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Jan 31 - 2022
In developing countries, the importance of manufacturing has
diminished over the last 20-25 years, resulting in
de-industrialization. However,
industrialization — or increases in the share of manufacturing in Gross Domestic
Product
(GDP) — is a key feature of modern economic growth.
Historically, manufacturing has been the backbone of all
developed and developing nations. It is where R&D starts, where
new
technologies are born, where scientists and engineers and others are challenged
to develop new and better processes, products, and technologies.
The manufacturing industry has pioneered historic
breakthrough improvements via concepts, tools, and
methodologies over the last
century.
1. Frederick Taylor’s “SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT” of the
early 20th century.
2. Gilberth’s “Motion Study” together known as “TIME AND
MOTION STUDY”
3. MASS PRODUCTION SYSTEM of Henry Ford
which revolutionized the automobile industry
4. STATISTICAL PROCESS CONTROL pioneered by
Walter Shewhart and later by Deming and Juran: it significantly improved
process quality during World War (WW) I and II
5. Dr. EDWARD DEMING’S 14 POINTS: helped the
Japanese industry to rise from the ruins of WW II
6. TOYOTA PRODUCTION SYSTEM (TPS) or “JUST
IN TIME PRODUCTION” created by Eiji Toyoda with help from
people like Taiichi Ohno and Shigeo Shingo that helped Japan (post-WW II)
to become the cheapest and most fuel-efficient manufacturer of cars
7. TOTAL PRODUCTIVE MAINTENANCE to reduce
losses in manufacturing by Tokutaro Suzuki that helped improve the
performance
of the chemical industry
8. SIX-SIGMA at Motorola by Bill Smith to
improve defects and improve process capability later made famous by Jack Welch at GE
9. THEORY OF CONSTRAINTS (ToC) by Goldratt
to improve throughput and reduce operating costs and inventory
10. LEAN by James Womack & Daniel Jones
who brought TPS from Japan to the western world
As we know, all these concepts which originated in
manufacturing are now used across various industrial sectors like IT, Financial
Services, Hospitality, Logistics, Government, and Armed Forces. This underlines
the contribution and importance of manufacturing to industry as a whole.
India story so far
In last decade India has emerged as one of the fastest
growing economies. While revising down the GDP growth outlook for 2020 to 6.1
IMF has pegged the medium-term GDP up to 2024 at 7.4% making India one of the
fastest growing economies ahead of China at 5.9%. (these estimates are prior to
onslaught of Covid-19. The revised estimates are still emerging) Today our
service sector contributes to 54.13% while manufacturing sector contributes to
18.32% followed by agriculture which is at 14.39%. Given our large domestic
market which needs “products” to consume such a lower contribution of
manufacturing is not a healthy sign.
Manufacturing provides many jobs, at all levels. It is
important as an employment generator. Among all sectors (service,
agriculture,
social, manufacturing), manufacturing distributes wealth most equitably among
the work-force; hence is a key
factor to pull people above the poverty line.
E.g. In most of the fast developing Asian countries such as Thailand,
Indonesia, Malaysia, Taiwan, Philippines, Korea and China, manufacturing has
contributed 30 to 50 per cent of GDP, and thus have helped in eradicating
poverty. In contrast, Indian manufacturing sector’s contribution to GDP has
moved from 16% to 18.32 % in last 10 years. a
“Make in India” initiative is designed to take manufacturing
to 25% of GDP. For India to realize these projections our manufacturing
industry has to play not just significant but a leading role. Under this
initiative GoI has identified and taken many steps to improve competitiveness
of Indian manufacturing organizations. This has resulted into India to jump to
58th rank out of 140 countries on the Global Competitiveness Index of the year
2018.
Even before GoI started serious efforts through reforms, organized
manufacturing sector in India has put its act together and has spent
significant efforts in putting the house in order. While battling with factors
beyond their control leading Indian
manufacturing companies have taken lot of
efforts to reduce manufacturing costs, improve quality, sweating the assets and
improve productivity. Most of the leading Indian manufacturing companies have
adopted world class manufacturing or
manufacturing excellence practices using
methodologies like TPM, TQM, Six-Sigma and Lean. Since 2003, India
companies have won 401 JIPM TPM awards which are highest for any country
outside Japan. Indian companies have won 38 Deming Prizes – the highest global
recognition for TQM implementation. India has the most US FDA approved pharma
plants outside US.
