Six Sigma
Six Sigma
Six Sigma
Project Scope In Scope: Review the work week and weekend the activity plans
What part of the and redefine routines as needed. Ad hoc activities and events
process will be (holidays, sales, etc.) to be discussed. An expenditure plan to be
addressed? built around these.
What are the Out of Scope: Changes to major fixed expenses (Rent,
boundaries of the insurances, etc.), we must focus on daily activities rather than
project or process? thinking of big moves or changes in the family lifestyle.
What areas are
inside or outside the
team’s focus or
authority?
Attach a SIPOC
diagram if
necessary
Team Member Name
Project Sponsor Mr Aung
Key Stakeholders Mr Htet
Team Lead Mr Zay
Team Members Mr Yan , Mr Myo , Mr Win , Mr Linn
Process Owner Mr Koti,
Other
Timeline by Project Milestone Target Completion Date
Stage
Define Project Charter and kickoff 1/1/2023
Measure Define and collect data 3/2/2023
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Analysis Find causes 1/3 /2023
Improve Fix causes 17/4/2023
Control Standardize the fix 20/5/2023
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Monthly Household Expense
Project Title Reduction
Timeliness
Meetings will begin promptly as scheduled
Data
We will rely on data to make decisions
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Monthly Household Expense
Project Title Reduction
The Voice of the Customer was used to understand the goals, expectations and limits of the
customer. The customer’s goal is to reduce expenses by 25%.
Customer meetings were held throughout this project to discuss results of the audits, and agree
to improvement plans.
Customers also agreed to monitor the continuation plan and implement an incentive plan for
positive results.
• Expense data for both family members will be recorded, both how much and when
• This project will document weekly and weekend expenses as well as ad hoc expenses
After looking at bank statements of the past 6 months and categorizing each transaction to better understand the type of charges being
made, a Pareto Chart was created to identify the main concepts where money was being spent:
Pareto:
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The types of expenses within the 80% are listed below:
Since major changes to fixed expenses are Out of Scope, the focus will be off Rent, Car
Insurance, and lunch for Member A, since this family member has lunch at the office diner
during the week and that behavior is not in scope.For the other main “culprits” in high expenses,
the interest is in analyzing the frequency with which:
Family members attend restaurants (and get average per week to estimate weekly
frequency)
Family members do shopping
Family members attend entertainment events (festivals, concerts, cinema, etc.)
Family members withdraw money, as this has been hard to track back to better
understand the type of expenses the money is ultimately spent on.
For these types of expense, the focus will be on decreasing the frequency of the activities to an
acceptable level that will both allow for family members to remain happy and engaged while
allowing for savings to be had.
The frequency of travel transactions, groceries, and lunch for member B will not be analyzed
since for these types of expenses the focus shouldn’t be on how many times an expense is made
but rather how much is being spent each time. For example, a family member might go to get
groceries on a weekly basis (4 times per month) and spend more on average than they would if
they went twice per week (provided they only buy what’s needed for those 3/4 days without
waste). The focus here is not on
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decreasing the amount of times the person visits the grocery store but on how much is being
spent and how to spend less (sales, ratio high end / cheaper products, etc.)
PROCESS MAPS
Working week
Weekends
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HYPOTHESES& STATISTICAL
ANALYSIS
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When getting the normal distribution for the information above, we’re interested in knowing in
the “As Is” process what is the probability of having the monthly expenses be
$5,000or less–because of the desire to reduce expenses by 30%. In excel, by applying the
formula NORM.DIST(5,000;7,034.89;1,418.68)we get an 8% chance that the monthly expenses
are $5,000 or less; this means that before improvement, there is a 92% chance of spending
$5,000 or more per month.
Looking at the 3 main expense categories that can be modified, the standard deviation is too
high (high margin of error) to be able to work directly with those numbers when creating the
hypotheses:
The data from the three tables above comes from bundling all available bank transactions per
category together.
Considering concepts with highest expenses, there seems to be a high variance in all categories.
Working with frequencies will make it easier to determine how many times per month the type
of expense is being currently incurred on and come up with a good
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number to decrease the frequency, which will in turn decrease the overall monthly expense for
that category.
