Plant Tour reviews

IBM Plant Tour: Driving Innovation Through Relentless Reinvention

IBM’s digital journey is keenly focused on building a cognitive enterprise that embraces an agile culture of innovation, combined with a client focus that leverages exponential technologies to deliver greater value. IBM executives on the MLC’s recent virtual tour of its high-end storage manufacturing plant in Vác, Hungary, described it as, “a mission of relentless reinvention.”
The April 2021 tour showed Manufacturing Leadership Council members how the company brings that mission to life to maximize its complex supply chain. And it is a complex one: IBM has an operational presence in more than 170 countries around the globe, with its manufacturing sites in strategic locations, serving hundreds of thousands of customers with hardware deliveries and service maintenance. To meet the high configurable product demand, the IBM supply chain operates in a hybrid model of build-to-plan and build-to-order. IBM also collaborates with suppliers across its global, multi-tier supplier network.
For IBM, the enterprise IT needed to drive rapid innovation is based on an Open, Hybrid Cloud and AI-embedded platform that incorporates the company’s own technology, including IBM’s Watson AI capability, to provide data insights as well as manage its supply chain on a daily basis. IBM AI technology has capabilities to co-create and manage business transformation through visual recognition technology, acoustic analytics, industrial augmented reality, IoT, blockchain, and digital twins, to power its infrastructure, elevate its automation capability, maximize equipment lifespan, and enable remote support.
But it also takes IBM’s team of passionate and committed supply chain professionals to apply these emerging technologies to operations with both speed and agility to achieve the company’s goal of relentless reinvention.
From piloting new technologies to becoming a more cognitive enterprise, automating core processes, and leveraging a multi-source more resilient supply chain, IBM is committed to the idea of innovating anywhere/use everywhere data insights to improve its processes, people, and technology.
Adopting Advanced Technology to Drive Digital Transformation
The Hungary plant tour exemplified how IBM combines collaboration and processes with automation, AR, AI, IoT, and data visibility to achieve a seamless, agile operation. Supported by the company’s Operations and Supply Chain Execution teams around the world, some of the key technologies IBM executives highlighted included:
 Supply Chain Advisor: Being able to access forecast, order, supply, inventory, and engineer data in real time across all manufacturing geographies and functions is critical to the company’s decision-making process. IBM uses a platform powered by Watson and cognitive AI capabilities to provide instant data insights that its worldwide supply chain professionals can use to monitor and assess global and local supply and demand information, as well as parts numbers and component details. There are three main Advisor systems: Cognitive Supply Chain Advisor 360, Quality Advisor, and Test Advisor, which enables the IBM Supply Chain to mitigate potential issues before they reach critical mass and to adjust workflows as needed.