While that is the story of top of the pyramid manufacturing companies an average
manufacturing company in India is yet to adopt world class manufacturing
practices and claim to get competitive advantage. Many Indian companies use
various
manufacturing improvement initiatives. These initiatives are used on
stand-alone basis without integration. E.g. initiatives like kaizen, 5 S,
Quality Circles and Six-Sigma etc. excel in themselves and remain restricted to
lower and middle level. Such
programs remain largely cosmetic in nature without
creating any competitive advantage. In some multi plant organization each plant
is left to decide their individual program with limited or no horizontal
deployment of best manufacturing practices. Often there is no integrated
approach to initiatives across plants. E.g. while one of the plant might be winning
accolades in Quality Circle initiative, other plants of the organization do not
have a culture of Quality Circle but may be working on other initiatives.
Another typical behavior we often see is that the plant manager would claim to
be knowledgeable about
manufacturing excellence initiative but there would not
be practicing the same.
Today’s Manufacturing plants are not isolated from the end-to-end
supply chain which consists of Plan, Source, Make and Deliver. Hence
Manufacturing practices within four walls of manufacturing can’t be built in
isolation. There have been many examples of companies spending lot of money on
ERP with limited impact on manufacturing performance as modules like PP and MM
are not supported by a strong manufacturing improvement initiative that
improves down time, cycle time, change over time, MTBF and MTTR. Objectives of
a manufacturing excellence program have to be defined in the context of
specific supply chain challenge faced by the company’s supply chain. E.g. a B2B
supplier has to build abilities to provide small batch sizes of variety of
parts within short lead time as demanded by the customer factory which itself
might not be very good at supply chain planning. In such a case the plant
has to focus on efficient layout, quick change overs with minimum wastages and
delayed differentiation. A pharma plant has to be fully compliant with
GMP as defied by regulators. Thus, practices like 5S, process capability
improvement, SOP management; ability to do exhaustive CAPA and data integrity
should be the key objectives of its manufacturing excellence program. In many
such cases we don’t see the supply chain objectives being well integrated in
manufacturing.
Manufacturing Excellence program to integrate
“Panchmahabhoot” of manufacturing
As per Auruveda and Indian philosophy we have five basic
elements in nature, which are associated with health of human
beings namely
Prithvi (Earth), Jal(Water), Vayu(air), Agni (fire) and Akash(Ether). Any
disorder in human body indicates
imbalance of one or more of these
elements. Similarly, a manufacturing plant has five basic elements which
govern its
performance. These elements are Assets, Processes, Place, Utilities
and People.
Any lack of performance of a plant can be traced back to sub
optimal management of these elements.
A comprehensive manufacturing excellence (ME) program has to
ensure that performance of all the five elements is improved to deliver a right
quality product at least conversion cost with highest productivity &
safety, with optimum inventory at right time. A manufacturing excellence
program has to address following basic aspects:
Improving Asset Adequacy and Availability:
Adequacy of asset mean the bottleneck stage of manufacturing has enough
capacity to meet the demand hence must be fed with orders which improve throughput.
The concept of Theory of Constraints (TOC) has to be used to make this happen.
The bottleneck has to be fully exploited by focusing on Overall Equipment
Effectiveness (OEE) improvement using TPM, Lean and Six-Sigma tools. Remaining
stages of manufacturing have to be adequately available by rigorous
implementation of TPM.
When we think of assets in a traditional manner, we only
focus on production assets. In some process and chemical plants utilities play
a major role in deciding capacity which is often is a function of product mix. Thus,
implementing TPM in utilities
to improve quality, availability and adequacy of
utilities has to be part of ME initiative. In industries like pharma where
large number of SOP based analytical testing happens for RM, PM, FG and WIP QC
labs are important assets using various equipment for testing which can become
bottlenecks. Hence QC has to be part of the ME program.
Another area to build excellence is building smart assets and IoT based asset
management. Ability to build a connected plant where machines can
communicate with one another, predict failures, and measure their own
performance is important for asset management.
Improving Capability, Flexibility and Value of
Manufacturing Processes:
A plant uses many processes like capacity management, production planning &
scheduling, Asset Maintenance and Quality Management which support the core
production process. Improving process capability of these processes to reduce
variations, defects, rework and delays has to be the objectives of cross
functional and function projects lead by senior and middle level managers.
