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Articles on
Current Issues:
Material
Requirements Planning had been around since the mid-1970s and was
reaching its heyday, receiving a lot of hype. Computerization made it
possible to crunch through thousands of records in an effort to provide
a more effective way in managing materials. Materials and MIS managers
were embracing MRP, and championing its implementation to assist in
achieving primary objectives: improving customer service, inventory
investment, and plant operating efficiency. It would, according to the
proponents, help us plan priorities for the shop, determine when and
how much material to order. We
saw the vision of a system capable of helping us manage our
inventories: move materials through the plant, keep track of parts, so
that we would know....the status of a job,.... what parts were missing,
....when they would arrive,....what was on the shelf, etc. The emphasis
was on control, and our new system would provide the means. Little did
we know what we were in for.
A
Trojan Horse
A
Fundamental Weakness in our Plan
Today,
MRP horror stories are so common, this one seems like ancient history.
Article after article has been written on the merits of MRP, MRP vs.
JIT, etc. Certainly it's easier to review our experiences in hindsight,
and more difficult to anticipate while facing the unknown, but
hopefully we can learn from hard experiences. It took a long time for
us to realize how far off course we were. Instead of focusing in on the
real causes of our problems, we were guilty of treating the symptoms:
trying to control an unwieldy manufacturing organization.
It's
tough to reason a war when you're in the foxhole, and bullets are
flying over your head. But today we can look back and contemplate our
mistakes. The lesson that we learned is fairly simple in this
particular case: we were going all out to try and control an unwieldy
factory, a near impossible task. Said differently, automation cannot
compensate for decades of problems on the factory floor caused by
haphazard growth. It is just too difficult, and requires too much
effort to maintain it.
If
we step back and review what's happened over the last thirty to forty
years, we begin to realize that with few exceptions, our plants evolved
by placing machines and equipment wherever space could be found. Our
information systems developed into "islands", beginning with
accounting, inventory, purchasing, etc., with no overall master plan to
guide their interaction. We structured our people around functions,
placing them into classes, separated them by walls, and then tried to
manage this with MRP.
Most
companies that we interface with seldom get through more than 60% of
the MRP review reports weekly. Because the extensive amount of
variances aren't maintained, over time, the effect is usually a
build-up of unneeded materials, a consequential rise in inventory, and
continued daily anguish over missing parts. Deja
Vu
Further,
the same survey of manufacturing executives revealed that a surprising
number of computer systems implemented have no links to operating
profits. Most of the benefits that reportedly resulted from systems
implementation centered around control. However, ironically, the
largest share of those who reported successes with those results,
against their original expectations listed their barometers as "casual
observations." There's more. Respondents
reported a 30% overall (not just MRP) systems implementation failure
rate, a documented testimonial to the difficulty of implementing
manufacturing support systems. This wasn't a surprise, because of the
60-80% overall MRP failure rates reported in the past. So if
implementations are so risky, with little real impact on profits, why
continue to put blind faith and money into MRP? For control? GIVE ME A
BREAK!!! The
Score Card is In Because
of the tainted history, we seriously question the validity of any claim
to a net improvement to operating profit as a direct and sole result of
implementing an MRP system. Far too many of the inventory reductions
claimed to be a result of MRP could have been accomplished without the
expensive system. However, few materials and MIS managers are willing
to admit they've made multi-million dollar mistakes. The
irony is that companies are still managing themselves using old manual
techniques, while automated systems are are pouring out data in massive
volumes. We calculated that one company produced over 25 tons of unread
MRP reports annually. Another produced three pounds of paper for every
pound of production aircraft that left the runway. Regrouping
for an Offensive If
U.S. manufacturing is serious about regaining world market share in the
21st century, and we think it is, then our focus has to change, as well
as the manner that we have been attacking problems in bits and pieces
in search of a quick solution. We need to step back and refocus our
efforts more broadly on what it will take to be seriously competitive
in the next decade: the overall ability of the enterprise to respond
quickly to the needs of the market, in new product introduction, in
delivery, in quality, and in cost. Organizations
must be market driven, with focus on quickly satisfying the service
chain; that chain of events that occur from the time that a customer
inquires about an order, through complete satisfaction of the order:
distribution, assembly, manufacture, and supply. All of the physical
events must be enacted swiftly, accurately, and effectively. The faster
parts, information, and decisions flow through an organization, the
faster it can respond to customer orders. The keys are flow and time.
To
make our factories highly responsive to the demands of the market, they
must be streamlined: processes must be integrated, setups must be
reduced using a zero-based goal, and all production interruptions
eliminated. We must physically couple successive operations in the
chain of work, removing nonvalue adding functions, and inducing
velocity. As parts move quickly through the factory, the need to
accumulate inventories declines, and the easiest way to manage
inventories is to get rid of them. While
we have experienced a great amount of difficulty installing and
effectively using MRP, it provided us with a good tool: the integrated
manufacturing system, which uses the same sets of data, reducing
redundancy and duplication. Using this as the center of the information
base will take us a long way in organizing our information, making it
timely, and more accurate.
But
the flow of information must also be streamlined and electronically
linked, so that the flow is direct--without interruptions and
delays--eliminating queues. Business cycle times must be reduced to the
time it actually takes to efficiently process information, supporting
the quick movements of parts in the factory. Having
the ability to produce spontaneously upon demand requires an
organization that is quick and resourceful. It requires short lines of
communication, and velocity throughout the work chain. Every member
must be in tune with the overall needs of the market, and close enough
to one another to be spontaneous in helping each other support the
common mission: serving the customer. Team play is a basic necessity to
produce the type of results required to be competitive in the next
decade.
This
means we must restructure our organizations to induce effective and
fast communications through out the enterprise: removing vertical and
horizontal layers of bureaucracy in the organization chart, such that
our companies become lean and agile, and decision time swift. Physical
walls will have to come down. Our emphasis needs to be around the tasks
that need to be performed to quickly satisfy a customer need.
If we are going to win the economic war, we are going to have to stop treating symptoms and begin to attack causes. We will have to quit trying to find a quick solution with bits and pieces of changes that have little overall effect on the profitability of our enterprises. We are going to have to make broad, sweeping changes in the way we operate, focusing on quickly serving the demands of the market, and managing our factories with ease. Those
companies who successfully transform themselves to accomplish this will
be the winners and leaders: quick, resourceful, and agile. They are the
ones who will have regained lost world market share, and with them,
MRP, in turn, will seem like ancient history.
Author
Richard
G. Ligus is President of Rockford Consulting Group, Ltd., located in
Rockford, IL., with over 30 years experience in manufacturing,
procurement, transportation and distribution. He specializes in
developing and implementing manufacturing, distribution, and supply chain strategies. Rich is an author
and a speaker, and has developed seminars with the American Management
Association. He is certified by both the Institute of Management
Consultants and the The National Bureau of Certified Consultants. Rich
has a bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering from the New
Jersey Institute of Technology, and a master of business administration
degree from Rutgers University. He is a member of CASA/SME, and has
been listed in Jane's Who's Who in Aviation and Aerospace. He has been
a speaker at IMTS, USCTI, APFA, NEPMA, MCAA, Hand Tools Institute,
CASA/SME, and others. He has appeared several times on WREX-TV,
Mid-Morning Magazine. Rockford Consulting Group applies concepts and technologies as the situation
warrants, that will result in the ultimate benefit to our clients. We treat strategies, technologies, and methodologies as tools in a
toolchest, and use them when they offer practical solutions and achievable results. We believe that each client situation is unique,
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