Call For Nominees |
AME Manufacturing Excellence Award recognizes and honors North American manufacturing plants (or sites) that have demonstrated excellence in their operations. Download the Award Intent to Apply form and the Award Evaluation Criteria |
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Leadership
The stories in this section describe the strategies and tactics—and capture the elusive qualities—of effective leaders.
Click here to download full articleAccountability Board: A visual system for
tracking individual tasks
Flow Interrupter: Anything that interrupts the
flow of development
Learning Cycle: Short, focused development
bursts, usually 2 to 4 weeks in duration
Pace: The time it takes to complete
development tasks
Stage Gate: An approval step in a traditional
waterfall process that projects must pass
Set-based design: The technique to move
multiple design options forward in parallel, in
contrast to single-point design which carries
forward only a single solutionClick here to download full articleIn the future, economic and ecological survivability
will require businesses and the government to be
actively engaged in advancing lean and green principles
and best business practices. To meet these challenges
the public and private sectors’ lean and green advocates
are coming together to formulate the next generation of
values, principles, initiatives, businesses, and jobs.Click here to download full articleRon Harper, president of Cogent
Power based in Burlington, ON
(recipient of the AME Canadian
Region AME Excellence Award in
2009), shares learnings about
building effective leadership
Q: How does your organization’s lean transformation change
the requirements for effective senior leadership as well as leadership
at all levels in the organization?Click here to download full articleEven as manufacturers face daunting market shifts, dire environmental
predictions, increasing security qualms, and other challenges, we can
find inspiration and reasons to strive for “a better way.” In this issue,
you will encounter the spirited innovation and resourcefulness of AME’s 2009
North American Manufacturing Excellence Award overall winner — Automation
Engineering Corporation — and also learn about progress underway at all of
the 2009 AME regional excellence award recipients. Their shared understanding
is universal: Transformations of the past may have brought progress, yet
survival and success will depend on tomorrow’s continuing improvements and
adaptations.Click here to download full articleAt the AME board meeting on January 16, I announced my retirement
as your association president. My career as an operations practitioner
spanned over 35 years and I have also had the privilege of serving
as your president for the past five years.
I became a member of AME over 20 years












