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Elements and Performance Criteria

  1. Facilitate a company wide appreciation for the competitive systems and practices strategy

Required Skills

Required skills

Required skills include

analysing the competitive operational techniques being implemented in the organisation and the stage of implementation including identifying people related needs and issues

using formal problem solving procedures such as root cause analysis RCA

developing formal and informal communication procedures with others in work area team leaders and other employees relevant to competitive systems and practices

establishing processes for communication of organisation goals and KPIS especially in regards to standardisation elimination of waste and quality changes

establishing sources of assistance in the organisation for people experiencing difficulty with competitive systems and practices changes

interpreting procedures and instructions relevant to own expertise for others

establishing KPIs for own work

Required knowledge

Required knowledge includes

features and benefits of common competitive operational practices including

Just in Time JIT and kanban systems

preventative maintenance

S housekeeping

continuous improvement processes eg kaizen

waste muda elimination

formal problem solving procedures eg RCA

standardised work

operations and products of the organisation sufficient to understand employee responsibilities and skills and relevance to competitive systems and practices implementation

employee assistance mechanisms in the organisation

survey and other techniques to measure employee support and culture

principles of change management

Evidence Required

The evidence guide provides advice on assessment and must be read in conjunction with the performance criteria required skills and knowledge range statement and the Assessment Guidelines for the Training Package

Critical aspects for assessment and evidence required to demonstrate competency in this unit

A person who demonstrates competency in this unit must be able to provide evidence of the ability to

identify the competitive systems and practices used in the organisation

identify changes to work flowing from the implementation of the relevant competitive systems and practices

encourage monitoring of KPIs by employees for their own work

implement and monitor changes designed to improve team culture

establish and monitor employee culture key performance indicators

Context of and specific resources for assessment

Assessment of performance must be undertaken in a workplace using or implementing one or more competitive systems and practices

Access may be required to

workplace procedures and plans relevant to work area

specifications and documentation relating to planned currently being implemented or implemented changes to work processes and procedures relevant to the assessee

documentation and information in relation to production waste overheads and hazard controlmanagement

reports from supervisorsmanagers

case studies and scenarios to assess responses to contingencies

Method of assessment

A holistic approach should be taken to the assessment

Competence in this unit may be assessed by using a combination of the following to generate evidence

demonstration in the workplace

workplace projects

suitable simulation

case studiesscenarios particularly for assessment of contingencies improvement scenarios and so on

targeted questioning

reports from supervisors peers and colleagues thirdparty reports

portfolio of evidence

In all cases it is expected that practical assessment will be combined with targeted questioning to assess underpinning knowledge

Where applicable reasonable adjustment must be made to work environments and training situations to accommodate ethnicity age gender demographics and disability

Guidance information for assessment

Assessment processes and techniques must be culturally appropriate and appropriate to the oracy language and literacy capacity of the candidate and the work being performed


Range Statement

The range statement relates to the unit of competency as a whole. It allows for different work environments and situations that may affect performance. Bold italicised wording, if used in the performance criteria, is detailed below. Essential operating conditions that may be present with training and assessment (depending on the work situation, needs of the candidate, accessibility of the item, and local industry and regional contexts) may also be included.

Competitive systems and practices

Competitive systems and practices may include, but are not limited to:

lean operations

agile operations

preventative and predictive maintenance approaches

monitoring and data gathering systems, such as Systems Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) software, Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems, Materials Resource Planning (MRP) and proprietary systems

statistical process control systems, including six sigma and three sigma

JIT, kanban and other pull-related operations control systems

supply, value, and demand chain monitoring and analysis

5S

continuous improvement (kaizen)

breakthrough improvement (kaizen blitz)

cause/effect diagrams

overall equipment effectiveness (OEE)

takt time

process mapping

problem solving

run charts

standard procedures

current reality tree

Competitive systems and practices should be interpreted so as to take into account:

the stage of implementation of competitive systems and practices

the size of the enterprise

the work organisation, culture, regulatory environment and the industry sector

Systems approach

A systems approach enables persons to see how work gets done and effect of changes and shows the internal/external relationships through which products and services are produced and may include considerations of:

customer

supplier

value stream member

member of the public

other external individual, group or organisation

Mechanisms to measure current understanding and support for competitive systems and practices

Understanding and support for competitive systems and practices may be measured through a variety of qualitative and quantitative methods, including:

employee surveys

information from toolbox meetings and other employee consultations

monitoring of suggestion schemes

individual consultations with selected employees and employee representatives

Work structures

Work structures may include:

use of teams (e.g. self-directed and cross functional)