How to Conduct a Time and Motion Study

Thứ sáu - 26/04/2024 23:11
A time and motion study is used to analyze work efficiency through the observation and timing of tasks. It can help you see where your day could be more efficient, saving you time and energy, which everyone could use! You can perform one...
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A time and motion study is used to analyze work efficiency through the observation and timing of tasks. It can help you see where your day could be more efficient, saving you time and energy, which everyone could use! You can perform one on yourself or observe another person. First, you must decide what method you'll use from real-time observation to a sampling approach, and then you'll observe and time the task. After you've completed the study, you can use the data to create a more efficient work process.

Part 1
Part 1 of 3:

Choosing a Data Recording Method

  1. Step 1 Use work sampling if you have limited time to record.
    In this approach, you observe the person at certain times rather than continuously. The intervals can be regular or random. You observe the person for a given time, and then extrapolate from the samples how much time is spent on each task. This type works better on tasks that have fewer components or workers that do fewer tasks overall.[1]
    • For instance, if a person's main job is invoicing, random sampling can work because each time you check in, you get a snapshot of what the person is doing. Once you have all the data, you can figure out which task or component the person spends the most time on by looking at how often and how long it showed up in each random sample.
    • The benefit with this method is you can observe more than one person in a set time period by rotating through each person.
    • If you're using this method on yourself, set up an alarm to go off at certain intervals so you can record what you're doing for a set amount of time.
  2. Step 2 Observe the task in real time to be able to ask questions.
    In this approach, you are in the room with the person as they do the task. Observe what they do, breaking the task into smaller components as you record times. Each component should make sense as a whole without getting so detailed that you can't keep up.[2]
    • Timing a large task isn't helpful without looking at the components of each task. If you analyze the components, you can look for inefficiencies. You won't stop the person; you're just breaking down the task for recording purposes. For instance, if the task is checking the mail, the components would include walking to the mail area, finding the mail, taking it back to the desk, opening envelopes, reading the mail, and discarding or dealing with each letter.
    • It can help to have a group for observation. That way, you can have one person to work the stopwatch, 1 person to record times, and 1 person to make notes.
    • You can also use this approach on yourself. In that case, you'll be writing down each component as you do it.
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Part 2
Part 2 of 3:

Performing the Study

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Part 3
Part 3 of 3:

Analyzing the Results and Making Changes

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