TY - JOUR
T1 - A study on critical failure factors for implementation of sustainable Lean Six Sigma from Indian manufacturing industries perspective using BWM technique
AU - Kumar, Sandeep
AU - Kumar, Ravinder
AU - Phanden, Rakesh Kumar
AU - Kumar, Ajay
AU - Bala, Jagadeesh
AU - Bharath Kumar, S.
AU - Giri, Jayant
AU - Sathish, Rao U.
AU - Agrawal, Ashish
AU - Vishwanatha, H. M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024 Kumar, Kumar, Phanden, Kumar, Bala, Bharath Kumar, Giri, Sathish, Agrawal and Vishwanatha.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - The adoption of Lean Six Sigma has become increasingly widespread in manufacturing industries worldwide. It is a powerful methodology for optimizing operational efficiency and quality, leading to increased productivity, reduced costs, and higher customer satisfaction. However, implementing LSS effectively, especially in Indian manufacturing sectors striving for sustainability, presents significant challenges. In this paper, the authors have presented the critical factors that impede the successful integration of sustainable Lean Six Sigma practices within the Indian manufacturing landscape. Through a systematic review of existing literature and empirical studies, authors have identified the eighteen failure factors. To prioritize these factors, authors have employed the Best Worst Method (BWM), a decision-making tool that aids in ranking factors based on their importance and impact. It is a multi-criterion decision-making (MCDM) methodology to solve different types of fact-based decision–making problems. This method involves initially identifying the best (most important) and worst (least important) factors, followed by pairwise comparisons to determine their relative significance. Results depict that “Failure of leadership to inspire and motivate”, “Lack of well-defined framework for executing initiatives”, and “High implementation cost and poor estimation of cost” are three top-level critical failure factors.
AB - The adoption of Lean Six Sigma has become increasingly widespread in manufacturing industries worldwide. It is a powerful methodology for optimizing operational efficiency and quality, leading to increased productivity, reduced costs, and higher customer satisfaction. However, implementing LSS effectively, especially in Indian manufacturing sectors striving for sustainability, presents significant challenges. In this paper, the authors have presented the critical factors that impede the successful integration of sustainable Lean Six Sigma practices within the Indian manufacturing landscape. Through a systematic review of existing literature and empirical studies, authors have identified the eighteen failure factors. To prioritize these factors, authors have employed the Best Worst Method (BWM), a decision-making tool that aids in ranking factors based on their importance and impact. It is a multi-criterion decision-making (MCDM) methodology to solve different types of fact-based decision–making problems. This method involves initially identifying the best (most important) and worst (least important) factors, followed by pairwise comparisons to determine their relative significance. Results depict that “Failure of leadership to inspire and motivate”, “Lack of well-defined framework for executing initiatives”, and “High implementation cost and poor estimation of cost” are three top-level critical failure factors.
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U2 - 10.3389/fmech.2024.1451568
DO - 10.3389/fmech.2024.1451568
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85203365262
SN - 2297-3079
VL - 10
JO - Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering
JF - Frontiers in Mechanical Engineering
M1 - 1451568
ER -