Collaborative Robots: The company also uses collaborative robots integrated with AI visual recognition to help maintain consistency in the quality inspection process, as well as precision in the assembly process. This allows employees to concentrate on more complex and higher value tasks.
Acoustic Insights: IBM infuses AI and automation into the acoustic arena as well. It trains AI models to recognize sounds that could indicate a potential machine failure so it can be mitigated before a failure occurs. Both of its visual and acoustic insight products were developed in house. 
Augmented Remote Assistance: When the company had to minimize the physical interaction of employees due to COVID-19, it implemented an augmented remote assistance solution — a mobile app and web interface that workers can use to report problems to remote experts. The experts can then evaluate and provide step-by-step visual instructions through a live audio and video stream. This has streamlined response and repair times. Some manufacturing operations staff also are equipped with a tablet to facilitate collaboration and improve knowledge sharing through virtual interaction.
Blockchain: In the Hungary plant, IBM has used blockchain technology to track parts in collaboration with its suppliers throughout the lifecycle of a product. This makes it easy to track and screen for faulty parts, and that data can then be shared with suppliers. IBM also uses Blockchain for logistics tracking and customs clearance to share key documents and in-transit information across the network with suppliers and carriers to digitize the data and improve compliance and cycle time through customs.
Track & Trace IoT: A key technology to monitor shipments and possible incidents /in-transit delays. IBM is using Track & Trace IoT Smart Sensors and the Mechanical Tilt indicator attached to outbound and inbound shipments to provide real-time data on location, temperature, humidity, and shock alert.
The Human Factor
IBM also enables its operators to learn cross-functionally so they can move from one area to another, based on demand. The flexible workforce, combined with its flexible platforms, enabled IBM to deliver on customer demands quickly and successfully during the perfect storm of disruption that was COVID-19. The supply chain team, augmented by data insights, can better understand situations and receive recommendations. The interface’s use of natural language also made it quicker, easier, and more intuitive to collaborate.
Digitizing the assembly line with visual and acoustic insights through augmented reality and AI not only speeds up processes and allows support to be provided remotely, it also allows employees to concentrate on value-add tasks in their workflows, enhancing flexibility, agility, and a culture of innovation.
Yet IBM executives do not believe the company is anywhere near the end of its digital journey. As it continues to it use Watson’s AI capabilities to streamline its cognitive supply chain, increasing amounts of data available from IoT devices across the network will help further enable IBM’s AI capability to grow and scale in the future.
IBM is confident that this approach to digitally centered, continually improving processes, combined with its investment in training in both technical and soft skills, is preparing the company to act with greater speed and agility whenever and wherever the next disruption might occur.

