Title: CORPORATIZATION CASE STUDY ITI
1CORPORATIZATION CASE STUDY - ITI
- Nirmala M. Pieris
- Head, Corporate Services Division, Industrial
Technology Institute (ITI) - 1st Vice President, WAITRO
- UNIDO/WAITRO Workshop on Significance of Testing
Conformity Assessment in Global Trade
Challenges for RTOs - 19th April 2005, SIRIM Berhad, Shah Alam,
Selangor, Malaysia
2Presentation Brief
- General overview of Industrial Technology
Institute (ITI) - UNIDO Intervention
- Corporatisation Service capability enhancement
3ITI
- Established nearly 50 years ago
- Nationally unique - only multidisciplinary
scientific service RD organization - Employs close to 350
- Provide clients with specialized capabilities (on
a fee for service basis) through a complement of
multidisciplinary scientists - Recognized leader in the field continuous
improvement
4Facilities
- Largest most comprehensive complex of
laboratories in the country - physical, chemical,
microbiological and metrology - Pilot plant engineering workshop Technical
Information Center - Over 900 pieces of laboratory equipment
- Leading edge testing metrology facilities with
03 internationally accredited laboratories - Over 50 PhD/Msc/BScs over 110 Technicians
5Services
- Testing, Calibration Measurement
- Research Development (RD)
- Consultancy
- Technology development transfer
- Training of technical personnel
- Laboratory equipment repair
6Testing Calibration
- Over 650 Service offerings in areas of Chemical,
Microbiology, Materials Metrology - Extensive menu of more than 3000 tests
- A client portfolio of over 2000
- Over 10,000 client focused services provided in a
year
7UNIDO Intervention
Integrated Industrial Development Support Program
for Sri Lanka - Quality, Standardization
Metrology
1999 - 02 labs identified for upgrading to
international status
2001 to 04 - 03 other labs identified
Funds for expert inputs, training/study tours,
equipment/chemicals/reference materials, facility
upgrading inter-laboratory testing proficiency
schemes
8Laboratory Accreditation
- 03 laboratories internationally (SWEDAC)
accredited (ISO/IEC 17025 Standard) - Chemical - June 2002.
- Microbiology - September 2002
- Metrology - September 2004
- UNIDO - financial support for lab assessments
annual accreditation fees (02-03 years) - ITI had to generate funds to retain accreditation
status when UNIDO support ended - Presently Rubber lab and Food analysis labs being
upgraded
9Accreditation benefits
Potential for increased business through greater
client confidence
Formal recognition of capability by a third party
using internationally-recognized accreditation
criteria procedures Has advantages at both
ends of the supply chain
To the accredited laboratory/ Institute
Increased visibility through certification by an
organization with recognized international stature
Potential for increased market access of products
due to national international recognition of
reports
To clients of the accredited laboratory
10Accreditation sustainability
- Profitability
- Increase productivity cost effectivity
- Laboratory Quality Managers
- Recognition to deal with pressures to deliver
results to growing number of customers - Commitment to provide customer satisfaction (more
than closest competitors) without compromising on
quality - Staff
- Expertise dedication to be captured to optimize
accuracy, productivity performance
11Accreditation functionality
- For accredited labs to achieve full range of
functionality - Concept had to be leveraged across the
organization through integration with other
platforms systems - Had to be linked to corporate governance,
operating strategic goals - Had to be linked to performance measures,
incentives to demonstrate importance of achieving
set goals
12Follow through UNIDO intervention
- Retention of UNIDO Consultant (4 phases) (Sep
2001- May 2004 spread over about 12 w/m) - Assessment of demand anticipated growth for
services, assess factors affecting motivation,
productivity service capacity enhancement
provide recommendations (phase 1) - Enhance Corporate governance, commercialization,
motivation strategic planning functions (phase
2 to 4)
13Assessment of demand growth
STRATEGIC AUDIT
External analysis
Internal analysis
14External analysis
- Market industry analysis (market size, growth,
segments, share etc.) - Customer analysis (segments, size, growth,
trends, unmet needs) - Competitor analysis (major competitors, their
market share, likely new entrants)
15Internal analysis
- Marketing (performance, competitive advantage,
product portfolio, customer profile, pricing
strategy) - Production (performance in relation to