Taking into consideration the data for Restaurants costs we get the
NORM.DIST(X,37.04,31.66,1)to find an appropriate Restaurant cost to use in our future
calculations. The way this amount is determined is through hypothesis.
The first hypothesis would be that if we select a restaurant cost there is a 90% chance that the
cost will be $40 or less.
We will look for a higher cost to use when estimating future expenses and will settle on
$70:NORM.DIST(70,37.04,31.66,1)= 85% which means that taking current costs there’s an
85% chance that a restaurant expense is $70 or less, this is an acceptable percentage and $70 will
be used as the number to estimate future costs instead of the mean.
The same procedure will be applied for shopping costs. The second hypothesis would be that if
we select shopping costs there is a 90% chance that the cost will be $60or less.
NORM.DIST(94,51.17,40.84,1)= 85% which means that taking current costs there’s an 85%
chance that a shopping expense is $94or less, this is an acceptable percentage and $94will be
used as the number to estimate future costs instead of the mean.
Applying this for entertainment costs. The third hypothesis would be that if we select
entertainment costs there is a 90% chance that the cost will be $60or less.
NORM.DIST(97,47.14,48.8,1)= 85% which means that taking current costs there’s an 85%
chance that a shopping expense is $97or less, this is an acceptable percentage and $97will be
used as the number to estimate future costs instead of the mean.
The focus should now shift to frequency, we should understand how often the three categories
are currently incurred on and how much they should be decreased to find a balance where the
customers are still satisfied with the amount of activities and events they attend but the overall
expenses decrease.
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From the table below,we see that in average there are 24 outings to restaurants per month, that
would mean 6 outings per week.
Similarly, shopping happens 15 times per month in average or 3.75 times per week. The family
attends 9.3 times per month in average to events (concerts, museums, cinema, etc.) which would
be 2.3 times per week approximately.
The table also shows the average per week based on monthly data rather than the discussed
averages above.
Table of frequencies per month and average times incurred per week:
IMPROVEMENT SELECTION
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Taking the information above into consideration the improvements below were selected, based
on the base of implementation and the return on investment. Improvements were also agreed to
by the customers.
Attend restaurants in a lesser frequency, decrease to 3times per week (Friday, Saturday,
Sunday). If we take into consideration the current data, we know with 85% certainty
that a bill in a restaurant will be $70 or less so:
3 days * 4 weeks = 12 restaurant bills per month * $70 or less = $840 or less This will
save at least $325.18 per month considering current average monthly expenses
Do shopping in a lesser frequency, decrease to 1timeper week. If we take into
consideration the current data, we know with 85% certainty that a shopping bill will be
$94or less so:
1day* 4 weeks = 4shopping bills per month * $94or less = $376or less
This will save at least $278.50per month considering current average monthly
expenses
Attend events in a lesser frequency, or focus on free events. Decrease paid events to
1timeper week. If we take into consideration the current data, we know with 85%
certainty that a bill will be $97or less so:
1day* 4 weeks = 4eventbills per month * $97 or less = $388or less
This will save at least $230.44per month considering current average monthly expenses
Groceries–Focus on spending only $70 per week, this will create savings of $100 per
month in average
Travel–In average, travel costs per month on the months in which the family travels
are $1,300. The main expense comes from flight tickets. In the following months
prefer short trips to closer destinations
CONTROL PLAN
Audit Restaurant, Entertainment, and Shopping expenses each week for 6 months and decrease
frequency of attendance depending on forecast for the month. Monthly communication to
customers with data taken from bank statement. Average daily / weekly usage should not
exceed that of the estimates in this project, “alarm” will be
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triggered once an expense has reached 80% of monthly capacity during weekly audits. Action to
be taken will be discussed with customers at weekend.
REFLECTION ON COURSE
Expect other high priority projects to disrupt efforts to complete projects Numerous other factors
such as one-off expenses and unexpected charges can alter a monthly budget Pareto style bar
charts and scatter diagrams with trend lines are effective for graphically displaying data Often times
it is hard to get enough information to create proper inferences for the measure and analyze
phases. It’s important to properly brainstorm where the focus should be to ask for the appropriate
data or make sure that it can be obtained during future observations.