Title: MessierDowty Gloucester Supply Chain Groups
1Messier-Dowty GloucesterSupply Chain Groups
David Johnson Team Leader - Systems Supplier
Development
Peter Newbery Supply Chain Facilitator
David Tucker Purchasing Executive
2Summary
- Supply Chain Groups
- A structured process of training, diagnostics,
workshops and reviews, involving Messier-Dowty
and supply chain personnel, to achieve mutually
beneficial supply chain improvements. - To date this approach has touched 19 Suppliers,
more than 200 people and will contribute gt500K
Euros of savings to Messier-Dowty in 2002.
3WHY IMPROVE?
- In early 1999 there was a recognition that we
were not meeting our customers expectations of
- 100 delivery performance
- Zero defect status
- Total cost competitiveness
- Highly responsive to Customers needs
4How Can we Improve the Supply Chain?
- Apply Lean tools and techniques
- Create Britains first aerospace supply chain
group - supported by the Society of Motor
Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) Industry Forum
5Supply Chain Improvement
PLAN
ACT
- Select Programme
- Select Suppliers
- Identify Champions
- Select Change Agents
- Establish Schedule
- Start new Supply Chains
- Extend Improvements
- 7 Measures - Results
- Roll Out Plans
- QOS Documents - Results
- Economics - Payback
- Train Champions
- Train Change Agents
- Diagnostics
- Workshops
- Follow Ups
DO
CHECK
6 THE LEAN APPROACH
Improvement Activity
Lean is a systematic approach of eliminating
waste so every step adds value for the Customer.
7Supply Chain Group Vision 2001/2002
8Structured Process
Company
9Flow
- Roll-out the improvement activity across all OE
supply into Messier-Dowty - Concentrate on improving
-
- Use set reduction to batch sizes
and improve quality - the manufacturing process
into logical blocks - Use visual management (kanban) to pull the parts
from block to block
FLOW
reduce
Break
10Kanban Pull
Raw Material
Pull
Pre HT Machining
Pull
2 weeks
Heat Treat
Pull
2 weeks
Post HT Machining
Pull
2 weeks
Surface Finishing
Pull
2 weeks
Customer
11Activity Plan
12(No Transcript)
13Structured Roll Out Control
Strategic Roll Out Plan
QOS Plan Key QCD's
Detail Action Plans
14Roll Out Plan
15(No Transcript)
16(No Transcript)
17Tools Outcomes
- 5S
- 7 Wastes
- Measurement
- Set Reduction
- Load Capacity Assessment
- Visual Management
- Kanban/ Direct Line Feed
- Standard Operations
- Machine Maintenance
- Team work
- Shared knowledge Experience
- Improved relationships with suppliers
- Delivery Improvement
- Quality Improvement
- Inventory Reduction
- Cost Reduction
- Waste Elimination
18 SUPPLY CHAIN - Gloucester
- 18 suppliers engaged in the last 2 years
- 35 supplier change agents trained, 5 of them
participating in Change Management NVQs - 57 internal change agents trained, 5 of them
participating in Change Management NVQs - gt 150 people at suppliers actively involved in
improvement activities - kits from 6 suppliers on kanban pull from
assembly - gt 200 parts on kanban with 100 on-time delivery
- some suppliers offering price reductions based on
the improvements
19DELIVERY PERFORMANCE BOARD - AIRBUS A320 ASSEMBLY
SEPTEMBER 2002
MARCH 2002
MAY 2002
20Progress to Date
21Cost/ Benefit Analysis
- External cost to Messier-Dowty 55K Euro for
consultants - Internal cost to Messier-Dowty peoples time
(although no additional people were recruited) - The Supply Chain Group has significantly
contributed towards - Savings as a result of price reductions - Win for
Messier-Dowty - 2002 572K Euro
- 2003 675K Euro
- Supply chain work in progress reduction - Win for
Suppliers - 2002 454K Euro
22NEXT STEPS - Gloucester
- Value stream map derived actions
- Messier-Dowty and suppliers monitor and report
progress with QOS documents - Bring on board new participants as required by
the value stream maps - Continue to work with suppliers to eliminate
waste and reduce costs
23NEXT STEPS - Internationally
- Integrate the process into Optimach
- Roll-out the approach across Messier-Dowty
- Toronto Supply Chain launched in May 2002 in
association with Boeing on the F18 - Gloucester
is supporting the development of this programme - Bidos Supply Chain launch - support available
from Gloucester
24What people think about the process
- Initially there was some scepticism. Wed made
attempts at introducing change before, but these
initiatives had not been followed through with
sufficient conviction. This was different. - I confess that neither I nor my colleagues knew
very much about these techniques, but it seemed a
practical proposal offering the opportunity to
improve the performance of the business while
working with one of our major customers. - Paul Foulds, Middlesex Group
- This was not just another initiative. Above all
it was a whole business approach. Here was a
customer saying it needed to improve. We would
improve with it. - David Elliott, Beaufort Engineering
- Our involvement in the Messier-Dowty supply
chain group has focused our attention on
improving our manufacturing process by
significantly reducing waste. At Ultra we have
been working on improvement activities with the
aim of sustaining 100 on-time delivery and total
customer satisfaction. - Paul Buckley, Ultra Electronics
- Since the start of the initiative I have seen a
significant improvement in the presentation of
details to the Airbus assembly by the
introduction of kit boxes and direct line feed,
thus reducing the handling of components by the
fitters and storeman. We have seen an improvement
in the delivery of both details and kits through
the recent introduction of kanban with certain
suppliers, the results of this reduce the
expediting and other non-value adding activity
associated with late delivery. - Mark Tunstall, Messier-Dowty - Airbus Assembly