competitors, capacity, competitive advantage,
quality control, flexibility of facility) - Finance (financial performance)
- HR (expertise, HRD, training, succession
planning) - Organisational (SWOT)
16Recommendations from Phase 1
- Corporate Governance
- Commercialization
- Performance based incentive scheme
- Strategic planning
- Prioritizing of Research
- Developing plan for Technical Services
17Corporate Governance
- Introduction of costing cost control systems
- Introduction of devolved Group budgets
- Introduction of Systems Procedures - approval
of research projects/training, capital
expenditure, support service Groups - Formulation of Restructuring plan
18Restructuring
- Immediate goal streamlining of business
processes - Separation of Technical Services from the RD
function - Emphasis on Quality via appointment of Senior
Quality Manager staff for entire institute - Emphasis on Business Development Marketing plan
via appointment of BDM - Bringing all Administrative/Operational/Corporate
functions into on entity)
19Organization (previous)
CHAIRMAN GOVERNING BOARD
DIRECTOR
Agro Food Technology Division
Materials Technology Division
Process Plant Engineering Division
Corporate Services Division
Metrology Instrumenta- tion Division
Personnel Administration Division
Chemical Environmental Technology Division
Accounts
Internal Audit
Chemical Technology Group
Metals Minerals Technology Group
Food Products Development Group
Pilot Plant Group
Industrial Promotion Marketing Group
Supplies
Metrology Group
Services Group
Environmental Technology Group
Wood Cellulose Technology Group
Engineering Services Group
Information Services Centre
Instrumenta- tion Group
Personnel, Administration, Stores
Post Harvest Technology Group
Laboratory Services Group
Rubber Plastics Technology Group
Computer Services Group
Natural Products Development Group
20Organization (present)
Deputy DirectorTechnical Services
Deputy DirectorAdministration
Operation/Corporate Services
Deputy DirectorResearch Development
Food Technology
Chemical Microbiological Laboratory
Business Development
Finance Administration
Herbal Technology
Materials Laboratory
Information services
Materials Technology
Industrial Metrology Laboratory
Computer unit
Environmental Technology
National Repair Maintenance Centre
Project Managers
21Commercialization
- Facilities strengthened are used to the maximum
- Pricing policies
- Competitive pricing
- Customer satisfaction
22Performance based incentives
- Focus on developing implementing incentive
strategies that brought employees together to
achieve institute goals - Scheme formulated to realize objectives with
respect to financial sustainability customer
satisfaction - Performance objectively measured, incentives
financially backed - Scheme also provided for employee appraisals
- Performance indicators, both financial
non-financial
23UNIDO
Treasury
PBIS
Fund deficit
24Financial gap
Rs. Mn
25The PBIS
- Scheme very successfully developed
- Different performance criteria for Services, RD
Support Groups - Successfully Implemented for 2003 2004
26Revenue achievement
Rs. Mn
27Expenditure recovery
28Prioritizing Research
- Next step, to achieve commercial orientation of
research functions - Research carried out, either financed by funding
organizations or contracted by the Government - Research more of a knowledge accumulating nature
with less commercial orientation - Significant change was necessary development of
strategic research priorities was deemed essential
29The Key Driver Delivering Value for Money
Customers
Value for Customers
Revenue from Customers
Division
Division
Division
ITI
Capital from Stakeholders
Value for Stakeholders
Stakeholders
30Opportunities - Outcomes
What to do?
Priority directions
Many opportunities
Direction setting
Resourcing
Availability of resources
Implementation
Rate extent of adoption (outcome)
Value from Research
Outputs
31Priorities Process Criteria - Research
Potential Benefits
Attractiveness
Ability to Capture
Return to Sri Lanka from R D
RD Potential
Feasibility
RD Capacity
ITI Response
ITI objectives Role
32Plan for Technical Services
- Framework for working out effective strategic
priorities for Technical services to propose a
medium term plan based on country demands - Formulation of implementation plan based on
development plan
33Priorities Process Criteria - Services
Leadership
Attractiveness
Marketability
Country Demand
Profitability
Feasibility
Capacity
ITI Response
ITI objectives role
34Summing up
- Corporate Governance
- Restructuring
- Performance based Incentives
- Research prioritization
- Plan for Technical services
35Thank you