
Value stream maps are usually drawn using standardized symbols…or that is what most people believe. While there are some symbols that are used pretty much universally, other elements have different symbols in different organizations or by different sources. Other identical symbols are used in a different way by different organizations. And, every day people seem to invent new symbols. In this post I will (try to) give an overview of what is out there, along with my opinion on what I use frequently and what I usually avoid.
The Symbols
Since the material and information flow is represented in symbols, we need different symbols to show the flow. A few of them are used almost universally across industry. However, many symbols have lots of variants and small differences that are either interpreted differently or not used at all in other organizations. I will try to give you an overview of the different symbols, with some (personal) preferences.
This list is also by no means complete. If you do VSM, you will sooner or later come to a point when it will be difficult to represent the VSM using the existing symbols. In this case, many organizations invent „new“ symbols. For the sake of clarity, I prefer to stick to common symbols and write a small note next to it. Symbols I use frequently have a white background. Less frequently used variants have a gray background. You can also download a PowerPoint file with an overview of VSM symbols for you to use, although I recommend doing it by hand on paper.
Processes
Inventories
Material Flow
Information Flow
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A symbol for a Kanban card. This is usually drawn on top of the information flow going back from a supermarket to a preceding process or transport. Technically speaking, a white card indicates only a production kanban, although I do not make this distinction. |
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Alternative MIFA symbol for a production kanban. |
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Symbol for a withdrawal kanban that does not start reproduction but merely takes the material out of a preceding inventory. I find this redundant, as the end point of a normal white kanban tells me where the material came from. Hence I skip the shading. Some companies also use different colors for production and withdrawal kanbans. |
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Alternative MIFA symbol for a withdrawal kanban. |
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Symbol for kanban arriving in batches. I usually do not use this symbol and prefer to use a single kanban and make a small note in or on top of it. |
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A triangle kanban, which is a special type of kanban system with only one kanban. Loosely similar to reordering points of Economic Ordering Quantity. I have rarely seen this used, and I don’t use it myself on VSM, although I find triangle kanbans in general quite useful. |
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Box for collecting kanban (Learning to See calls this a kanban post). It is usually near a supermarket and indicates that kanbans are collected and picked up only periodically. I have used it sometimes, but only when the information flow needed this detail. |
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Load leveling, or more generally, leveling. It is part of the information flow in a kanban loop. |
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Heijunka board, or leveling board. This is not part of the set in Learning to See, but rather in MIFA. Yet it fulfills a very similar function, although I rarely see it. |
| This arrow indicates a manual information flow. Can be combined with text on the type of information. | |
| This arrow indicates a digital information flow. However, I usually simply use the manual information flow for everything, unless it is critical that the flow is digital. |
Other Symbols
On the Symbols…
As you have seen, there are tons of different symbols. Often, there are different symbols for the same thing, depending on which organization you are in. Many of them are also a pain to draw (e.g., the push arrows or all of these truck symbols). At other times, you will find that these symbols are insufficient to express the details of your value stream and you are lacking some symbols that you need to describe your system.
While the above symbols look like a worldwide standard, they are not. I often find lots of gaps, redundancies (push arrow and unstructured inventory), and uncertainties on how to draw them exactly. Often my colleagues and I have different opinions, eventually coming to the conclusion that „both are possible.“ In any case, pretty much any value stream drawn needs to be understood only by the team that is working with the improvement. For everybody else, especially higher up, they are just eye candy.
Hence, feel free to adjust, skip, or modify the above symbols to fit your need. It’s not like primary school where Miss Krabappel grades you on your spelling. I usually stick to a basic set of symbols (the ones above that are not grayed out). I mostly skip or ignore the others, because I often don’t need them, don’t like them, and find that they can confuse others on the team.
I also often find the existing symbols lacking. Every now and then I come across a situation that I cannot represent to my satisfaction using the existing symbols. I urge you to resist inventing new symbols; we already have more than enough. If anything, write a small text on the document explaining what you want to do. Nevertheless, the set of symbols sometimes feels incomplete or inadequate. Am I the only one, or did you sometimes have this feeling too? Let me know.
Summary
These above are also only the tip of the iceberg. There are many other sets of symbols out there – for example, for flow diagrams and layouts, many of which are surely used somewhere in value stream maps.
This post is part of a small series on value stream mapping, with more posts on When to Do Value Stream Maps (and When Not!), Basics of Value Stream Maps, and Practical Tips for Value Stream Mapping.
In any case, the value stream map can be a great help with some problems but a burden if they are done without proper purpose. Do what is necessary, but don’t over-complicate the things to organize your industry!
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