The term Poka-Yoke (poh-kah yoh-keh) was coined in Japan during the 1960s by Shigeo Shingo, an industrial engineer at Toyota. Shingo also created and formalized Zero Quality Control – a combination of Poka-Yoke techniques to correct possible defects and source inspection to prevent defects.
Actually, the initial term was baka-yoke, meaning ‘fool-proofing’, but was later changed because of the term’s dishonorable and offensive connotation. Poka-Yoke means ‘mistake-proofing’ or more literally – avoiding (yokeru) inadvertent errors (poka).
Poka-Yoke ensures that the right conditions exist before a process step is executed, and thus preventing defects from occurring in the first place. Where this is not possible, Poka-Yoke performs a detective function, eliminating defects in the process as early as possible.
Poka-Yoke is any mechanism in a Lean manufacturing process that helps to avoid mistakes.
Its purpose is to eliminate product defects by preventing, correcting, or drawing attention to human errors as they occur.