Posts Tagged ‘Business Management’

It's a jungle out there

November 30th, 2012
By: Dan Davis

What makes a jungle a scary place? It's probably fear of what might happen—not so much of what has happened. Uncertainty feeds paranoia, and paranoia forces one to lose focus. Without focus, a person is more likely to find himself in a dangerous spot.

Upton Sinclair observed those dangers firsthand when he went undercover for several weeks in 1904 in the Chicago stockyards. The journalist observed the dangers that unskilled workers had to cope with every day, the sickness that was rampant among the workforce, and the abuse that was heaped upon the workers by greedy company management. Back then the workplace could be a deadly place for someone that didn't have his wits about him.

Sinclair's book The Jungle, published in 1906, brought these conditions to the attention of most Americans and eventually led to legislation that set federal standards for meat and food inspection. Sinclair actually wanted the book to generate more interest about worker safety and well-being—which didn't really happen until several years later. (more...)

FABTECH 2012: A reason for optimism

November 16th, 2012
By: Dan Davis

The year was 2008. FABTECH, North America's largest metal fabricating and forming technology tradeshow, was making its first visit to Las Vegas. The opening day of the event generated a lot of excitement because more visitors attended that first day than had ever attended a FABTECH opening day, which included the typically larger Chicago shows. Many attendees were uncertain about the economy cooling down, but plenty of others blamed such talk on the liberal media trying to sabotage the economy. Several weeks later, however, any enthusiasm soon faded; the U.S. economy seemingly fell off of the cliff.

The year is 2012. FABTECH returned to Las Vegas, Nov. 12-14. The opening day generated similar numbers as the show four years ago. Attendees still don't know how much their taxes will go up in 2013 or just how much the federal government's new health care mandate will cost them. Meanwhile, some attendees point the finger at the liberal media for not recognizing that the metal manufacturing sector is operating at near-full capacities. Business is good, but uncertainty remains high even after the presidential election. Can the Republican majority in the House of Representatives work with the Democratic majority in the Senate to provide a roadmap that helps the federal government avoid the huge mandatory budget cuts that are linked to the "fiscal cliff"?

It appears what is old is new again—much to everyone's frustration. But there is good news, and that is fueling quiet optimism among the metal fabricating community walking the floors of FABTECH 2012. Everyone is lean and means to grow the business. Everyone is waiting on the right moment to do it, however.

(more...)

Learning from other fabricators

March 9th, 2012
By: Dan Davis

Put two metal fabricators in the same room, and you might find a scene reminiscent of the Hatfields and McCoys. Those two individuals don't want anything to do with each other because one only wants to steal the other one's customers.

Thankfully, all metal fabricators don't feel that way. It's one of the reasons that The FABRICATOR's Leadership Summit has evolved into such a great learning experience for company leaders and managers in this industry. The metal fabricators in attendance aren't afraid to share winning strategies and difficult challenges with their counterparts from all over the U.S. because, more than likely, they aren't competing for the same customers and they actually can learn from the interchange. It's one of the reasons that some of these fabricators have formed formal groups—the Precision Sheet Metal User Groups (PSMUG), as the Fabricators & Manufacturers Association (FMA) has officially labeled these small groups. They know that they can learn the best lessons from others that may have been in similar situations. The FABRICATOR's Tim Heston covered the PSMUGs in December, and when reading it, you realize why those groups are so important. (more...)

The choice of reading about greatness

October 21st, 2011
By: Dan Davis

I once knew a gentleman in the metal fabricating business who said his favorite leisure-time activity was reading "business books." Wow. Nothing says "party" like a weekend with Blue Ocean Strategy or The Wisdom of Crowds.

Pardon me if I'm skeptical of such literary efforts. But I've met a bunch of people running metal fabricating businesses was don't have fancy degrees or the latest self-help book on their nightstands, and they do just fine. They know how to bend, cut, form, and join metal, and they run their businesses with an integrity that is often lost in the pursuit of "big hairy audacious goals" and "win-win strategies."

This comes to mind only after reading an excerpt of the latest book, Great By Choice, from management guru Jim Collins and his writing partner, Morten T. Hansen. You can read the excerpt here. (more...)

Skilled at what, exactly?

July 15th, 2011
By: Dan Davis

My recent note in the July 2011 edition of the "Fabricating Update" e-newsletter resulted in a nice exchange of e-mails with readers. I wrote about The FABRICATOR's 2011 What Keeps You up at Night? survey and noted that even with the overall concern about the economy, which also was the No. 1 concern among fabricators surveyed in 2009, metal fabricators still fret about the availability of skilled workers, the No. 2 concern.

Most of the e-mail contained comments about the current economy and the inability of elected officials to do the right thing. That can't surprise many people. However, one e-mail author asked a decent question: "You keeping saying there is a lack of skilled workers out there. What skills? Why don't you do your own survey to find out what skills companies are looking for?" That's a great point because "skilled labor" definitely can be defined many different ways.

Luckily, the Fabricators & Manufacturers Association's Nuts, Bolts & Thingamajigs Foundation conducted such a survey recently. The Manufacturing Job Skills Survey, completed at the end of 2010, revealed that every fabricator has a different take on just what skills need improving. (more...)

