OPTIMIZING PRODUCTION



Similar documents
Manufacturing. Manufacturing challenges of today and how. Navision Axapta solves them- In the current explosive economy, many

Sage 200 Manufacturing Datasheet

revenue growth MANUFACTURING KNOW HOW 4 STEPS TO IMPROVE your business CRITICAL QUESTIONS to ask yourself LEARN FROM best in class manufacturers

How To Improve The Supply Chain

Lean manufacturing in the age of the Industrial Internet

Making Every Project Business a Best-Run Business

Datasheet Electronic Kanban Ultriva vs. ERP ekanban Modules By Narayan Laksham

BEST PRACTICES IN DEMAND AND INVENTORY PLANNING

UXC Eclipse + Microsoft Dynamics NAV for Life Sciences

Understanding Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES)

Choosing Planning & Scheduling solutions for Metals

Fleet Optimization with IBM Maximo for Transportation

Five Tips to Achieve a Lean Manufacturing Business

Business Challenges. Customer retention and new customer acquisition (customer relationship management)

Ten Critical Questions to Ask a Manufacturing ERP Vendor

project portfolio management Effectively plan, manage, and control projects and resources Planview Enterprise Planview Project Portfolio Management

What's New - Application in Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 for Supply Chain Management, and Manufacturing Course 80163A: 1 Day; Instructor-Led

SALES AND OPERATIONS PLANNING BLUEPRINT BUSINESS VALUE GUIDE

Infor ERP SyteLine Enterprise Resource Planning for Manufacturers

AUTOMATIC ENGINEERING

MADE2MANAGE ENTERPRISE RESOURCE PLANNING. WE OWN THE SHOP FLOOR Plan, schedule, execute and track with an industrial strength feature set.

Job Management Software Integrated Job Management Solution for Sage MAS 90 and Sage MAS 200

Integrating Your ERP and MES to Improve Operations

Realizing the Benefits of Finite Capacity Scheduling to Manage Batch Production Systems

OIL & GAS SUPPORTING THE PROJECT & ASSET LIFECYCLE

Civil Engineering & Construction

Infor Planning Tools. From Demand to Execution. Hans Smet Senior Account Executive

BUILDING BLOCKS FOR MANUFACTURING EXCELLENCE

Are You Using Word, Excel or PowerPoint to Create and Manage Your Assembly Work Instructions and Supporting Documentation?

Does enterprise resource planning software support lean? ERP goes 44 TARGET AME.ORG/TARGET

Job Management Software Integrated Job Management Solution for Sage 100 ERP

SHOP MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL A GUIDE TO SELECTING THE RIGHT SHOP MANAGEMENT SYSTEM

Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 R3, clear cut benefits for your Organisation

DELIVERING EXCEPTIONAL CUSTOMER CARE

CHOOSING THE RIGHT MES VENDOR TO ACHIEVE MANUFACTURING EXCELLENCE: A VENDOR COMPARISON

Achieve greater efficiency in asset management by managing all your asset types on a single platform.

Steel supply chain transformation challenges Key learnings

More. Better. Faster. THE QAD ADVANTAGE

Job Management Software. Integrated Job Management Solution for Sage 100 ERP

Integration points: Project management and accounting and other Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 modules

The Beginners Guide to ERP for Food Processors

Standardizing Best Industry Practices

ORACLE MANUFACTURING EXECUTION SYSTEM FOR DISCRETE MANUFACTURING

Wonderware MES 4.0/Operations and Performance Software

How To Manage A Field Service Call On A Computer Or Cell Phone

Lean manufacturing and ERP: How to leverage ERP to get lean

QAD ENTERPRISE APPLICATIONS

Oracle E-Business Suite Extensions for Endeca Converse with Your Data

Agile Manufacturing for ALUMINIUM SMELTERS

Supply Chain Management Build Connections

Ten Critical Questions to Ask a Manufacturing ERP Vendor

RESEARCH NOTE NETSUITE S IMPACT ON MANUFACTURING COMPANY PERFORMANCE

TRAINING SESSION SUMMARIES FOR MANUFACTURING

It s Time for Maintenance 2.0

Taking Control: Integrated ERP Solution Helps Honda Supplier Cut Costs, Improve Productivity

