Just in Time
Meaning
A manufacturing/delivery process where a minimum of goods is kept in stock. Items are planned to arrive precisely at the time they are required for use or dispatch.
Origin
Just In Time, or JIT, was coined to name and describe a manufacturing process developed by Toyota in Japan in the 1950s and which spread to the US and UK in the 1970s. Nevertheless, the credit for the initiative should go to Henry Ford. He described essentially the same process, although it wasn’t then named, in his autobiography My Life and Work, 1922:
“We have found in buying materials that it is not worthwhile to buy for other than immediate needs. We buy only enough to fit into the plan of production, taking into consideration the state of transportation at the time. If transportation were perfect and an even flow of materials could be assured, it would not be necessary to carry any stock whatsoever. The carloads of raw materials would arrive on schedule and in the planned order and amounts, and go from the railway cars into production. That would save a great deal of money, for it would give a very rapid turnover and thus decrease the amount of money tied up in materials.”