Calculator

Enter the Kaizen before-and-after metrics

Core logic: Annualized savings = recurring savings x yearly run rate

Breakdown

Savings profile

Source Annual Savings Share
Time $91,000 48.9%

Portfolio

Portfolio dashboard

Projects Saved
0
Total Annual Savings
$0
Average ROI
0%
Average Payback
N/A
Project Annual Savings ROI Payback Sigma Shift
No saved Kaizens yet. Click Save To Portfolio after calculating.

Instructions

How to use this app

  1. Enter the project name, duration, implementation cost, and annual revenue basis.
  2. Fill in before-and-after time, defect, and inventory metrics along with the cost assumptions tied to each improvement stream.
  3. Click `Calculate impact` to return annualized savings, payback period, ROI, and sigma-shift equivalent.
  4. Use `Save To Portfolio` to add the current Kaizen to the local portfolio dashboard in this browser.
  5. Compare multiple saved Kaizens to see total savings, average ROI, and which projects are creating the biggest contribution.

The sigma-shift equivalent here is based on the improvement in defect rate converted to a long-term sigma estimate. It is a directional quality indicator, not a substitute for a full capability study.

Inventory savings are modeled as carrying-cost savings, not as immediate one-time cash recovery. If you want both views, add one-time cash impact separately in your business case.

What This Kaizen ROI Calculator Helps You Prove

This tool helps teams convert before-and-after improvement work into financial outcomes. It turns time savings, defect reduction, inventory reduction, and implementation cost into annualized savings, payback period, ROI, and a portfolio-level picture for multiple Kaizens.

Use it when improvement work is visible on the floor but still needs a stronger business case for leadership review or future project selection.

Core ROI Logic

Output Formula Meaning
Annualized savings Recurring monthly or periodic savings x yearly factor Standardized value of the improvement over a year.
Payback period Implementation cost / recurring savings rate How long it takes for the project to recover its cost.
ROI (Annual savings - project cost) / project cost Relative financial return on the Kaizen effort.

Worked Example

If a Kaizen reduces changeover time by 18 minutes per run across 400 runs per year, the saved capacity can be valued in labor and throughput terms. If the annualized savings total $48,000 and the implementation cost was $12,000, the payback is short and the ROI is substantial.

The calculator helps teams present that result clearly instead of relying on vague claims that the event “went well.”

How to Interpret the Results

Kaizen ROI Frequently Asked Questions

What counts as Kaizen savings?

Common categories include labor time, material loss, defect reduction, throughput gains, inventory reduction, and avoided downtime or warranty cost.

Should soft savings be included?

They can be tracked, but they should be labeled clearly. Decision quality improves when hard and soft savings are not blended carelessly.

Why does sustainment matter so much?

Because a one-time gain that erodes in two months is not the same as a stable process improvement that survives normal operating pressure.

What is the most common ROI mistake?

Annualizing savings without validating that the improved method was actually sustained or repeatable at real production volume.

Can Kaizen ROI be used across multiple projects?

Yes. A portfolio view helps leadership see cumulative improvement value rather than reviewing each event in isolation.

Related Templates and Guides

Download the PDCA Workbook

Use PDCA structure to hold the problem statement, pilot evidence, and standardization work behind the savings claim.

Read the Kaizen Guide

Use the guide for the broader philosophy, event discipline, and culture logic that turns one project into repeatable improvement behavior.