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October
30, 2006 Welcome, Are
you frustrated by shop and purchase order reschedules that create a
stressful "end-of-the-month" scramble? If this be the
case, chances are your manufacturing system is being driven by an
ERP/MRP computerized system. It’s
time to stop band aiding your computerized systems and start
focusing on visual controls and flow technology. If you need help in
kick starting your efforts, this week’s article. “Lean-Linear
Production” is a must read... to go there, just click on the below
link: http://bbasicsllc.com/MBBP103006.htm Have
a nice day, keep the faith, and stay connected. Bill
Gaw Lean-Linear Production The
MRP evolution took us down the road of computer sophistication. It
was to be the panacea for solving all manufacturing problems. Little
did we know that when we finally arrived at the final phase – ERP
– that we would still be facing daily part shortages, shop floor
disasters, and end-of-the-month chaos. WHAT
HAPPENED TO ALL THOSE PROMISES? MRP
at first look is not a complicated system. We input a master
schedule that uses bills of material, part lead times, and lot size
algorithms to calculate gross requirements. These requirements are
then balanced against the aggregate of on-hand inventory,
work-in-process and open purchase orders to determine coverage. The
MRP system then does a gross to net requirements explosion to
establish time phased net requirements. The resultant output is
notification to planners in the form of take actions to reschedule,
reorder or cancel shop and/or purchase orders.
If
we dig deeper into what is happening in the gross to net requirement
process, we discover that many calculations are made based on the
data and systems parameters supplied by production/buyer planners. Before
computers, these calculation were done by hand calculators but only
for high-cost/critical items. They were classified as A items. B and
C items were purchased on a min-max or two bin pull system. When the
computer came on the scene many planners got carried away and
started doing these gross to net calculations for all items on their
product bill of materials. In
reality, the computer is flawless in its ability to calculate the
gross to net requirements, however, the data supplied by the
planners is not. Consequently, results are subject to human error. THE
NERVOUS SYSTEM The
typical ERP/MRP system generates more take action exception messages
than planners can handle effectively; we call it a NERVOUS SYSTEM!
My experience is that most MRP exception message parameters report
far too many non-essential take actions. If your planners can't get
to all of their take actions in a timely manner, then it's time to
readjust the exception message parameters by replacing theoretical
parameters with practical know-how and common sense! For
a measure of ERP/MRP shortcomings, we need only to spend some time
in a manufacturing facility... especially during the last weeks of
the final financial quarter. In a typical company, we'll find that
converting the quarterly financial forecast into reality still
requires overtime, internal/ external expediting, last minute
on-the-run product changes and even a little smoke and mirrors. Results
are scrap, rework and warranty costs that negatively impact
profitability. In addition, relevant quality and shipment problems
deliver less than acceptable customer satisfaction. Companies that
have spent thousands of dollars in pursuing ERP/MRP and ISO-9000
certification are distressed when they experience their business
decline due to uncontrolled operating costs that caused
non-competitive pricing. Other
companies have won the Malcolm Baldrige Award for Quality and
Business Excellence and subsequently fell far short of achieving
growth and earnings expectations. MANUFACTURING
METHODOLOGIES Today,
most manufacturing companies are still organized for functional
manufacturing... mechanical assemblies, electronic boards, cables,
machined components and purchased parts are produced or purchased in
LOT SIZES and received, inspected and moved to stockrooms. This
methodology includes the picking-of-parts to fill shop orders kits
and the movements of them to the production area to build, inspect
and returned sub-assemblies to the stockroom. Finally
the end product shop order kit is picked, moved to an assembly area,
assembled, inspected, tested and finally shipped to a customer.
Ollie Wight would be turning over in his grave if he knew that in
spite of his 1970s MRP crusade... the shop/purchase order
"launch and expedite syndrome" is still alive and kicking.
Why? Because the realities of information integrity and statistical
probability reduce the effectiveness of all MRP shop floor control
systems. No
matter how much sophistication is added to our computerized shop
floor control systems, if we fail to master the basics of flow
technology and visual controls, we will never eliminate the chaos
that grips our shop floor day-to- day activities! Changing factory
floor realities is an objective of Lean Manufacturing. TODAY’S
REALITIES We
need to shift from the order launch and expedite system to a system
of flow technology, I call it sequential production. We need to
convert stockrooms into production space and move the materials to
point of use, I call it Point-of-use-logistics.
It's time to eliminate the end-of-the-month crunch and focus
on linear production. We need to design our manufacturing system to
be flexible and agile so that we can contend with inside-of-lead-
time orders. The
realities of today find most manufacturers still bogged down
applying old computer systems for controlling shop floor operations.
To survive in the 21st century these companies will need to make the
transition from ERP/MRP to the hands-on methodology of "Lean
Manufacturing." CHANGE
IMPLEMENTATION What
can an individual do to affect positive change? I
have developed two products that can help you and your company
convert your MRP order "launch and expedite" system into a
lean-linear manufacturing success. The first is my training package,
"Kaizen Based Lean Manufacturing." This training package
presents 8-Basics Of lean manufacturing that when mastered produce
results beyond all expectations. You
can review it by clicking on the below link: http://bbasicsllc.com/kblm-ar.htm The
second product is "ShowTime!" This is a must have
manufacturing simulation game that demonstrates the pros and cons of
MRP vs. lean-linear manufacturing. "ShowTime"
is like no other training product. Its participative,
"hands-on," factory simulation exercises clearly
demonstrate the shop floor problems created by ERP/MRP "order
launch and expedite" systems and what you can and must do to
eliminate them. ShowTime is an educational tool for transforming MRP
supporters into lean-linear manufacturing champions. You
can review "ShowTime" by clicking on the below link: http://bbasicsllc.com/manufacturing-simulations.htm Remember,
if you continue to work the same way, you're going to get the same
results. You and I know that if you've read this far, you're
seriously interested in bringing sanity to your day-to-day work
environment and helping yourself and your company achieve their full
growth and earning potentials. So just do it! Visit the two Web
pages referenced above and decide if my products are right for you
and your company. Thanks
for staying the course, keep the faith, and stay connected. Print and Share You are welcomed to
print and share this bulletin with your peers, business team members,
and upper management... better yet, have them signup for their own
copy at: Education
and training that you'll not find in the books Business
Basics, LLC Lean
Six Sigma Training Good
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