Id
love to buy it But can I have it with Shaker style doors, cherry
veneer, a darker finish and an inch shorter?
If you can say; Yes you either are a one man shop, use a
configurator, or a candidate for a nervous breakdown.
You
may have a configurator and not know it Many cut-list and cabinet design
programs are based on simple configuration logic. This article discusses the basics of configuration and how
advanced applications make it a lot
more than a shop floor tool. It is
the cornerstone of mixed mode manufacturing, - the equipment and systems that facilitate the efficient
manufacture of custom(ized) products in a mass production environment. However,
configurations greatest value to most companies is as a marketing concept that can be a key profit builder when
it controls order entry.
Ancient
history:
Henry Ford thought he could live without a configurator. He offered
cars in any color you want as long as it is black. Chevrolet became a
major player by offering customers a choice of colors. Lazy but smart engineers
decided that it didnt make much sense to create a different bill of material
for each color and simply appended a color suffix
code to the cars model # (A2S[BLU]
or A2S[GRN]).
The practical limit to colors in the factory were the number of guns and
tanks the sprayer could handle but the ultimate limitation was the ability to
control finished goods inventory.
It really became interesting when someone asked
Why cant I have a different color upholstery than gray? Thus
began the first level of configuration: options and features.
The cars identification documents (travelers or route sheets) became
more than just information to the
workers with a spray gun. The A2S[BLU][RED] now required inventories of
subassemblies and purchased parts of both gray and red fabric and trim. An
option or unit value was added to every inventory item to designate the
color sensitivity of every component of
the car 0 = no color, 1= body
color, 2= trim color. Brake pads and similar parts had
no color value but
seats, door panels, etc. had to be ordered and ready at the line in each
color.
It wasnt too hard for the assembly-line worker, he
had bins of various colored parts and he read
the identity tag on the car and matched the color information up with the suffix
of the part he was putting on the line. Inventory
control at the line was simple bin min/max (a predecessor of the popular
Japanese name inventory reserve schemes) but the real sweat in
inventory control was upstream where the rule was never,
ever, put anything on the assembly line that you couldnt complete. Cabinets without doors or chairs without cushions may not
seem as big a deal (as a yard full of partially built cars) because they can be
stacked awaiting components. But think, your labor supply isnt completely
elastic (nor is your cash flow). Wouldnt
it have been better to build, ship and invoice complete products
than build more work in process inventory?
Yes, color options (suffixes) made life
easy for engineering as only one bill of material was necessary for a car
model. The combination of ten body colors and five interior colors would have
required fifty bills (10 x 5) for every model
car and five sets of bills
for every interior component. Think of the potential for error in doing the same
task fifty or more times: think of the needless work
to make even a simple update. Eliminating the proliferation of bills of
materials avoids chaos in engineering but of greater value is that management
can make product rules automatically enforced at order entry to maximize revenue
(upcharges for better fabrics and
veneers), prevent component inventory proliferation by focusing customer choices
( stock laminate colors vs. long-lead time specials) and control finished goods
stock keeping units by restricting
choices of inventoried products.
The real genius was not the one who decided
that offering color choices was a way to maximize sales but the one who realized
that you could charge more for special color and trim combinations.
At the car factory green bodies would
only be offered with beige or gray
interiors, red cars were available only in the 2 door model and white cars were
$50 more. This is the second level of configuration: rules based option
selection.
Setting rules in advance rapidly resolves oddball requests at order entry thus avoiding delays and the need to meet with engineering and inventory control for every non-standard order. The interaction amongst the color options and between the options and the product number are the essence of rule based bills of materials. Of course, you could do this all manually calculating cost one bill of material at a time (different color paints, fabrics and veneers can drastically change costs) and then individually price each product variation. Because you have better things to do on weekends, employ computer system rule based architecture to allow you to make price changes based upon cost, inventory and marketing considerations. All white cars with blue interiors $200 off this week Ford has done this.
The third level of configuration is the most
important one for wood products manufacturing: size control. Product
and component rules based upon size are no-brainers: fabric width and panel
sizes limit construction and/or help
the system automatically select alternatives. (Rules for tabletop cores could
include limits such as these: maximum width: fir ply 48; MDF 60; gum ply
72.) Depending on the systems capabilities
it would either automatically substitute materials or reject the order if
it was out of bounds. Component size control is extremely important for
architectural applications and systems furniture. The simplest example is
a hutch. If your standard construction uses
1/32 laminate faces and the customer selects a special laminate which
is available only 1/16 thick, applying this laminate to the two uprights
increases the overall width 1/8. To make it fit the base unit, the shelves
and back must be cut 1/8 shorter. The same situation often exists with
various thickness and profiles of edge banding. This is not a problem if you
work in a 2x4 environment where the
customer expects up to a ½ less and sloppy size control. But when you
promise an installer 6 table tops it better be 72 not 72-1/4 or
71-1/2.