One solution, countless benefits

Advanced Planning and Scheduling

LANDesk Service Desk. Outstanding IT Service Management Made Easy

Summit Platform. IT and Business Challenges. SUMMUS IT Management Solutions. IT Service Management (ITSM) Datasheet. Key Benefits

Within Budget and on Time

BREAKING DOWN INFORMATION SILOS BETWEEN MANUFACTURING AND DESIGN: A NEW APPROACH TO CAD/ERP DATA INTEGRATION

Sage 300 Manufacturing

Evaluation Guide. Sales and Operations Planning Performance Blueprint

Enterprise Asset Management made for Microsoft Dynamics AX

Majenta Engineering Centre (MEC)

Software solutions for manufacturing operations management. Helping manufacturers optimize the Digital Enterprise and realize innovation

Achieve greater efficiency in asset management by managing all your asset types on a single platform.

Generate optimal production schedules to maximize profitability and meet service levels

QUEST The Systems Integration, Process Flow Design and Visualization Solution

How To Run A Lean Manufacturing Plant

Product Lifecycle Management. Diane Ryan Siemens PLM Software

Epicor Mobile Field Service

ORACLE PROJECT PLANNING AND CONTROL

IBM RFID for Supply Chain and Logistics: Reusable Asset Tracking solution

4 Key Tools for Managing Shortened Customer Lead Times & Demand Volatility

Top reasons why ekanban should be a key element of your lean manufacturing plan

Transnet Engineering: Driving Lean Six Sigma with SAP Portfolio and Project Management

ERP Software for: MTO / ETO Manufacturers

MANUFACTURING ERP SOFTWARE BUYERS GUIDE

AGILE PRODUCT LIFECYCLE MANAGEMENT INTEGRATION PACK FOR JD EDWARDS ENTERPRISEONE: DESIGN TO RELEASE

ORACLE ADVANCED SUPPLY CHAIN PLANNING

How Technology Supports Project, Program and Portfolio Management

Statement of Direction

Models for MES In an Enterprise Architecture

Lean Procurement: The Future of Supply Chain Management in a Demand-Driven World

Elevator Service Preventive or Predictive

Transcription:

REAL WORLD SCENARIOS Volume 2 Cases 7-12 OPTIMIZING PRODUCTION SQUEEZE MORE OUT OF PRODUCTION OPTIMIZING SCHEDULING PRODUCTION FLOW IMPROVEMENTS INTEGRATED MAINTENANCE PLANNING INTEGRATED PROJECT MANAGEMENT IMPROVING PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE ENHANCING PROJECT VISIBILITY

OPTIMIZING PRODUCTION Having a comprehensive, easy-to-use and effective suite of planning tools will significantly improve the operational performance of a business. Buyers and production planners need clear visibility of what is required, when it is required and why it is required. The supply of purchased materials and manufactured components need to be closely synchronized with the product assembly schedule to minimize inventory, optimize productivity and maximize on-time delivery performance. Integration of business systems offers many advantages. It supports the coordinated planning of production with other functions, such as procurement and maintenance. It also provides accurate and readily analyzed information which supports flow optimizations using techniques such as Lean Manufacturing. Increased visibility improves responsiveness to demand changes and enables a more proactive approach to be taken. This is particularly the case in project-driven environments where effective risk management is another key factor in achieving customer satisfaction. Plant maintenance plays a key role in minimizing disruption to production schedules and ensuring quality output. Many businesses seek to introduce preventative maintenance to increase machine uptime and minimize lifecycle costs. Realtime links to shop floor equipment present opportunities for condition monitoring and predictive maintenance. These cases studies illustrate how Columbus has helped various industries optimize production using the ColumbusManufacturing solution set based on Microsoft Dynamics.

