Posts Tagged ‘part flow’

Metal fabrication, a people business

March 12th, 2013
By: Tim Heston

In an upcoming print edition of The FABRICATOR, columnist Dick Kallage, principal at KDC & Associates, Barrington, Ill., asks this fundamental question: Why do customers buy from you? As Kallage explains, “the answer often revolves around soft, generalized terms, such as quality, precision, or service. Those are great attributes for use, but who told you that? Unless you know exactly why your customers choose your company, you cannot possibly improve in a focused, economical manner.”

Those are wise words. Kallage’s column focuses on company valuation. It delves into not just why customers buy from you, but why another company or investor would want to purchase a custom fabricator. As Kallage explained it, investors will pay more for a fabricator with new equipment, because they know they won’t have to update equipment during the near term. But they don’t view equipment as a key differentiator because--unless a shop uses proprietary, custom machinery--other fabricators can buy the same or similar machines.
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The metal fabricator and the iPhone

March 8th, 2011
By: Tim Heston

Immediately after listening to a presentation at The FABRICATOR’s Leadership Summit last week, a metal fabrication executive turned on his iPhone®, rose his eyebrows, and, smiling, showed me the screen. The iPad® 2 had been announced minutes earlier.

The moment couldn’t have been more appropriate. We had just finished listening to Mike Simpson, director of systems operations for the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Manufacturing Extension Partnership (MEP). He had just wrapped up his presentation on how innovation drives success. Judging how that business executive sitting next to me reacted to news of the next iPad, I think Apple has innovation down to a science.

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Pareto and the job shop

February 15th, 2011
By: Tim Heston

After 10 years and two recessions, Vilfredo Pareto’s principle has had a rocky history with the job shop. The Italian economist discovered that roughly 80 percent of the effects come from 20 percent of the causes. In business, this has come to mean that 20 percent of customers provide companies with 80 percent of sales.

For years the 80/20 rule has helped companies grow. Some job shop managers found that if they focused on that 20 percent of work orders that produced 80 percent of revenue, they could develop standard procedures and base lean manufacturing and other improvement initiatives on the work that drove so much revenue.

But the Great Recession revealed the 80/20 rule’s inherent danger. On the sales end, the rule may lead to limiting the number of customers and the industries they come from. A shop may have only several major customers from one or two industries, and it’s easy to understand why. Having a few major, reliable customers makes it easier to run and grow a business. A small number of customers limits the variety of work on the floor, which in turn makes it a little easier to standardize and drive manufacturing efficiency. For sales reps, a few large accounts also can be more profitable than going after numerous small orders.

The recession forced many job shop managers out of their comfort zones. To survive, they had to take on myriad small orders from various industries, each having different demands and expectations. When businesses closely tied to only a few sectors--like automotive--started stumbling, people questioned the nature of the Pareto Principle: For job shops, is the 80/20 rule good practice or just an unfortunate habit worth breaking?

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