A recent headline in the daily SME Executive e-newsletter proclaims “Some Companies Moving Manufacturing Jobs Back To America”. The story lead continues: “A small but growing band of US manufacturers - including giants such as General Electric, NCR and Caterpillar- are turning the seemingly inexorable off-shoring movement on its head, bringing some production to the US from far-flung locations such as China.”
This development is a good illustration of several key points of supply chain management. Above all else, supply chains must be flexible and agile. As conditions change, the supply chain must adapt ... and conditions certainly have changed. Labor costs in China as rising rapidly. Quality issues have come to the forefront recently. Shipping costs change rapidly and dramatically, and companies are ever more aware of the importance of lead time and inventory buffers required to accommodate longer lead times. That also points to another key supply chain consideration – risk.
Supply chain risk is the recognition that all elements of the supply chain are subject to disruption from any number of causes – natural disasters, labor unrest, political upheaval, pricing changes, and many more. The well-designed supply chain is built around certain assumptions that reflect current conditions. Savvy supply chain managers will anticipate all the ways those conditions might change and prepare contingency plans in case they do (change). Then, when the worst case presents itself, the company already knows what to do and can quickly execute on the contingency plans to keep the supply chain moving.
The reversal of the off-shoring trend is indeed good news for America and American manufacturing. So far, the manufacturing sector has been leading the country out of this recession and this trend promises to help continue that happy development.
Showing posts with label Manufacturing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Manufacturing. Show all posts
Friday, August 6, 2010
Thursday, July 22, 2010
Education is Key to Resource Management
To a great extent, business success is a result of effective management of operations and resources. That is the focus of APICS — the association for operations management — an international organization with more than 40,000 members.
APICS is focused on education and professional development. Offering certifications in production and inventory management for manufacturing and distribution specialists and supply chain management (Certified Supply Chain Professional) which is valuable to professionals in fields as diverse as health care, retail, insurance, services, and logistics, APICS is dedicated to helping members and their companies better manage operations and get the most from all resources — people, equipment and facilities, materials, funds and trading partners.
APICS chapters throughout the world offer a professional development meeting that consists of either a presentation on an operations management topic or a plant tour. Recent topics in our local chapter include lean operations and six sigma quality, "green" energy management, capacity management, and the logistics infrastructure in China, among others.
The group also tours local plants and discusses the products, markets, and operations. At each of these companies, members are usually given a tour of the production areas and warehouses, learn about the company business and operations, and discuss their challenges and successes.
As an education-oriented association, APICS also offers classes on a wide range of operations management topics. There are programs leading to certification for individuals and others focused on operational improvements such as lean manufacturing and global sourcing. CPIM certification classes are offered through local chapters and colleges, and all classes and workshops are available on-site at host companies in the area, and at public scheduled sessions.
APICS members come from plant and warehouse operations, procurement, customer service, general management, logistics, information technology, and other business areas. The association publishes a magazine for members and offers a weekly newsletter to all (members and non-members) highlighting operations management issues in the news. For more information and to sign up for the newsletter, visit www.apics.org Many local chapters also publish newsletters with local activity schedules and items of interest.
APICS offers business professionals the opportunity to learn best practices in operations and resource management, enhance job performance and career advancement through education and certification programs, and helps companies advance productivity, innovation and competitive success.
Dave Turbide, CFPIM, CMfgE, CIRM, CSCP, is president of the Granite State chapter of APICS and vice president for education. More information can be found at www.daveturbide.com.
APICS is focused on education and professional development. Offering certifications in production and inventory management for manufacturing and distribution specialists and supply chain management (Certified Supply Chain Professional) which is valuable to professionals in fields as diverse as health care, retail, insurance, services, and logistics, APICS is dedicated to helping members and their companies better manage operations and get the most from all resources — people, equipment and facilities, materials, funds and trading partners.
APICS chapters throughout the world offer a professional development meeting that consists of either a presentation on an operations management topic or a plant tour. Recent topics in our local chapter include lean operations and six sigma quality, "green" energy management, capacity management, and the logistics infrastructure in China, among others.
The group also tours local plants and discusses the products, markets, and operations. At each of these companies, members are usually given a tour of the production areas and warehouses, learn about the company business and operations, and discuss their challenges and successes.