Manufacturing Cyber Security: MxD’s Protection Framework

More than 35% of cyber espionage attacks in the United States are targeted at manufacturers, more than any other business sector, according to a recent U.S. national defense industry association study.
To ward off today’s determined hackers, manufacturing companies of all sizes must now urgently analyze and protect both their internal operations, and their entire supply chain ecosystem, to prevent malicious disruption, the theft of intellectual property, data ransom attempts, or competitive denials of service.

Chandra Brown, MxD CEO

As manufacturers accelerate the deployment of digital technologies to modernize and interconnect their facilities and supply chains, they also open up new risks for cyber-attacks, stressed Chandra Brown, CEO of MxD, during a recent virtual plant tour for Manufacturing Leadership Council members.
Smaller companies are especially at risk, Brown added. “Hackers are very aware that there may be more vulnerabilities in smaller companies, and their attack vectors on large companies can start with targeted attacks on the smaller companies within their supply chain.”
And a cyber-attack can be fatal: 60% of small companies go out of business within six months of an attack.
MxD, which was designated as the National Center for Cybersecurity in Manufacturing by the U.S. Department of Defense in 2018, took virtual plant tour participants through two cybersecurity demonstration areas within its 22,000-square-foot Innovation Center in Chicago to highlight what can be done.
Build a Cyber Wall
MxD’s framework for cyber security is designed to address the five major cyber security elements published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST): identify, protect, detect, respond, and recover.
First up on the tour was MxD’s Cyber Wall, which is configured to help manufacturers understand the vulnerabilities of, and required protection for, Operational Technology (OT) systems, which are vulnerable because they typically are based on microcontrollers or PCs that are increasingly connected to local area or wide area networks. As MxD demonstrated the Cyber Wall, they provided the following tips for meeting the first two NIST elements:
Identify: If you don’t know how many devices you have connected to your network, find out. There may be more than you think — the average could top 4,000 in a 100,000-square-foot factory. It’s also key to know what operating system you’re running, how often it’s updated, and if it has the most recent security patches.
Protect: The next brick in the cyber wall is installing software on each device that will keep you updated on whether it’s connected and, if so, if it’s running the latest, most secure software version.
To illustrate how the Cyber Wall works, MxD uses two identical PLC industrial control systems, each attached to a unique network of PCs, routers, switches, and firewalls. One is protected with “whitelisting,” or application control, while the other is not. Rather than trying to keep a list updated with malicious software that is constantly propagating, application control only allows software that is expressly approved. When a USB drive loaded with an unknown malicious executable file is loaded into each system, the protected system blocks the executable file since it is an unrecognized application, while the unprotected system allows it to start malicious activity.
All it takes is one person to plug in a suspect USB or click on a phishing email to set a hacker loose in the system. That’s where network segmentation comes in. The MxD protected system is contained within its own segmented network, with access controlled by a firewall that manages both internal and outside access, so if a hacker does break in, you can keep any damage from spreading to other areas within the facility.
Erect a Cyber Platform
To address the remaining three NIST cybersecurity framework segments — detect, respond, and recover — MxD demonstrated its Cyber Platform. Like the Cyber Wall, the demonstration was based on programmable logic controllers used to power the OT control system, in this case to operate an array of pumps and values to direct liquid through separate clean and wastewater pipe networks. It includes 20 sensors to monitor temperature, flow rates, pressures, and other factors.
Detect: Like most factories, the MxD cyber platform uses an intrusion detection system (IDS) to monitor network traffic and note an anomaly, such as when a hacker tries to take over the PLC. It then alerts appropriate personnel to investigate.
Respond: The most important thing is to have a plan, including official, easy-to-locate policies and procedures. These generally include 1) bringing the system to a safe halt; 2) disconnecting the affected system from the network to keep the corruption from spreading; 3) communicating the incident to the proper internal and, if appropriate, external personnel and law enforcement; 4) performing a root cause analysis to determine how the problem happened and how to mitigate similar incidents in the future.
Recover: While the details will vary across industries, a recovery plan generally should include 1) having a documented plan on how to bring the systems back online — manufacturers should have software backups of all systems, including OT, so they can revert to the last backup that happened before the hack; 2) review the root cause analysis to determine what corrective actions are needed; 3) bring the system back online. MxD engineers did a failure modes and effects analysis (FMEA) when designing the Cyber Platform to determine potential hacker targets and worst-case scenarios ahead of time so they could build recovery mechanisms into their systems. Even if you have an older legacy system, it’s worth doing an FMEA to help drive effective recovery plans, they said.
The goal of manufacturing security is “to operate securely, not to secure operations,” stressed the MxD panel at the end of the virtual tour. The goal always has to be to ensure continuous production, not to be 100% secure.
As cyber threats evolve, manufacturers must also evolve the tactics they use to thwart those threats. But don’t expect to ever be able to thwart them completely. The most important thing, concluded MxD, is to have a plan in place to get back up and running before too much damage is done.