Automation: The key to cost control

June 17th, 2011
By: Dan Davis

Metal fabricators got a quick history lesson before technical presentations on automation at Mazak Optonics' open house event in Elgin, Ill., in mid-June. As with any look back, it gave everyone a better idea of what the road ahead may look like.

Historical fact: While millions of U.S. citizens used to be employed in agriculture at the turn of the 19th century, today only 1.9 percent of the working-age  population is needed to grow food for this country and the entire world. Lesson learned: Just because fewer people are farmers doesn't mean this country has no farming. The same scenario applies to manufacturing, which many people incorrectly assume is disappearing from the U.S. at an alarming rate.

Historical fact: Since 1987 factory output in the durable goods sector has risen 160 percent while employment decreased 20 percent. Lesson learned: Fewer people are needed to maintain record-high productivity in today's manufacturing facilities.

Historical fact: While the unemployment rate still hovers around 9 percent for the general population, it's about 16 percent for those without a high school diploma. Lesson learned: Manufacturing isn't absorbing these under-educated people because these companies need an educated workforce to operate sophisticated equipment.

(more...)

Sometimes it pays to listen to the new guy

June 10th, 2011
By: Dan Davis

I was chatting with Jeremy Riniker, a buyer/estimator/designer for Giese Manufacturing, Dubuque, Iowa, the other day for an upcoming story. I was giving him a hard time about his plethora of responsibilities, but he said the multitude of job duties keeps each day fresh and exciting, even if he doesn't know what to expect when he walks through the door each morning. (more...)

Party hearty or hardly party?

December 9th, 2010
By: Vicki Bell

Last week global outplacement and business coaching firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas reported the results of its 2010 Holiday Party Survey. The findings indicate that as a growing number of companies benefit from a slowly improving economy, there are indications that workplace holiday parties are starting to make a comeback. However, with the bitter taste of cost-cutting measures still fresh in employees' minds, some companies appear to be keeping festivities relatively subdued. (more...)

The new rules of inventory

September 3rd, 2010
By: Dan Davis

Dr. Chris Kuehl, the Fabricators & Manufacturers Association's economist, had this nugget of wisdom in his "Business Intelligence Brief" for Sept. 2: "The role of the manufacturing sector in this recession and subsequent recovery is going to be studied for a long time. Thus far the rules of economic rebound are consistently being broken, and it is not altogether clear what is going on. Then again, almost everything about this economic collapse has been a bit odd."

So the thinkers continue to think, and the metal fabricators of the world move forward, looking for ways to deliver products faster and always searching for more customers. They don't need to know the reasons for the slow recovery; they just need to know when the recovery will pick up steam. Unfortunately, no one knows the answer to that.

What do we know? Factory orders increased 0.1 percent in July, held down by declining orders for computers and machinery, according to the U.S. Commerce Department. The Purchasing Managers Index for the U.S. rose from 55.5 in July to 56.3 in August, which indicates expansion in the manufacturing sector. It's not a robust expansion, but manufacturing is doing more than its part to keep the economy from taking another dip.

Even with the creeping expansion, manufacturing companies aren't hiring. They are laying off fewer workers, which is sort of good news, according to those that work in air-conditioned offices and research these types of things.

Like the economists, manufacturers just don't know what they are dealing with. Metal fabricators that I have spoken with in recent weeks describe their shops as busier than last year, but they don't have any reason to believe it will continue. "Nothing's in the pipeline," many of them told me. That makes it hard to forecast a robust picture for the future.

Look closely and you'll see that perhaps we've entered the days when everyone is forced to operate lean, whether they want to or not. Simply put, no one wants inventory. With the chaotic nature of the economy, where the market is up one day and down the next, no company wants to get stuck with the cost associated with unwanted inventory.

If those companies don't want excess inventory, they aren't placing orders for new products until they absolutely have to. As a result, metal fabricators don't have as many orders in the pipeline. When the orders come, customers need the metal fabrications as soon as possible.

A sales representative for a machine tool company told me this week that his company had to wait eight weeks for a part for its bending machines that used to be available in a matter of days only three years ago. The lack of inventory can be a pain for the customer, but most will have to deal with it.

Luckily, many metal fabricators will be able to exploit the situation. They have invested in shop floor practices, capital equipment, and software that have allowed them to squeeze that time between receiving the order and delivering the parts, and these fabricators may be able to step up and meet the increased customer demands while others can't.

I believe the order pipeline eventually will fill again, but it may not be like the good ol' days. The pressure to deliver quality parts just-in-time may be a value-added service that some OEM customers never want to give up.

Fabricators saw the end of management before the gurus

August 26th, 2010
By: Dan Davis

Nothing gets the attention of a reader better than a headline that declares the death of something. For example, Wired's story "The Web Is Dead. Long Live the Internet" has generated all sorts of discussion as people debate whether apps, such as iTunes and Facebook, will continue to grow in popularity and generally replace search engines as the means to find information.  It's an interesting read, but hardly one that will make a difference to someone trying to turn around 500 metal assemblies for a morning delivery to an OEM customer.

This article, however, might be of interest to that metal fabricator. More than likely, The Wall Street Journal story "The End of Management" will verify something that the fabricator knew all along: Big bureaucracies don't cut it anymore.

(more...)