Yalın Üretim Teknikleri | Kaizen Tekniği
Bursa Coşkunöz Eğitim Vakfı - Education Foundation · 835 words · 4 min read · EN

Below is the complete, readable transcript of Yalın Üretim Teknikleri | Kaizen Tekniği by Bursa Coşkunöz Eğitim Vakfı - Education Foundation on YouTube. Read the full text, copy any part you need, or generate a transcript for any video with our free tool.
Hello, my name is Tamara, and I work in rose oil production. Today, I will tell you about a Japanese improvement technique that increases your awareness of improvements. After watching this video, you will learn what Kaize is and in what areas you can achieve it, along with Karenina matches. In the end, you too will be able to achieve Kaize. Let's
talk about why we need improvement. We live in a constantly evolving world, and when you look around, you will see that nothing remains the same, and it will continue to develop and change. At this point, we
will need a technique to improve our work and solve our problems, becoming part of the continuous improvement journey. This technique is called Kaize, which means " change the bad, make it better." In its literal meaning, it means continuous improvement. It is about making big changes with small steps, and it is also a problem-solving process. It is about
eliminating waste at every stage of the process. So, in what areas can we achieve it? Mu da Morimura immediately forms the basis of the arms. Mu da Mori means overload, here it means unbalanced workload, but it is not only waste; you can achieve it in many areas such as occupational safety, environmental health, ergonomics, and
productivity. You can make it slippery in all matters related to ease and similar issues, meaning that in Kayseri, it aims to reduce costs and errors by eliminating waste that does not create value, improve quality, save time and resources, and at the same time improve problem-solving ability and effective teamwork. I always try to explain the
difference between the improvements we are making and slippery with examples. Cleaning the floors with a mop, collecting and throwing away garbage, wiping windows and cleaning. Are these examples examples of slippery? No, they are not. Because they do not contain method or process improvement. In Kayseri, they are changes made to do something better, easier and faster. Now let's
Transcribe another video
Paste any YouTube, Instagram or TikTok link to get a free transcript.