Teaching Analog Systems Digital Tricks

Teaching Analog Systems Digital Tricks

Posted by  | Jan 14, 2021 | 

Manufacturing Leadership Council members recently took a virtual tour around MxD’s Innovation Center in Chicago to learn how to integrate digital manufacturing technologies using existing legacy equipment in ways that can help increase agility without breaking the bank or getting buried in a data landslide.
MxD’s nearly 100,000-square-foot Innovation Center in Chicago is a neutral space for manufacturing experimentation and demonstration housing millions of dollars in consigned and purchased equipment that its 300 partners, including companies such as Siemens and Autodesk, use to conduct research and implement projects ranging from augmented reality to advanced simulation techniques. To date, it has invested about $100 million in 60 projects on behalf of manufacturers of all sizes and stages in their digital journeys.
MxD (Manufacturing x Digital), is a six-year-old nonprofit that works in partnership with the U.S. Department of Defense and is one of a network of 16 advanced manufacturing institutes around the country. Its goal is to improve U.S. competitiveness in the manufacturing sector through innovative R&D projects, workshops, and testbeds in the areas of predictive analytics and maintenance, agile and resilient supply chains, cybersecurity, digital fingerprinting, augmented reality, and digital twins.
It’s where manufacturers go to forge their future.
The MLC’s virtual tour included six stops. Because MxD usually hosts live tours and meetings at the center, the first stop outlined some of the health and safety measures MxD has implemented, including touchless thermometer checks, automated doors, masks, physical distancing cues, one-way entrances and exits, sneeze guards, hand sanitizer stations, updated air circulation, and UV-sanitized safety glasses. All measures are in compliance with the CDC and Illinois Department of Health guidance. All visitors and other stakeholders are told about the policies ahead of time.
The other five stops showcased examples of how MxD brings hard-to-visualize applications to reality in a factory setting. It has several testbeds throughout its 22,000-square-foot factory floor that are used for proof-of-concept testing of new technologies, integration and testing of existing technologies, and for educating and demonstrating various digital manufacturing concepts.
In one example, tour participants virtually walked through the process MxD uses to produce small souvenir tokens it gives to facility visitors, using its discrete manufacturing testbed, which uses typical factory equipment, to show how it integrates data collection systems and closed-loop analytics to continually improve its processes.
MxD commonly showcases products from several service providers as well as open-source products to provide a range of perspectives. Participants were also shown how MxD’s test beds integrate older analog equipment into digital systems, using a simple, inexpensive proximity sensor to sense whether the token is oriented correctly. Designed and built-in house, this unit cost less than $600, including all the mechanics, electronics, and control system.
Instead of using a plug-and-play commercial system, MxD also had one of its summer interns design and build the washing station used to rinse the coolant from the CNC process to help foster a better understanding of the higher tech skills tomorrow’s workers will need.
Another stop on the tour walked participants through a visual digital retrofit project MxD is doing in partnership with the University of Cincinnati and several MxD members. The goal is to convert analog information from older equipment into digital information that can be communicated over IoT networks and used in a variety of digital manufacturing operations. The project demonstrated how manufacturers can accomplish this without having to make large capital investments in new equipment by using vision-recognition hardware and software.
The project uses an inexpensive web cam to non-invasively record and digitize data from a simple analog air-pressure gauge – an approach that can be used for other pieces of legacy equipment — with the results fed to a PC which processes the visual information and displays the output on a monitor, including the real-time digital conversion. The PC then sends the information to the IoT network for alerts, analytics, or other digital use cases. This project was developed in partnership with Opportunity Works, a program to help young adults in the Chicago area by placing them as interns in local businesses to learn skills in manufacturing, IT, and supply chain. In this case, they learned how to use 3D printers to fabricate the fixtures in house and helped install the hardware in the factory for testing.
Another virtual stop on the tour showcased how manufacturers can get the benefit of digital technology while continuing to use legacy equipment, such as a type of manual milling machine that’s been in use since the 1930s. MxD undertook the project with Georgia Tech and several MxD members to inexpensively retrofit this type of machine with digital sensors. This specific use case identifies when machines are in operation by installing an industrial current sensor on the power leads to the spindle motor to monitor the current load and communicate the sensor’s output. A $19 microcontroller, simple enough to be programmed by a high school intern, was also used in the project. The total cost for the sensor, panel controller, and power supply was less than $150.
During the following discussion and Q&A session, facilitators and panelists emphasized a few key learnings from the MxD experience:

  • The goal isn’t always about gathering as much data as possible, but more about ensuring you collect relevant data that will address gaps and problem areas in the process.
  • Not everyone needs an advanced degree or a lot of training to make innovation happen. If the interns and high school and community college students MxD works with can adapt to the needs of digital manufacturing, it’s a good indication that you can educate and upskill your existing workforce to handle the digital transformation.
  • The cloud is the big equalizer, enabling everyone to collaborate remotely regardless of location, as has been seen in practice during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Don’t try to eat the digital elephant all in one bite. Start small and demonstrate the ROI. Once others see the value of what you’re doing, you will start gaining internal advocates who will champion new digital ideas by building on those early successes.
  • Be transparent. Make sure that folks in the company know what you are doing, why you’re doing it, and how it’s going to help them, and the company, move forward.