Methodologies like DMAIC, SPC (Six-Sigma tools) need to be used for process
improvement. Flexibility of support processes in terms of quick response
time and shorter lead time are critical for plant flexibility. A process
becomes valuable when it has less nonvalue adding activities and meets customer
expectations in terms of time and quality. Manufacturing processes often have
lot of wastes which increase the lead time. Use of tools like VSM and 7 Wastes
(Lean tools) are very effective in identifying wastes and designing new
processes.
Workplace Organization
The workplace is like ether which fills all the space in a plant. Workplace
effectiveness fundamentally starts while designing the plant layout. Indian
manufacturing has grown through brown field. Most of the old plants have
poor layouts leading to problems like unwanted material handling, inadequate
machine working area, poor illumination & ventilation and safety problems.
Ensuring high quality workplace upkeep, hygiene and safety are quite a
challenge. While we have focused on
cleanliness with some success, we have not
understood importance of beautification of manufacturing shop floor. Why should
a shop floor look drab and mundane? How can we use the machines, walls,
MH equipment, floor etc. to display
messages about quality, safety, team work,
inventory etc. in a manner which will make shop floor lively and vibrant? why
can’t
there be some plants in the shop floor ? Of course, all this has to be done
keeping applicable safety and environmental norms.
Thus, a robust 5 S and beautification program coupled with
strong intolerance towards “abnormalities” should be the
foundation of any ME
initiative. It has to go hand in hand with initiatives like autonomous
maintenance (AM). Making AM
and 5 S as part of job description of a shop floor
worker, however highly skilled a job may be is critical much needed
mind-set
change.
People Capability & Total Employee Involvement
Involvement of grass root level is the foundation of any improvement
initiative. A robust mass awareness and communication program which makes the
masses aware of the business challenges and new improvement initiatives has to
run on an
ongoing basis. It gives opportunity to the leaders to connect with
the masses and gives employees to see how their role
needs to change with
changing time. Programs like 5S, Kaizen, suggestion scheme, Quality Circle etc.
have to be effectively used to achieve shop floor improvement objectives which
get cascaded from the organizational thrust areas. Today customer wants full
visibility and access to shop floor. The experienced customer or auditor of
international regulatory body assesses the work culture during such visits by interacting
directly with shop supervisors and workmen and nothing remains hidden. Thus, we
have to move from employee involvement to employee engagement. Creation of
empowered cross functional Area Effectiveness Teams in each section right from
entry gate to scrap yard & ETP is needed to improve workplace organization
and employee engagement.
Upgrading skills is a continuous process as the
manufacturing technology is changing fast. Knowledge of basic 7 QC tools,
Why-Why analysis etc. are no more new skills. These are basic skills to remain
gainfully employed in today’s manufacturing world. In India most of front-line
staff lack adequate supervisory skills which hamper their ability to do
effective daily management.
Plant managers have to build capabilities to understand
latest applicable manufacturing technology, have to be literate in IoT and
digital technologies. Sadly, today’s average Indian manufacturing manager is
quite inadequate even in excel skills.
They need to practice high-level
problem-solving skills using statistical analysis to solve complex problems,
process
reengineering skills and appreciation of supply chain view. Managing
industrial relations in situation when the workforce is
going to shrink with
use of automation and robotics is important.
Each company has to design its own unique program aimed at
building competitive advantage through manufacturing.
A large multi plant
manufacturing organization has to develop following core abilities under the
umbrella of Manufacturing
Excellence. These abilities have to be part of
company’s manufacturing DNA:
1. Common maturity model to measure maturity of MfgEx across
all the plants
2. Comprehensive improvement structure across all plants
3. Common Operational KPIs across the plants
4. Strong internal capabilities to continuously improve product quality, throughput,
and costs.
5. A robust linkage of improvement targets, performance & maturity of ME
with and rewards of leaders
6. Ability to rapidly implement best manufacturing practices and key corrective
actions for critical issues from one plant to all the plants.
7. Integrated planning to manage delivery due dates & inventory
8. Availability of a competent pool of manufacturing leaders who understand
Manufacturing Excellence
9. Strong structure for manufacturing capability building lead by internal
trainers
10. Robust mechanism to ensure implementation of MfgEx at key vendors and 3P
plants.
Manufacturing Excellence is a long-term commitment and core
competency for manufacturing leaders. Make in India will be truly successful
only if we are able to build culture of Manufacturing Excellence across
majority of the plants. This task is quite daunting and would call for much
more collaboration among manufacturing companies facilitated by industry and
trade associations. Some kind of mandating and incentivizing from the
government would help in gathering speed as we are already late.