Level four of configuration is: labor
utilization. It is
essential for all manufacturing systems to not only measure labor time but to
track setup time and waste. This is
the basic information for machine
loading (accurate delivery projections), labor utilization and realistic
costing. The configurator adjusts your process requirements depending on the
options selected and the upstream operations and materials. In the tabletop example the 72 wide tops can only be
laminated manually and require
machining in your oversized bed router. Setup and process time also drive the
configurator and can select your double end tenoner for long runs of
tabletops and the router for short
runs.
Projecting yield and waste is an important feature of
any system used in cabinet, furniture or millwork manufacturing. These are not
material losses - other than handling damage there are no yield losses in
materials. They can only be incurred in a labor process but different materials
will have different factors and require different processes. (Setups can also
have a predicted waste factor.) The system must accurately estimate projected
losses and then working back from the desired quantity of finished
products calculate realistic requirements for materials and process time.
Product size customization
is the fifth level of configuration. A leap of faith is to have only one product
for each design. This is fairly easy to do with chairs, (which typically are not
modified to suit the Goldilocks syndrome of too little, too big, too tall)
but how about tables? Your catalog could offer: Style X table 1-1/8
laminate top, particle board core,
banded edges and tubular legs. Have
it your way! Rules would
probably include:
|
Item |
Modify |
Choice |
Remarks |
|
Top
Surface |
Material |
Any
laminate (hpl) |
|
|
Top
Surface |
$ |
$7.50
upcharge for non-stocked hpl |
|
|
Top
Surface |
$ |
15%
upcharge for solid color hpl |
Higher
scrap rate |
|
Due
Date |
Delivery |
Add
5 days for non-stocked hpl |
|
|
Length
|
Maximum |
120" |
Cold
press/router size |
|
Length
|
$ |
>82"
= $9.20 upcharge |
no-sag
brace channel required |
|
Height |
Limits |
24"
26" 30" 36" |
Legs
are purchased parts |
|
Height |
$ |
36"
= $10.50 upcharge |
|
|
Leg
Color |
Choose |
Grey,
Black or Chrome |
Legs
are purchased parts |
|
Leg
Color |
$ |
Chrome
= $ 15.00 upcharge |
|
|
Bulk
Pack |
Yes/No |
no
= $3.50 upcharge |
effects
labor operations & material |
The ultimate leap is to have only one product: "table"
and let the customer configure style, materials, size, shape and type of base.
It can and has been done!
How does
this all play out in the factory where your nightmare image is a Charlie Chaplin
movie of lock-step manufacturing? Will this information overload cause employees
to go postal? No! Remember my example of the car factory, the employee just
focuses on his single task: he reads the product identification tag and makes
one decision at a time. In most cases he will have a work-station schedule (or
product traveler) that identifies the process and the options. More complex
information can be interpreted directly
by a bar code reader on the machine. (Typically labels are created and applied
at the panel saw identifying the job # and part #.
The machining center is instructed on the basic machining and the options
selected for this part; hole drilling, corner rounding, etc.) The machine
doesnt care or lose time if this part is different than the previous one
neither should your operator! (The only problem is tracking these parts as they
move through the factory but thats another story.)
Configuration ideally is part of
the order entry process
(providing instant feedback) but in many large scale business systems it
is operated from a stand-alone package. It
can either use existing bills as templates (static) or create bills of material
directly from rule based logic
(dynamic bills). In either case,
the bill of material exists only for the one order. Static bills are easier to
create and faster to process. Dynamic
bills can be used for similar products in varying sizes or to alter the size of
an existing product. It is
easier to get started with static bills, your staff is probably familiar with
their appearance and it is probably easier to modify your system to accept them.
They may be all you need, particularly if you arent going to change materials
or processes based on product size.
In many ways the automobile is a much simpler product
than furniture or cabinets its size cant be changed by the customer When
a customer says the car wont fit in his garage they steer him to a another
product rather than offer to
make it 2 inches shorter. A
logical candidate for a static system (without size control)? Yeah, until they
started to build trucks of
varying lengths and with
frame specifications based on payload. The
point is first do what ever you need to do to survive today but dont
block your path to the future!
Lets get real! I am a strong believer in
configuration software for cabinet and furniture companies but I am very
concerned with the swing of the industrial pendulum. Our industry was late to
embrace computer technology and today many companies who claim to have installed
manufacturing business software
still have little more than accounting and order entry software of a quality
that is barely adequate for a convenience food store.
On the other hand there are companies who have spent more in the last
five years on computerization than they have on manufacturing equipment.