CASE 7: Optimizing Scheduling A company making plastic toys needed to optimize the scheduling of its injection moulding machines at the same time as coordinating these plans with the assembly lines which have to be reconfigured for each specific toy. The changeover time on the injection moulding machines and the reconfiguration of the production lines was a lengthy process. The complete process needed careful coordination of various critical resources setter, tooling, operators, components and packaging. The old ERP system could link the injection moulding schedules to the assembly line, but other resources had to be managed manually. This planning took a small army of people and resulted in constant changes to the schedule which in turn generated too many assembly line changes and necessitated larger safety stocks to buffer delays in production. Using the Microsoft Dynamics features for master planning and scheduling, all resource constraints are now considered during the planning process. Resources are linked through either the product structure (BOM) or the production routing. As planning is now automated, a first rough-cut schedule is generated, then subsequent versions created which can be fine-tuned. Similarly, a change in demand can be more easily modeled and a revised schedule published. The ability to model and optimize the plans while considering all the constraints is now quicker and results in more efficient change-over sequencing. The number of last minute changes to the program is reduced. More stable planning reduces the need to hold buffer stocks. Bottom line benefits were: Better machine utilization Higher labor productivity Reduced inventory Improved responsiveness to demand changes 4

CASE 8: Production Flow Improvements A company making electronic equipment had experienced rising levels of work in progress inventory due in part to the need to buffer against the unreliability of key machines. The company found that the shop floor was crowded, which aggravated the problem of keeping work moving and fast-tracking urgent orders. There was also a desire to implement Lean thinking, but the company didn t know where to start. The existing ERP system gave information on overall inventory levels and costs of production, but captured no shop floor timings, so there was no basis for systematic analysis of what were the real bottlenecks. In addition, inventory could only be issued to the batch at the beginning of the job, so there was no easy way to stage issues or to move to a Kanban approach for lower value items. Upgrading to Microsoft Dynamics has delivered the opportunity to record key production data such as operation start and finish times on the critical machines. It has also facilitated analyzing this data in a number of different ways as part of the move to Lean. Additionally, electronic Kanbans have now been introduced so that inventory is only pulled when needed by production, retaining the tracking and costing controls needed in their business. The company has started the Lean journey with these two initiatives. Capturing more accurate data about the critical machines is allowing them to identify the bottleneck machines and start to tackle their reliability. Kanbans are reducing inventory holdings, but more importantly the shop floor is less cluttered and problems such as queues at the bottlenecks are becoming more visible 5

CASE 9: Enhancing Project Visibility A manufacturing company designs and manufactures specialist machinery for use in the automotive, aerospace and defence industries. The company predominantly manufactures to agreed customer specification, so the company tends to be project driven. Overall manufacturing lead times can range from 6 to 18 months. With such a variety of special customer requirements and long lead-times, the company has had two main issues over the past few years. The first issue has been ensuring timely delivery of materials. The second has been scheduling resources both internally and with subcontractors. The underlying problem has been lack of visibility in their old account driven system. The impact has been poor on-time delivery and has led to some loss of business. Columbus Advanced Project Management and Columbus Visual Project Planning allow them to schedule resources across the factory more easily. The Gantt chart format makes reviewing the progress of a specific customer project more visual this includes Red/Amber alerts to highlight potential late deliveries of purchased or manufactured items. The fully integrated system is able to provide a complete picture of an order from its design, procurement and production, to dispatch and installation. The key benefit is improved visibility of orders going through the shop floor resulting in: Easier progress tracking of projects Greater ability to react to changes in a timely and orderly manner More efficient scheduling of resources both internally and externally Reduced stock levels Improved on-time delivery performance Microsoft Dynamics has been implemented with additional modules to provide greater project-specific functionality. Ultimately these improvements have led to increased business with customers. 6

