Feature Article (A Competitive Success Piece from Modern Machine Shop) The Knowledge System This company has made capturing and sharing information into routine production functions. The resulting process makes better use of less experienced personnel. It also allows the company to keep innovating so it can remain competitive while manufacturing in the United States.
When a company is young and small, there is little need for formal information sharing. Everyone in the company has easy access to all of the information they need. On the shop floor, a small group of production employees works side by side, inventing and improving the production process as they go. But as the company grows, manufacturing job functions become more specific. A growing share of employees are newer hires who dont necessarily know the context for the work they are asked to do or the procedures that make the most sense for the process. If these employees lack clear instruction, then the rate or quality of the output may vary significantly depending on which employees are doing the work that day. The same lack of formal structure that made the company so responsive when it was small can make the process clumsy and unpredictable when the company gets bigger. In other words, a manufacturer can choke on its own success. One manufacturer that is determined to avoid that very danger is Task Force Tips of Valparaiso, Indiana. Company president Stewart McMillan intends for the company to be just as responsive, innovative and efficient at a size of 130 employees as it was when the company was small. He recognized, however, that fundamental changes would be needed to make this possible. Valuable knowledge locked up in the heads, computers and filing cabinets of key employees had to be shared across the workforce, among employees who can no longer be assured of interacting with one another on a daily basis. A brand-new infrastructure had to be put in place for sharing this information. And new procedures had to be adopted to make knowledge capture and knowledge transmission into routine functions of the companys work. The changes have been particularly dramatic on the production floor. Machine shop personnel now look to PCs near the machine tools for all of the information they need to set up, run, inspect and track any part. More significantly, the company devotes engineering resources simply to creating these instructions and making them as clear and effective for the operators as possible. Many of the changes that TFT is making throughout the company are still ongoing, but this system for sharing knowledge on the shop floor is already in place, and is already delivering benefits. Not only is the production process faster and more reliable thanks to this system, but the company itself is also more adaptable, because new part designs can now be introduced into production more easily. This last advantage is particularly important to TFT, because the company innovates so frequently that new part numbers are added to the process every week. The Company TFT makes equipment used by firefighters. Machining and assembly are performed in two Valparaiso facilities. About 10,000 active part numbers are machined on various Mazak machining centers and multitasking lathes.
The companys first product was a fire hose nozzle able to maintain a constant water pressure despite fluctuating pressure in the hose. That product was introduced by Mr. McMillans father, Clyde McMillan. Today, the company offers a range of products for the firefighting field including not only nozzles and fire hose appliances, but also foam application systems and hand tools that are customized for fire and rescue work. New product developmentthat is, ongoing new product developmentis the cornerstone of the companys strategy for continued success. TFT cant afford ever to fall back on its current product line, because to do so would leave the company vulnerable to competitors who can make lower-quality copies of its products for much less. The Problems The reader of this article may also work for a manufacturing company that has 100 or more employees. If so, the challenges that TFT set out to address may sound very familiar. Those challenges include:
The Solution Today, all of the information that a TFT operator needs to perform a job is available at a PC close to the machine tools control. In addition, all of the information that an operator needs to share, for the value of the overall process, can be entered or captured at that same PC.
The operator begins by selecting a part number. This selection starts the clock. Production time data invisibly captured in this way allow TFT to evaluate the performance of its machines and its processing strategies. The data captured are far more accurate now than what the company formerly used when production times were recorded by hand. Once the operator has selected a part number, a tree-structured menu offers separate branches for every step in the machining sequence associated with the part. Clicking on any of these steps reveals sub-branches for all of the electronic documents relevant to that step, including setup instructions, gaging instructions, part prints and even the history of internal correspondence related to that part. For all of the shops part numbers, a given part might have five to ten machining steps associated with it, and every step might have five to ten relevant documents. Two software tools make it possible to share and organize so much information. One is a suite of shop management applications collectively called Folders from Cimnet Inc. The Folders system provides a structure specifically designed to give shopfloor personnel easy access to manufacturing documentsparticularly when a large quantity and variety of documents are involved. The other software tool the shop relies upon is Microsoft Word. Word offers powerful features for creating documents that are meant to be viewed and shared electronically. For example, TFTs shopfloor Word documents include digital camera photos to supplement the setup instructions. Also, a reference to a tool in these documents can be presented as a hyperlink that connects to information about that tool. And to ensure that every tool is referred to using a standard naming convention across every document, menus that have been customized in Word allow users simply to click on tool names in order to insert those names into the texthyperlinks included. Two employees from TFTs production engineering group play important roles with regard to these documents. One is Jim Walker, a 21-year employee. Mr. Walker develops prototype machining processes for all of the companys new parts. After the process for a new part is worked out, Dave Lewis steps in. An employee in his early 20s who came to the company when he was 17, Mr. Lewis is comfortable with both the machine shop and the finer points of Word. He created the custom menus for inserting tool names, for example. For each process developed by Mr. Walker, Mr. Lewis documents the process, takes digital photos, and creates all of the necessary documents for inclusion in the Cimnet system. (Mr. Lewis is also an example of one of the companys responses to the lack of skilled employees. He came to TFT out of high school by means of the companys apprenticeship program. Nine current employees came through this program.)
The new system that relies on these electronic documents replaces the use of hard-copy prints and instructions on the shop floor. Hard copies are difficult to share and difficult to keep current. In TFTs case, hard copies also left the company vulnerable, because a fire, flood or act of vandalism could have wiped out the companys institutional knowledge about how to manufacture parts. However, the new system provides more than just dumb terminals for viewing documents. The ability of shopfloor personnel to share information, right at the machine, is an equally important characteristic. Mr. Walker and Mr. Lewis point to these other features of the system:
Lessons Learned What TFT achieved with the new system goes beyond just a move from hard-copy to digital information. The engineered instruction sheets, the structuring of information according to operation, the access to part history and even the clear channel of communication between shiftsall of these features represent a change in the quality of information available to employees. The transition, a change being made throughout TFT, can be thought of as the move from tribal knowledge to system knowledge. Information in the past was stored in various silos. An employee in need of information had to physically visit one of those silos and then make sense of what he found. The objective today is to throw open the silos, not just by networking silos together, but also by formatting the information so that anyone in the company can use it productively. Mr. McMillan, Mr. Walker and Mr. Lewis all spoke about the experience of making this transition. Here are some of the lessons they learned and the advice they would give to other shops that want to see their own internal knowledge used better:
Prepare For Success One source of inspiration that Mr. McMillan keeps close at hand is a poster that bears the quote, If I had known I was going to live this long, I would have taken better care of myself. Task Force Tips is a business that has lived that long. Mr. McMillan is determined that it will live longer. And that brings him to another piece of advice: Start early. The most important feature of TFTs current process is that it anticipates newness. New parts, new opportunities, new employeesthe process can accommodate all of these changes. More importantly, the system was designed from the ground up to expect such changes, and to accommodate them as a matter of course. Prepare for success, says Mr. McMillan. Design the system not just to meet todays needs but also to respond to the needs of tomorrowwhenever it is that tomorrows needs happen to appear. |
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