As an education-oriented association, APICS also offers classes on a wide range of operations management topics. There are programs leading to certification for individuals and others focused on operational improvements such as lean manufacturing and global sourcing. CPIM certification classes are offered through local chapters and colleges, and all classes and workshops are available on-site at host companies in the area, and at public scheduled sessions.
APICS members come from plant and warehouse operations, procurement, customer service, general management, logistics, information technology, and other business areas. The association publishes a magazine for members and offers a weekly newsletter to all (members and non-members) highlighting operations management issues in the news. For more information and to sign up for the newsletter, visit www.apics.org Many local chapters also publish newsletters with local activity schedules and items of interest.
APICS offers business professionals the opportunity to learn best practices in operations and resource management, enhance job performance and career advancement through education and certification programs, and helps companies advance productivity, innovation and competitive success.
Dave Turbide, CFPIM, CMfgE, CIRM, CSCP, is president of the Granite State chapter of APICS and vice president for education. More information can be found at www.daveturbide.com.
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Product Design Should Consider the Life – and End of Life
The last two articles I’ve written for the APICS magazine “Enterprise Insights” department (to be published in the January/February 2010 and March/April 2010 issues), deal with “green” and “sustainability”. In the second one, I wrote about designing a product with its end-of-life in mind – reuse, reprocessing, recycling, and responsible disposal. Coincidentally, the following item appeared in the SME Daily Executive Briefing on December 29, 2009:
Considering "End Of Life" Issues For Electronics Could Benefit Manufacturers.
The Chicago Tribune (12/28, Hopkins) reported on "Harrison Kim, an assistant professor in the University of Illinois Department of Industrial and Enterprise Systems Engineering at Urbana-Champaign." Kim studied the lifecycles of electronic gadgets and the associated costs, "and found that the time to think about...'end of life' issues is before the small electronics are even designed." Specifically, Kim "analyzed how design differences affect product recovery and determined that manufacturers are losing money by not reusing components." Fewer than 5 percent of retired phones "are recycled or reused." Kim said, "These are profits currently neglected." One way manufacturers could benefit, he said, is by designing products that were modular. Such products would also "appeal to the environmentally-savvy consumer."
There are regulations in Europe – RoHS and WEEE – that govern the electronics industry with specific requirements for recycling and safe disposal. You can be sure that the same kind of regulation will be implemented in the U.S. in the foreseeable future and similar regulation will apply to other industries as well as electronics. Why not get ahead of the game and start thinking about end-of-life in products you are designing today? Chances are good that this effort will pay off in future compliance as well as enhancing your image with an increasingly “green” oriented customer base. Read more articles by Dave Turbide at www.daveturbide.com or click here
Considering "End Of Life" Issues For Electronics Could Benefit Manufacturers.
The Chicago Tribune (12/28, Hopkins) reported on "Harrison Kim, an assistant professor in the University of Illinois Department of Industrial and Enterprise Systems Engineering at Urbana-Champaign." Kim studied the lifecycles of electronic gadgets and the associated costs, "and found that the time to think about...'end of life' issues is before the small electronics are even designed." Specifically, Kim "analyzed how design differences affect product recovery and determined that manufacturers are losing money by not reusing components." Fewer than 5 percent of retired phones "are recycled or reused." Kim said, "These are profits currently neglected." One way manufacturers could benefit, he said, is by designing products that were modular. Such products would also "appeal to the environmentally-savvy consumer."
There are regulations in Europe – RoHS and WEEE – that govern the electronics industry with specific requirements for recycling and safe disposal. You can be sure that the same kind of regulation will be implemented in the U.S. in the foreseeable future and similar regulation will apply to other industries as well as electronics. Why not get ahead of the game and start thinking about end-of-life in products you are designing today? Chances are good that this effort will pay off in future compliance as well as enhancing your image with an increasingly “green” oriented customer base. Read more articles by Dave Turbide at www.daveturbide.com or click here
Friday, December 4, 2009
The Lean Supply Chain
We are used to talking about Lean in the context of Lean Manufacturing and the techniques that are used to achieve Lean within our own plant – things like 5-S, Poka-Yoke and Kaizen. But how does Lean extend beyond the plant?
