FAST Creativity & Innovation
eBook - ePub

FAST Creativity & Innovation

Rapidly Improving Processes, Product Development and Solving Complex Problems

  1. 280 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

FAST Creativity & Innovation

Rapidly Improving Processes, Product Development and Solving Complex Problems

About this book

FAST Creativity & Innovation is a landmark work authored by the creator of the method called Function Analysis Systems Technique (FAST) and pioneer of value engineering and value analysis. FAST is a powerful mapping technique that can graphically model goals, objectives, strategies, plans, systems, projects, products, processes, and procedures in function terms to identify function dependencies by organizing them into a cause and effect relationship. This technique quickly brings clarity to whatever situation or problem it is applied and greatly enhances productive thinking, creativity, innovation, and complex problem solving. Some of the basic concepts of FAST have been used for several decades in value engineering, which focuses on decreasing costs, improving quality and increasing value and profits. Derivatives of this original method such as fishbone diagrams, theory of constraints and process mapping came into use in fields such as quality management, new product development, manufacturing, and supply chain and project management. However, despite these developments, many of the original FAST concepts were either overlooked or misunderstood as greater opportunities for success remained untapped. FAST Creativity & Innovation groups all the original concepts together in great detail so you can learn them using easily understood step-by-step examples developed by the creator of this method. The creator and author, Charles Bytheway, presents a procedure that standardizes the method for creating FAST diagrams and function trees for rapidly improving processes, innovation, new product development and value engineering, and for effectively solving a wide variety of complex problems quickly. After reading this book you will have gained not only the basic skills of using this method, but the original insight of its developer for mastering its use in any environment. This guide is an outstanding tool for use in industry, a variety of college courses and for value engineers.