CASE 10: Integrated Project Management A project-based design and development company had historically managed projects using traditional stand-alone project management software that was independent of their accounting system. Each project was managed independently, leading to resource conflicts across the portfolio of live projects. Cost control and financial reporting were difficult to calculate. Project overruns on both time and cost were typical. Dynamics standard project accounting functionality, all project management tasks have now been migrated from the standalone project system. All projects are established with an initial financial baseline. Any changes to the project are automatically re-calculated into a new version of the budget before approval. Resources are defined across the whole business so that workload can be balanced. Actual time is now booked through daily timesheets, with automatic update for completed tasks, and the ability to flag potential overruns. Managing projects independently of the financial system gave rise to a number of issues. Cost estimation and budgeting were difficult, especially when there were changes. Rescheduling of projects and calculation of cost to complete were time consuming. Project resource conflicts across a number of portfolio managers were difficult to identify and resolve, leading to unexpected delays and added costs. Purchasing was poorly coordinated with project schedules. Using Columbus Advanced Projects module which has been implemented in conjunction with Microsoft The integration of project management, procurement, production and accounting processes within the single Microsoft Dynamics system results in a much greater ability to manage the project-based order book. include: Less time wasted re-keying data, so more time addressing project issues Material planning better aligned with the up-to-date project plan Less disruption and delay due to fewer resource conflicts Timely management information allowing a more proactive response to potential problems 7

CASE 11: Improving Preventative Maintenance A large manufacturer of bed mattresses wanted to reduce unplanned production stoppages due to equipment breakdowns. With production volumes increasing, there was greater pressure on equipment uptime. They also sought to improve equipment life by performing preventative maintenance on a more systematic basis. maintenance work is now visible to production planners and can be confirmed or changed nearer the time to ensure urgent production work is not disrupted. The status of current maintenance jobs is up-to-date and visible. All maintenance costs whether labor hours, spare parts or third party work is booked to the specific equipment. Maintenance was mainly performed on an as-needed basis and record keeping was poor as it tended to be an afterthought. As the maintenance records were poor, it was not easy to obtain meaningful data on machine performance or maintenance costs. to date include: More maintenance being performed on a planned basis Accurate maintenance records giving better information on equipment performance and costs Statistics on maintenance labor performance and response times Better planning for production asset refurbishment and replacement Fewer breakdowns and less disruption The company has introduced Columbus Enterprise Asset Maintenance along with Microsoft Dynamics. All significant production equipment is now registered and preventative maintenance policies established for each type of equipment. The forward schedule of planned 8

CASE 12: Integrated Maintenance Planning A high-volume manufacturer of automotive parts has sophisticated computer-controlled production equipment. This equipment requires good preventative maintenance to maintain uptime and efficiency. The computer controls generated alerts on the status of the equipment, but this was not being used. plans. Interfaces to machine controls are now written to record machine usage data, a key driver for preventative maintenance, and to capture any machine maintenance alerts. Loading of historic data from the old maintenance system has been prioritized for the key machines but generally only summary history was loaded into the new system as the records were of variable quality. New machines are now purchased in Microsoft Dynamics so accurate data is logged throughout their life in the one integrated system.. The company had historically managed their own manufacturing equipment using stand-alone plant maintenance software that was independent of their ERP system. This resulted in the duplicate purchasing of spares and consumables. In addition, production had limited visibility of planned preventative maintenance work causing friction with the Maintenance Department. The Columbus Enterprise Asset Management module has been implemented alongside Microsoft Dynamics. Maintenance policies are now set for each machine and new business processes introduced to schedule maintenance work in coordination with the production Tight integration within Microsoft Dynamics eliminated duplicate effort, improved visibility and helped ensure the right parts were on hand to service the equipment when needed. Overall benefits included: Better planning of maintenance department workload resulting in greater efficiency Successful introduction of preventative maintenance disciplines Move towards predictive maintenance using real-time condition monitoring data Improved on-time delivery performance 9

