Title: Best of the Best Sales and Operations Planning Conference
1Best of the BestSales and Operations Planning
Conference
- Using SOP in Companies with Lean Manufacturing
Bill Kerber, CFPIM
2Agenda
- A few thoughts about Executive S OP and Takt
Time - Executive S OP Strategies
- Level
- Chase
- Hybrid
- Material Procurement practices
- Push versus Pull
- Negotiations and planning
- Questions and Answers
3Lean Executive SOP Do Different Things
- Lean Manufacturing
- Lean emphasizes/focuses on flow.
- It also has a focus on eliminating waste from
processes - Strong on execution
- Drives improvements to the operating environment
- Flow works best with stable and linear demand
- Executive SOP
- Tools for forward decision-making
- Strong on planning
- Long future horizon
- Balances demand and supply across the supply
chain - Can be used in many different environments
- They work best when they work together!
4Takt time
- Demand rate?
- or
- Production Rate?
5Takt time and Executive S OP
- Current Lean definition has Takt time as
effective working time divided by demand rate - In most circumstances, we would be better off
making it effective working time divided by
Production rate (from SOP plan)
6What does Takt Time Do?
- Sets the Beat in the form of pitch for
production. - Determines how many people work in assembly jobs.
- Provides the bar for operator balance charts
for line balancing. - For all of these, takt would be better
represented by the production rate from SOP.
7Traditional Executive SOP Strategies
- Make to Stock
- Make to Order
- Finish to Order
8We have also have three production strategies
- Level- Most often associated with Make to Stock.
To achieve a level production, a buffer against
variable demand must be used. - Chase Most often Make to order. Also could be
called variable capacity. - Hybrid-used in both environments
- Learning to See has couched this as making to
shipment or making to supermarket.
9Level
- Buffer with finished goods inventory
- (al a TPS)
- Make to Stock
10Stock Amount
In this strategy there is no correct level of
inventory
11BOM Shape helps dictate strategy
Levels
of Parts
In this shape a few end items are made from
many parts, materials, and components. An
example would be an equipment manufacturer such
as automobiles, lawn mowers, capital equipment,
etc. This shape lends itself to making to
stock.
12How Lean fits in Make to Stock
Supermarket Here
Customer Lead Time
Pull or Push to finished goods
Replenish Finished Goods on pull signal
Or create mix leveled Heijunka schedule and push
to finished goods
13Mix and Volume variability definitions
- Mix variability is a measure of how often the
models and their variants actually are sold. - Volume variability is measured by simply
determining whether the total amount of work
required in the factory by the customer orders
varies significantly from period to period.
14Leveling Production mix versus sales mix
- Forecast 100 A, 50 B and 50 C this month
- At 20 days in month, this is 10 per day
- Production sequence A B A C A B A C A B A C etc
- The actual sales may not equal the forecast.
- A finished goods inventory handles this.
15Leveling Mix
- Pull systems work better when mix is leveled
- Shared resources can be synchronized based on the
production pattern. - Capacity requirements for the value stream will
fit the average requirements during each
interval. - FIFO lanes are kept to a minimum with regards to
the need to balance operations for mix.
16Leveling mix in a high mix environment
- High inventory investment
- Potentially high obsolete inventory
- Potential poor customer service (reliant on
forecast accuracy) (The forecast will most likely
be inaccurate, due to the high mix variability)
17Leveling only volume
- The buffer for the value stream may (or needs to,
or should) contain only high volume items - We need to have separate strategies for high
volume and low volume items when creating the
schedule. - Interval should be based on a time slice of
volume and the number of items sold during the
time slice.
18Leveling only volume, Cont.
- More elaborate capacity planning is necessary due
to work content variations caused by varying
mixes of products being sold. - Cross training of operators is needed to handle
required flexibility from various mixes as well
as for absentees
19Level
- Buffer variability with lead-time
- Make to Order
20Backlog
21BOM Shape
In this shape many end items are made from a
few raw materials. An example would be an
injection molding company This shape suggests a
make to order strategy.
22How Lean fits in
Customer Lead Time
Speed
Supermarket here
You must make the lead time fit market
requirements!
23Managing Backlog
Market Lead Time
Production Lead Time
Variable Backlog
24Managing Backlog
- Promised dates must be managed one of two ways
- Fixed lead time, vary capacity if backlog exceeds
allotted time - Variable lead time, governed by an aggregate view
of sold versus capacity
25Chase
- Buffer variability with
- more flexible and agile manufacturing resources
26Chase Strategy
Production Demand Inventory (Backlog)
27Takt time and Chase
- Takt time has a different connotation in this
strategy - Think in terms of units of capacity, such as with
adding production in chunks of lines, or adding
time at the same rate
28Chase requires
- Cross training
- A way to know when to switch jobs during the
workday (controlling flow) - Adding or subtracting labor by using
- Temporary employees
- Overtime
- Subcontractors
- Or
- Staff for peak periods and work on improvements
when slow
29Hybrid
- Buffer variability with
- common component inventory (produce to stock)
- finish-to-order with flexible finishing capacity
- (Postponement)
30BOM Shape
In this shape many end items are made out of a
few sub assemblies or intermediates that are made
out of many unique raw materials and parts. An
example of this would be a pharmaceutical
manufacturer with many package types from
standard product (aspirin), personal computers,
packaged chemicals This shape lends itself to a
postponement strategy.
31How Lean fits in Postponement
Assemble to order
Customer Lead Time
Supermarket Here
Backlog management here
Pull Components based on usage
Stock management here
32Supply chain issues from Executive S OP
- Buying capacity or items in the long term?
- If capacity, rough cut capacity from the
Executive S OP plan should be used - If items, must decide how to reconcile plan with
short term actual
33Supply Chain Issues
- Choices for material purchasing
- Pull
- MRP
- Rough Cut Planning
- All will make have problems on long lead time
items - Mix sensitivity matters here
34Question Answer
35Thank You for Attending
- Business cards are available.
- Or
- WWW.Highmixlean.com
- Or
- 609-781-4830