(Unfortunately in both situations, most companies have focused on when to
manufacture neglecting what and how to manufacture.)
Neither extreme is healthy.
Companies with "legacy" systems are living on borrowed time.
Customers want it their way and now! The world of sixteen week cutting
cycles is long gone. However, never forget that it is the product that you
sell, not your ability to manipulate data. Unless you are a dot com
company, survival and long-term profitability
demand that you must first have a salable product, the means to
efficiently produce it, and a motivated team before starting
down the (often, very long) path towards computer integrated
manufacturing.
For more information on software systems that can run your manufacturing business from "Quotation to Cash"
Manufacturing business software to help your company prosper:
Complete MRP / ERP software solutions customized for your exact needs
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SIM*plicity tutorials:
(Click any underlined item for more details.)
| Features that help your company | Examples from SIM*plicity | Discussion and Features |
| Customer
Orders
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<<< Please read this introductory overview first.
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| Customer Details: shipping information, history, etc. |
The utmost in options and feature controls. Automatic pricing with
more than 400 variables (size, color, add-on's etc.) Simple to set-up and easy to use.
More than an "Order Configurator":
these variables interact with dynamic (parametric) bills of materials to create complete manufacturing
documentation.
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| Item Details |
Options to enter and display product information.
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| Order Entry Tools |
Because we automatically transfer all
pricing variables and "engineering limits" to Order
Entry, SIM*plicity eliminates the typical delay for orders to first go to
Engineering and Pricing prior to Order Entry.
|
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| Batch Order Entry |
Input Customer Order details directly
from Excel.
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| Order-Project Costing |
Display actual costs during Order Entry
or during "material takeoff" -Quotations.
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Graphics display with real-time visibility of all in-process orders. | |
| Product Entry Instructions |
Guidance to the operator in entering complex items .
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| New Product Entry |
Add new customers and products on the fly.
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| Zip and Postal Code Tutorial |
Factors in entering address data for uniformity and to ensure automatic freight calculation
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| Sales Discounts and Commissions |
Information on entering discounts and sales commissions.
|
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| SPEED-UP |
Tips to increase order entry productivity.
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Invoice Details - Setting Variables
|
Variables for printing (and exporting to
accounting software) invoices
Order Entry variables for display and printing |
|
| Deposits and Payments |
Record and display deposits and partial payments
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|
| MRP2/ERP Planning and Shop Floor Control | Advance
Plan
|
Customer and factory (internal) orders create inventory and labor demand for specific days. SIM*plicity schedules individual machines within each work station/cell and generates material requisitions.
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Planners can control and balance workload at every machine. | |
| Production Planner/Scheduler | Shifting production (date or workcenter) automatically updates all related processes. Graphics displays with drill-down" information effectively links Planning to Shop Floor Control. | |
| MRP2/ERP Tutorial |
Workstation Control allows supervisors to fine tune schedules and report production.
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| Purchasing and Inventory Control | Requisition/Purchasing
|
New orders automatically updates long-term material plans. Shop floor control module interacts with purchasing to automatically flag needs that won't be met and adjusts schedules accordingly. Buy-out items are purchased as soon as customer order is processed - including automatic pricing of options and features.
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| Inventory Details |
Knowing the materials "on hand" and what they cost is not enough! SIM*plicity calculates the exact date needed, where it should be stored and details of its physical characteristics. |
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| Vendor Information |
Access complete contact information on vendors and their employees. |
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| Purchasing Messages |
Adding Standard and Text Messages to an individual item Requisition or to an entire Purchase Order Tools to record and adjust physical invnetories.
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| Accounting and Cost Control |
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Know the true cost of every item that you build! Automatically calculate the cost of "work -in-process" inventory. Instantly estimate the complete cost of every Order and Quotation. Change an option or feature and the cost is automatically updated! Please also read ABC Cost Control |
| Product Engineering | Bill of Material Flow Chart | Bills of Materials are the core of true manufacturing systems. They link together customer orders, manufacturing instructions with material and labor requirements. Dynamic (parametric) Bills of Material are used for entire families of products eliminating the need at most companies for 90% of individual Bills of Material. However, Static (Conventional) Bills of Material are still valuable and our system incorporates them with a full range of Options and Features |
| Plan and Perform | Project Takeoff | Estimate and control complex projects. |
| Sales
Management
|
Sales by Customer and Product Line | Cost of Goods Sold report for every order. Volume and margin reports for each sales rep. For each customer select default discount programs, special product discounts and choose from multiple selling companies (OEM, etc.) |
| SUPPORT |
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Training, customization and 24/7 real-time support by the developers of this software. A commitment to excellence - today, tomorrow and for the past 30 years. |