Extending Lean makes logical sense. Once we trim our own operations, reduce lead time and improve responsiveness, the path to further improvement leads outside of our own doors to the suppliers, customers, warehouses, transportation providers, and other supporting entities. Those entities can help get materials to us sooner and more in line with our needs and they can help speed products through the distribution chain to the end customer.
Some aspects of Lean naturally extend beyond our own four walls. Kanban replenishment, for example, works best when the suppliers are linked in to receive and respond to replenishment triggers directly. In most cases, this involves a blanket purchase agreement and a mechanism to signal releases (electronic kanban) directly to the supplier. However, other techniques that support Lean within the plant are not easily moved out into the broader world.
It's important not to confuse the techniques with the philosophy. Lean is a focus on adding value and eliminating those activities that don't add value (waste). Lean principles can be applied far beyond the plant floor – throughout the enterprise in such areas as customer service, administration and engineering – and throughout the supply chain. But the specific techniques used within the plant may or may not apply, or may need major rethinking to generate the kinds of improvements that we might expect and demand.
Applying Lean principles to the supply chain means enlisting trading partners in our efforts to drive out waste – it's not something we do by ourselves. The path to Lean in the supply chain can be summed up as CO-CO-CO-Collaboration
CO-operate: Establish the kind of close relationship with trading partners that will foster real cooperation to drive waste out of all activities both internal to the partner's operation and ‘in the seams' where product and information move between organizations. There has to be a certain level of trust between partners to enable such cooperation
CO-mmunicate: Open communication is the key to close cooperation. Electronic kanban is one example of communication on an operational level, but there also must be communication on a management and process improvement level to open new doors to waste elimination.
CO-ordinate: Collaboration is most visible in coordinated activities – smooth hand-offs of data and materials supported by joint efforts to link information and activities to eliminate delays, errors, miscommunication, or surprises.
All this adds up to collaboration, which the dictionary defines as working together, especially in a joint effort. Lean transformation within the plant can pay big dividends but the benefits of extending Lean thinking through the supply chain can be huge. To find out more about Lean Manufacturing visit www.daveturbide.com
Extending Lean makes logical sense. Once we trim our own operations, reduce lead time and improve responsiveness, the path to further improvement leads outside of our own doors to the suppliers, customers, warehouses, transportation providers, and other supporting entities. Those entities can help get materials to us sooner and more in line with our needs and they can help speed products through the distribution chain to the end customer.
Some aspects of Lean naturally extend beyond our own four walls. Kanban replenishment, for example, works best when the suppliers are linked in to receive and respond to replenishment triggers directly. In most cases, this involves a blanket purchase agreement and a mechanism to signal releases (electronic kanban) directly to the supplier. However, other techniques that support Lean within the plant are not easily moved out into the broader world.
It's important not to confuse the techniques with the philosophy. Lean is a focus on adding value and eliminating those activities that don't add value (waste). Lean principles can be applied far beyond the plant floor – throughout the enterprise in such areas as customer service, administration and engineering – and throughout the supply chain. But the specific techniques used within the plant may or may not apply, or may need major rethinking to generate the kinds of improvements that we might expect and demand.
Applying Lean principles to the supply chain means enlisting trading partners in our efforts to drive out waste – it's not something we do by ourselves. The path to Lean in the supply chain can be summed up as CO-CO-CO-Collaboration
CO-operate: Establish the kind of close relationship with trading partners that will foster real cooperation to drive waste out of all activities both internal to the partner's operation and ‘in the seams' where product and information move between organizations. There has to be a certain level of trust between partners to enable such cooperation
CO-mmunicate: Open communication is the key to close cooperation. Electronic kanban is one example of communication on an operational level, but there also must be communication on a management and process improvement level to open new doors to waste elimination.
CO-ordinate: Collaboration is most visible in coordinated activities – smooth hand-offs of data and materials supported by joint efforts to link information and activities to eliminate delays, errors, miscommunication, or surprises.
All this adds up to collaboration, which the dictionary defines as working together, especially in a joint effort. Lean transformation within the plant can pay big dividends but the benefits of extending Lean thinking through the supply chain can be huge. To find out more about Lean Manufacturing visit www.daveturbide.com
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