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Information

Year
2007
Print ISBN
9781932159660
eBook ISBN
9781604276398
Edition
1

INTRODUCTION


Creative people look for opportunities to extend their imagination into areas where others have made assumptions or areas others have not considered or ventured into. Dr. Albert Einstein has been termed a conceptual inventor or genius. He said, “Imagination is more important than knowledge.” He found that by exercising his imagination, he could extend his imagination into unknown areas. I believe that you too can venture into new creative areas if you apply the principles of creativity presented in this book.
UTILIZING ONE’S IMAGINATION
The creating of ideas or utilizing one’s imagination is no longer the secret of just a few educated and successful men and women. It is available to you, and history proves it. A boy who worked in a meat market and sold candy, soda water, and magazines on a train in his spare time increased his ability to think up new ideas that brought success and fame. That boy was Thomas Edison. Great ideas have generally come from people who were working in unrelated fields of endeavor. Samuel F. Morse was a portrait painter; he invented the telegraph. The steamboat was invented by an artist, Robert Fulton. Eli Whitney, a schoolteacher, invented the cotton gin and was the first person to build parts that were interchangeable, which made clock making a thriving industry.
Their success was based on personal decisions to think more deeply about things they observed from day to day. We have a lot more things to observe than they did. How many times have you seen a new product come on the market and thought to yourself, “I could have come up with that idea if I had just taken the time to think about it.” Those opportunities are everywhere, just waiting for you to recognize them.
Earl Tupper is a more recent inventor. He took black polyethylene slag, a waste product from oil refineries, and made a tough, flexible, nonporous, nongreasy, and translucent plastic, known as Tupperware®. An inventor by the name of Chester F. Carlson invented xerography and electrophotography. He is said to be the man who started it all, which has made it possible to print more than 100 copies a minute, to record and transmit electrostatic images and recordings, etc.
Every person has some creative ability. You are creative if you do one thing different today than you did yesterday. If you do two creative things tomorrow and add an additional one each day, your capabilities will continue to increase. My FAST Creativity technique will teach you how to stimulate your creativity and increase your creative opportunities. FAST is the acronym for Function Analysis System Technique. The logic questions involved in this technique are self-stimulating. Each answer is used to formulate two new questions. Both of these new questions force thinking into higher levels of understanding and into other methods of performing the same task.
For example, this technique will allow you to expand a simple one-line statement into a volume of information within a short period of time. As the information comes rolling in, it will spark your creativity and new ideas will begin to flow within your head. You have to experience it to believe it.
QUESTIONS TO ASK
This book teaches you the basic elements of function analysis and how FAST Creativity can change your method of thinking. It will teach you what questions to ask when you are selecting a task. Then it teaches you the questions to ask yourself, such as why you should devote energy toward a given task. Additional questions bring new facts to your attention and allow you to logically organize them. The logic associated with these questions also will help you identify any information that is missing.
Ten stimulating questions are used to analyze any subject. These questions will expand and enhance your thinking into new levels of understanding as this technique organizes your thinking and the information you have collected. When this happens, your creative mind will begin to ponder and apply those same questions to the new information you have gathered, and additional new ideas will begin to flow.
This path to creativity reminds me of when our grandchildren were living with us. My grandson was always asking me “why” over and over again about everything. As soon as I gave him a simple answer, he would ask “why” again and again about something else. As he got older, he started to ask “how” do you do this and “how” do you do that, over and over again. You see, as he got older, he was able to completely understand the reason “why” I was doing something; he then wanted to know “how” to do it himself.
WHY-HOW LOGIC
This proven “Why-How Logic” also taught you when you were young, and it continues to teach you today if you will take the time to recognize it. This Why-How Logic is the heart and meat of this creative technique. Maturity and experience help all of us to think deeper in so many different areas when we ask the same proven “why” and “how” questions. These two questions bring together facts so you can logically connect them and also understand them. They stimulate your creativity so you feel better about yourself as you experience an increase in your level of thinking and satisfaction in your accomplishments.
Someone asked the vice president and director of research at General Motors, Charles F. Kettering, how it happened that General Motors was making most of the diesel-electric locomotives in the country. He said, “You must have awfully good patent protection.” Kettering replied: “Well, here’s the reason. You see, a great many people think we’re crazy. That is much better protection than any patent.”
Several years ago a research engineer told me he thought I was crazy when I was teaching him my creativity technique. A week later, he became so enthused about a new gyroscope concept that he spent his evenings developing it on his own time. My technique is so simple that it is hard to believe it works so well. Basically, all I do is ask “why” and “how” over and over again, just like I did when I was young. I named these questions the “Why-How Logic Questions.” I also ask several other thought-provoking questions that broaden my understanding and stimulate my creativity.
FAST AND TESTIMONIALS
After I discovered this technique, I gave a presentation on the subject in Boston, Massachusetts. During the presentation, I displayed a diagram to show the answers to the Why-How Logic Questions and demonstrated how the logic tied the answers together. I named this diagram a FAST Diagram. Most users just call my technique “FAST.” I have been overwhelmed by its acceptance. Here are two comments from the hundreds who have written me:
We are confident that, if we keep to the rules of your FAST approach, the answer we seek will be found.
—Leon M. Turner
Management Consultant
John P. Young & Associates
Hawthorne, Australia
The FAST Diagram clarifies a problem and pinpoints the area to apply creativity.
—Richard J. Park
Manager, Value Control
Chrysler Corporation
Detroit, Michigan
After I discovered that my technique works on any type of problem, I stated this fact in an article. A director for the state of Pennsylvania went looking for a solution to the state’s financial problems because the state was in bankruptcy or close to it at the time. After a little searching, he came upon my article, his staff applied my technique, and he wrote me the following:
FAST reduces the time for complex analysis…One diagram may be worth more than many times one thousand words. It can be understood and appreciated by almost anyone.
—Donald P. Goss, Director
Bureau of Systems Analysis
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
A staff member of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania wrote the following about the Why-How Logic Questions and FAST:
The process of answering the formula makes “creative planning” both inescapable and so easy that program managers may not realize how creative they really are. This formula changes the brainstorming list from almost to fully complete!…An invalid answer is almost automatically apparent even to a person not skilled in the management of the program being planned…One Pennsylvania agency produced an agency plan by another method which required 638 pages. FAST would produce a more comprehensive and meaningful plan using less than 50 pages!”*
I visited the Chrysler plant in Detroit, Michigan shortly after it started to use my FAST technique. I was informed that the plant had been so successful using it that the company introduced it into its Canadian operations and was in the process of extending it to its England operations. The following was written to Sperry Univac’s (a division of the Sperry Rand Corporation) division manager in Salt Lake City:
We feel that there is no question that the results produced would have never been accomplished without the use of the FAST Diagram to stimulate and organize our thinking and to pinpoint the specific area for improvement.
—H.T. Hearon, Comptroller
Chrysler Corporation
A COMMUNICATION TOOL
An example of the effectiveness of FAST was given by Jerry Kaufman of Houston, Texas, and I quote:
I have used FAST to improve an orthopedic procedure replacing a knee joint for the producer of prosthesis. The closing comment was that “this is the first time the medical doctors and engineers were able to communicate on the same level.”
BASIC CONCEPTS
Some of the basic concepts of my FAST Creativity technique have been used throughout the world by hundreds of people who have achieved unbelievable success. As I have reviewed how these people are applying my technique, I realize that some of my original concepts have not been fully explained or understood; therefore, I will cover those concepts in greater detail in this book. You have the opportunity to learn them first. This book groups all my concepts together so you can learn them firsthand as you follow a variety of examples step by step.

* Article supplied by John S. Hollar, Cost Reduction Program Supervisor, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Harrisburg.

This book has free material available for download from the
Web Added Value™ Resource Center at www.jrosspub.com

SPARKED BY FUNCTION


In 1960 I experienced a new way of thinking. I learned about this new way of thinking when I was assigned to conduct the first value engineering seminar within the Sperry Rand Corporation. Shortly after receiving this assignment, I enrolled in the first value engineering class ever taught at a university, at the University of California at Los Angeles. This was a workshop class designed to teach a technique developed ...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Read the Reviews
  3. Title
  4. Copyright
  5. Table of Contents
  6. Foreword by Richard J. Park
  7. Foreword by Martin Hyatt
  8. About the Author
  9. Acknowledgments
  10. Web Added Value™
  11. 1 Introduction
  12. 2 Sparked by Function
  13. 3 Discovering Functions
  14. 4 Why-How Logic
  15. 5 Selecting a Project
  16. 6 Participants
  17. 7 Intuitive Logic
  18. 8 Project 1: Lightbulb
  19. 9 Project 2: Timing Device
  20. 10 Project 3: Love
  21. 11 Project 4: Three-Ton Heat Pump*
  22. 12 Project 5: Military Communication Device*
  23. 13 Generalizing and Undisclosing Methods
  24. 14 Other Applications of FAST
  25. 15 Summary of FAST Procedure
  26. Appendix A: Constructing FAST Diagrams
  27. Appendix B: Glossary of FAST Terms and Thought-Provoking Questions