Whether they’re building bicycles, making mobile phones or preparing produce, manufacturing plants around the world all have one problem in common:
How do you cut waste and other by-products from production processes?
It’s estimated that at £6,5 trillion, manufacturing waste is equal to 10% of the Gross World Product (GWP)—the combined gross national product of all countries across the globe. Clearly, things need to change.
How much revenue in manufacturing is lost to waste?*
Not only is waste... well, wasteful, but it also increases manufacturing costs, reduces profits and impacts the environment. In short, the more that waste can be kept to a minimum, the better it is for everyone.
With so much waste produced, there’s a strong focus on changing how processes work. And establishing the right practices and systems to minimise this excess. But how?
Leftovers. Surplus. Unwanted. However you describe it, waste is an unavoidable part of the manufacturing process. But that doesn’t mean it can’t be minimised. Which is why many in the industry follow Lean Manufacturing. Invented in the 1930’s, this method identifies any part of a manufacturing process that doesn’t add value so that waste can be reduced, and productivity increased. It has helped millions of companies for almost 100 years, enabling them to offer better products and services for their customers. Fast forward to the 21st Century, and waste is more important than ever—whether that’s due to greater awareness of environmental impacts or the need to streamline budgets more efficiently.
Lean Manufacturing has been around since the invention of radar, ballpoint pens and cat’s eyes (the road reflectors, not the feline variety).
Digital tech is helping and takes Lean Manufacturing to another level. The method now concentrates on the collection of tools, techniques, and principles that have proven to be effective at driving out waste. As well as providing the information needed to make sure that the entire manufacturing process is as eco-friendly and sustainable as possible. Whether it’s from different raw materials, the production lines they’re made on or even the facilities they’re created in, more detailed data can be collected than ever before. And better decisions can be made. But what should modern manufacturers be looking for? And how can they analyse it efficiently?
According to Deloitte, there are seven main areas of waste that manufacturers should keep in mind when thinking about how to reduce them.
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What is it?
There's a fine line between making sure you have enough materials in stock to create products, without them taking up too much room – which can stop production of other products.
Why is it waste?
In a nutshell, it ties up your capital as you’ve spent it all on the wrong materials—which prevents you from fulfilling other orders. All of that excess sits gathering dust, as you don’t need to use it, while you have to find ways to buy new raw materials to meet orders.
How Sage can help
Sage can keep overproduction to a minimum. By monitoring—and keeping—production, purchasing and warehousing processes in line with demand, you can control and manage your supply chain. Ensuring your production is at the right level.
A case in point
Sage customer success stories
ARA Food Corp
Everything you create has to go somewhere. So the more you create, the more you have to transport it around—whether that’s within the same building, down the road or even overseas.
Not only does all this movement have an impact on your environmental goals, but it can also affect the quality and costs of your products too. The more they move around, the more likely they might be damaged or even lost along the way—making them more expensive to replace.
Sage can help you adapt and change plans when you need to, to help manage logistic flows wherever you’re sending products. With visual dashboards of real-time data, you can see what’s happening and avoid costly movement when it’s not needed
Let’s take a closer look at how things move. It’s not just traveling to and from workstations in a bustling factory. This is also about how machine parts operate to keep production moving and the role that people play to create your products and services.
Even machines need to have some sort of movement. But when they—and the people operating them—have to do so in ways that can cause injury, stress, and general wear-and-tear, it’s going to lead to problems. And downtime to repair and recover.
To stay on top of maintenance, and fix small issues before they become larger problems, requires in-depth management of asset data. Sage allows for preventative maintenance, work order control, early diagnosis and statistical analysis. With a single system in place, everyone can access all this important data and quality control can be easily monitored.
If you want to turn a healthy profit, you need a steady stream of stock and products ready to send to your customers. It’s a fine balance to get right, and can lead to issues if you don’t.
Having too much product means you may have a hard time moving it and come across other issues—like warehouse availability, insurance costs and more. On the other hand, having too little means you can’t offer customers what they want or keep up with orders. In that case, you’re likely to end up spending more on costly last-minute fixes.
A lot of manufacturers follow some variation of Just in Time (JIT) processes to keep that balance right. Sage makes this process much easier with real-time monitoring of inventory. So you can keep up with ever-changing customer demands without holding costly, excess inventory.
Nothing is perfect. So there are going to be occasions when products don’t meet your high standards. Whether they’re identified early on in the supply chain or when your customers receive them, having full traceability keeps these errors to a minimum.
Faulty, damaged or hazardous materials and goods not only affect the safety of your employees and customers, but can also impact your business’s reputation. Which is why it’s important to identify faulty batches and compromised raw materials, as well as if the problem is new or has been happening for a while.
With real-time data at your fingertips, you can answer these questions instantly. Sage can identify exactly where issues lie at any stage, so you can address them quickly. Project management tools offer much more efficient product and project tracking—increasing planning accuracy and reducing the number of defects.
Similar to ‘Inventory’, this is all about making sure that products aren’t sitting idle during any stage of your manufacturing process. Whether that’s between workstations, sat on shelves or stored in warehouses.
Products not doing anything—whether it’s due to unplanned downtime, production bottlenecks, staff shortages or more—tie up significant capital in your business. Capital that isn’t adding value and costing you more while you wait.
Sage shares information for oversight of the entire manufacturing process. Everything can be accessed easily, offering ‘one version of the truth’, so everyone knows what stage products are at, and when to expect them—meaning that there’s never a need to wait.
Put simply, this is when additional extras or options are added to the product that the end user didn’t ask for. This can be caused by a range of issues: from including extra steps in workflows, to having too much resource that results in double entry of data.
Sometimes it’s great customer service to go the extra mile, but it has to always add value to your bottom line. Duplication of work—unless critical, like safety checks for example—doesn’t make your product any better and just delays timelines.
Sage can prevent the duplication of record creation and help optimise workflows by managing all manufacturing processes within a single system. From Bill of Materials (BOM) planning to shop floor control, using a single system puts you firmly in control with increased planning accuracy.
Works order planning has been revolutionised and Redtronic now has less wastage and full visibility of stock levels. Sales increased by 23% and turnover by 12% in the year after go-live, and Sage helped Redtronic to secure the coveted Automobile Association supply tender contract due to its ability to ensure products met customer demand.
"Sage has allowed us to react quicker to demand, and deal with any enquiry using full knowledge of all assets within the system."
Steve Redfern, Technical Director, Redtronic Ltd
Pharmonovia
With a pioneering track record of more than 50 years of manufacturing traditional coffee machines, family firm Fracino has trusted Sage solutions to help ensure growth remains manageable
“We know where everything is, and we haven’t got people double-ordering stock—which was another common problem in the past. Simple things like that have been alleviated and it’s made a huge difference. Probably a reduction of 15% or 16% in stock levels. That’s massive for the business.”
Adrian Maxwell, MD and owner, Fracino