Storerooms and
Listening to Customers (VOC)
One of the
first supply chain projects that we did at a large chemical company in Alabama
which involved frequently used MRO parts by the maintenance folks. First we did
an As Is process map! Highly paid maintenance personnel ($30 per hour) were
driving in pickup trucks, in pairs, to go to a central storeroom to pick up
basic and frequently-used parts. The time lost was enormous. The feedback we
got from the maintenance personnel (VOC) was that they did not trust the
current system at all. We were a chemical company, and our expertise or core competency
was not in storeroom, or MRO parts management. We started a supplier search for
distributors with expertise in management parts and storerooms. We decided to
basically outsource the management of these frequently used parts to the
distributor. They examined our storeroom data, provided us software, and soon
discovered the one hundred parts most-frequently used by our maintenance folks.
In other
words the distributor did the To Be process map for us! Since they had strong
credibility the Kaizen team formed. They then set up
many free-issue or mini-storerooms throughout the large chemical plant’s
grounds. Our maintenance folks traveled or walked to these areas to get the
parts they needed. The distributor maintained and restocked the areas. The
distances were much shorter and conveniently decentralized. The maintenance
people set up a steering committee (another best practice) with the distributor
to review parts usage and add or subtract parts to the mini-storerooms. In
Kaizen terminology this was To Be metrics! The process was greatly simplified,
and the maintenance people soon developed a high degree of confidence in the
distributor and the streamlined system. Then the distributor offered to
reorganize our storeroom and barcode all the parts at no charge. We quickly
agreed.
In another
month, a shocking development occurred. We were not sure how to quantify the
savings from this project and were worried that many people would not
appreciate the soft savings. As stated above, many of our maintenance people
had no confidence in our current storeroom system. We publicized a return-any
extra-parts-with-no-questions-asked week. This was run much like a fine-free
day at your local library. Our maintenance people returned over $2
million-worth of bogey or just-in-case inventory that they had been squirreling
away in their toolboxes and other areas. They’d done this because they’d had
zero confidence in the old system. Our new supplier accepted the parts back and
gave us a large credit for the returned parts that were still usable. The
distributor kept us abreast of any new storeroom-management techniques and
technologies, including the RFID (Radio Frequency Identification Device). We
developed a long and lasting relationship with them which became the model for
our other chemical plants.
By just using
a few tools of the Kaizen methodology we experienced a huge success!
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