A newly published 5S guide lays out a practical, step-by-step way for woodshops to cut search time, reduce clutter, and improve day-to-day flow using simple visual organization.
What we know
- The guide defines 5S as five steps: Seiri (sort), Seiton (straighten), Seiso (scrub), Seiketsu (standardize), and Shitsuke (sustain).
- It describes 5S as a foundation of Lean, aiming to make waste visible by creating an organized, efficient work environment.
- It emphasizes benefits that translate directly to shops: reduced search time, easier access to materials, improved safety and ergonomics, and more consistent work areas.
Why it matters for shops
- Most workflow slowdowns in a small shop come from preventable friction: hunting for tools, moving material twice, or working around clutter. 5S targets those issues without requiring new machines.
- Visual standards (labels, shadow boards, floor markings, set locations) help keep shop organization consistent across different people, shifts, or project types.
What to do now
- Run a 30-minute “Sort” sweep in one zone only (cutting, assembly, or sanding). Tag anything that does not belong and move it out of the work area.
- “Straighten” the same zone by assigning fixed homes for the top 10 most-used items (based on frequency), then mark locations clearly for fast resets.
- Write one simple standard for end-of-day reset and post it. Keep it visual and specific, then repeat weekly so the workflow tips actually stick.
Related topic: shop layout and lean manufacturing.
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