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Inventory turns training for anyone ... anywhere ...anytime.
It is futile for manufacturers to try to reform their
operations without the strong managed supply chain. To create technology
intensive products --- and what product isn't these days --- U.S.
manufacturers spend on the average, 65 cents of each sales dollar
purchasing production materials and outsourced activities/processes. At
the same time, JIT assembly operations require perfect quality and timing
at the receiving dock. Parts have to get better and
cheaper.
Increasingly fragmented markets demand more flexible manufacturing, which
means, in turn, key suppliers who can stand and deliver under enormous
pressure, change over quickly to new product programs, or master new
technologies to make --- even help design --- robust components. Indeed,
corporate product design teams, whose lead times are shrinking fast, need
all the help they can get --- especially the subtle suggestions for
improving a product that only the people who manufacture its subassemblies
and
components can provide.
Inventory turns training for anyone ... anywhere ...anytime.
Supply chain management is thus no longer a task for old-style purchasing
managers. Strategic manufacturing is becoming a partnership between the
companies that preside over design, assembly, and marketing of finished
products, and fewer, smarter suppliers --- often single-sourced suppliers.
Getting this partnership going, and keeping it competitive, is no easy
feat. It may be the single most important task of the people who run the
manufacturing organization. How should they approach it?
The first point, which is obvious but important, is that the cheapest
component is, in the long run, not necessarily the least expensive. Once
the cost of poor quality is factored in --- downtime on the line, rework,
scrap, warrant work, legal fees, and so on --- the cheapest may well be
the most
costly. Managing the supply chain means aiming for the lowest "total
cost," the lowest cost when all is said and done, not the lowest
initial price per unit. Because poor quality is so expensive, buyers have
to use more care in
selecting suppliers than ever before; they must learn more about suppliers
than they ever cared to know before. They need to engage in careful
research and mutually beneficial relations with key suppliers, not
counterproductive tests of strength.
Inventory turns training for anyone ... anywhere ...anytime.
Another, less obvious point … purchasing managers have long advocated
the award of two or more contracts for the supply of critical materials.
Presumably, competition drives prices down and insures on-time deliveries,
and, besides, does a company dare put a whole production line at the mercy
of a supplier? This is anachronistic thinking. When capacity permits,
manufacturers are better off with single- source key suppliers. A
carefully selected and managed supplier offers the greatest guarantee of
consistently high quality and on-time deliveries. Suppliers who feel part
of the family permit manufacturers to subject them to rigorous inspection,
certification, and education.
There are six questions that will determine whether a company will achieve
dramatic results from a supply chain management program.
- Is the company
sensibly organized to select and manage key suppliers?
When selecting key suppliers, progressive
companies delegate this responsibility to a multifunctional team …
lead by a purchasing specialist that has relevant technical, process
and management experience.
- Are key suppliers
provided stabilized procurement schedules?
Sending a supplier the "take action"
print outs from an MRP or ERP system is a sure way of confusing and
destroying key supplier relationships. Successful companies place a
qualified planner in between the computer and supplier scheduling to
assure that requirement schedules are realistic and stabilized.
- Does the design
process team include key suppliers?
One hears a great deal about designing for
manufacturability. But where design engineers ignore the manufacturing
and technological capabilities of key suppliers, problems with
quality, configuration, and cost are the inevitable result. Key
suppliers should participate in paper reviews, value engineering, and
in prototype, failure and stress analysis.
- Are key suppliers
addressing quality standards upfront?
Today manufacturers should expect key suppliers
to develop quality plans and an effective quality management system.
ISO 9001 certification is an expense that many key suppliers can least
afford but that does not prohibit them from becoming ISO 9000:2000
compliant. To learn more about ISO, click here: ISO
9001 Manual
- Are
suppliers earning a fair profit?
Smart manufacturers are quick to seek and
acknowledge key suppliers cost reduction improvements and to establish
a satisfactory distribution of relevant profits.
- Are supplier relationships
managed to ensure long-term growth in supplier skills?
Virtually all world-class manufacturers have
learned that supplier training and assistance pay handsome dividends.
Inventory turns training for anyone ... anywhere ...anytime.
Supply chain management, in the end, is based on interdependency and
respect. The supplier needs a responsible, steady customer for its
products and services. Manufacturing companies recognize that they need
key suppliers to help them provide their customers with the level of
quality, speed and flexibility they require.
Most attempts at implementing and managing a supply chain achieve limited
positive results? Why? Poor preparation … a company should have absolute
control over its internal operations before it plans and executes its
supply chain management program. If you're struggling with supply chain
management at your company, make sure that internal operations are under
control. Need help? Our tutorial, Kaizen Based Lean Manufacturing is an
excellent training aid for helping operations stabilize requirement
schedules, gain control over shop floor activities and eliminate
end-of-the-month scrambling.
Inventory turns training for anyone ... anywhere ...anytime. For
additional information, click here: Good Manufacturing
Practices
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