ColumbusManufacturing The issues and challenges presented here and many more are addressed by ColumbusManufacturing. ColumbusManufacturing is an integrated business solution tailored for discrete manufacturers. It includes a combination of our award winning advanced discrete manufacturing software, our industry templates and implementation methodology all built onto the flexible and reliable Microsoft Dynamics platform. ColumbusManufacturing starts in the supply chain, though warehousing, inventory, production planning, manufacturing, sales, service, equipment maintenance, delivery routing, engineering, shop floor control, sub contract management and project planning and tracking. It is widely known for delivering improved efficiency and reduced costs by integrating all supply chain processes while providing accurate business metrics for improved decision making. ColumbusManufacturing allows you to utilize the solutions and functionality you need. To learn more about the various components, visit www.columbusglobal.com > Microsoft Dynamics AX or Dynamics NAV > Columbus ADM (Advanced Discrete Manufacturing) > Columbus SCS (Supply Chain Solution) > Columbus BIS (Business Integration Software) >Columbus RapidValue >Columbus SureStep+ > Microsoft Dynamics CRM 10

Introducing Columbus RapidValue RapidValue has been designed and developed by Columbus to help organizations implement best practice business processes alongside their ERP implementation. RapidValue is a Business Process Modeling solution that is fully integrated into Microsoft Dynamics AX, the foundational platform of ColumbusManufacturing > > Streamline business processes for efficiency and speed > > Adopt best practices when appropriate to the business > > Standardize business processes across the organization RapidValue enables customers to translate business process models into solutions while working directly in Microsoft Dynamics AX. RapidValue is designed to meet 80% of your industry requirements out of the box. > > Business processes > > User procedures > > Application functionality > > User roles and profiles > > System set-up and base data 11

The ColumbusManufacturting Real World Scenario Series REAL WORLD SCENARIOS Volume 1 Cases 1-6 REAL WORLD SCENARIOS Volume 2 Cases 7-12 REAL WORLD SCENARIOS Volume 3 Cases 13-15 REAL WORLD SCENARIOS Volume 4 Cases 16-18 MANAGING PRODUCT COMPLEXITY GETTING THE RIGHT MIX OPTIMIZING PRODUCTION SQUEEZE MORE OUT OF PRODUCTION MANAGING CUSTOMER REQUIREMENTS KEEP DELIVERING ENSURING BEST PRACTICE... STREAMLINE YOUR BUSINESS PROCESSES. INTEGRATING PRODUCT LIFECYCLE MANAGEMENT (PLM) FACILITATING PRODUCT PERSONALIZATION OPTIMIZING SCHEDULING INTEGRATED PROJECT MANAGEMENT CONFIGURING PRODUCTS TO ORDER REUSING COMPONENTS IMPROVING VERSION CONTROL AND TRACEABILITY MANAGING ENGINEERING CHANGES PRODUCTION FLOW IMPROVEMENTS IMPROVING PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE INTEGRATED MAINTENANCE PLANNING ENHANCING PROJECT VISIBILITY MANAGING COMPLAINTS AND THEIR ASSOCIATED COSTS CONTROLLING WARRANTY CLAIMS ADDING A SERVICE BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY UTILIZING BEST PRACTICE PROCESSES EXPANDING BUSINESS OPERATIONS BUSINESS PROCESS STANDARDIZATION Volume 1 Cases 1 through 6 Volume 2 Cases 7 through 12 Volume 3 Cases 13 through 15 Volume 4 Cases 16 through 19 Thanks to the ColumbusManufacturing Team for sharing their Real World Scenarios: Dave Ward, Deborah Vermillion. David McKenna, Niraj Nanda, David Raaphorst, Antony Prabhath, Bo Prychidnyj, Jeevan Anthony Louis, Les Shippen and Clyde Bennett. For more information on Columbus, our clients experiences and our solutions, please visit www.columbusglobal.com ABOUT COLUMBUS: Columbus currently employs over 1,000 dedicated professionals working out of 41 offices in 21 countries. With more than 20 years experience and 6,000 successful implementations, Microsoft recognizes Columbus as a top global partner and has presented the company with virtually every award and certification available. Columbus is a part of the registered trademark Columbus IT