughput: The rate at which the value stream delivers products or services.


When to Use Value Stream Mapping
  • Process inefficiencies: When there are bottlenecks, delays, or excessive waste.

  • Lean transformation: As part of a lean initiative to optimize processes.

  • Customer dissatisfaction: If customers are unhappy with delivery times, quality, or cost.


This cheat sheet provides a quick overview of value streams, helping you understand their importance and how to optimize them.


#Efficiency #ValueStream #LeanThinking #ProcessImprovement #ContinuousImprovement


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