Footnote: Further details: mxdusa.org

Protolabs hosts MLC’s first-ever virtual plant tour

Only July 22, the Manufacturing Leadership Council hosted its first-ever virtual plant tour in conjunction with Protolabs, a manufacturer of custom prototypes and on-demand production parts. More than 300 attendees joined the tour, which “visited” six of Protolabs’ U.S. facilities across three cities.
Protolabs was founded by Larry Lukis in 1999 as a rapid injection molding business in Maple Plain, MN. It was originally called Protomold. Frustrated with not being able to get prototypes quickly, he decided to start his own business that would begin with a customer’s problem and then work backwards to automate and scale the necessary solution. The company later expanded into CNC machining services, and opened facilities in Europe and Japan.
CEO Vicki Holt joined the company in 2014, and the company then acquired Fine Line Manufacturing to add 3D printing to its service portfolio, followed by Rapid Manufacturing for sheet metal fabrication. Today, Protolabs is an end-to-end digital manufacturer of custom components with locations in three states and seven countries.
Protolabs has developed a robust ecommerce platform where customers can upload 3D CAD files 24/7 and typically receive an interactive quote within a few hours. The customer receives a digital twin of the part for their inspection, and they can work with Protolabs’ engineering team if they want input on their designs.
The tour began at the company’s injection molding facility in Rosemount, MN, which processes more than four million parts per month. This segment of the tour was led by Gurvinder Singh, Protolabs’ Global Product Director, Injection Molding. Singh said that the standard lead time for a new mold is 15 days, but with rush options a design can often be delivered within one day. In addition to the Rosemount facility, Protolabs also has another injection molding facility in Plymouth, MN.
Rosemount has 125 presses that typically handle part run volumes from 1-25,000 parts, but sometimes make more than one million parts. Protolabs will store customer molds to allow for follow-on parts and offers additional finishing services like adding textures or inserts or printing logos on parts. Injection molding services were a critical element to Protolabs’ COVID-19 response efforts as they allowed the company to make parts for ventilators, face shields, test kits, and masks.
From there the tour went to the CNC machining facility in Brooklyn Park, MN, led by Holt, who is a member of the MLC’s Board of Governors and a member of the Board of Directors of the National Association of Manufacturers, the MLC’s parent. With 380 machines running in the facility, noise levels became a problem so the company installed acoustic insulation in the ceiling to minimize how long sound bounces, taking the sound down several decibels. Protolabs further enhances safety at this facility with a fall arrest harness system for employees who are working on top of mills. The company has an enhanced machining facility in Nashua, NH, that allows for more complex parts via 3-5 axis machining as well as lathe and wire EDM.
The company tries to ensure that it will have enough capacity to ship orders on time every time. When capacity nears its peak, Protolabs brings more machinery online to handle the additional demand. The CNC facility is automated through machine programming, allowing for highly repeatable processes and high quality. Other machining-related services offered by Protolabs include turning, drilling, finishing, and quality control.
The next stop on the tour was the Protolabs 3D printing facility in Raleigh, NC. Led by Rob Bodor, VP and GM, Americas, it is believed to be the largest 3D printing contracting manufacturing facility in North America. The company has the capability for 3D printing with both plastics and metals and can work with a broad range of materials and part sizes. There are 70 stereolithography machines in a range of sizes that can build features as fine as a human hair. Protolabs deploys stereolithography (SLA), selective laser sintering (SLS), direct metal laser sintering (DMLS) PolyJet, Multi Jet Fusion (MJF), Carbon DLS, , technologies to make a variety of parts rapidly.
The final stop was at Protolabs’ sheet metal fabrication location in Nashua, NH, again led by Holt. The plant is broken into two sections, one focused on complex assemblies and the other on speed and scalability. The operation for complex assemblies includes laser cutters, punch presses, press brakes and other hardware, and material selections include aluminum, stainless steel, cold rolled stock, galvanized steel, and brass and copper. Every order is cut from 40×40 blank sheet to reduce waste.
Moving to the second area of the sheet metal plant designed for simpler parts, this plant is built around express work cells, each with their own laser cutter, press brake, punch and hardware station, set up in a cellular layout with an operator who is trained across all of the equipment in the cell. Each day the operators meet in a daily huddle to cover performance metrics, and they contribute to idea boards aimed at continuously improving how the cell works.
During the attendee Q&A following the tour, Holt described their end-to-end digital thread and how they manage all business processes in the same system, so that every piece can connect and talk with every other piece. This digital connectivity allowed Protolabs to respond rapidly in service to its customers at the beginning of the pandemic crisis, especially medical customers.
Holt also discussed the company’s quest to build further resilience and agility into its supply chain in order to always be crisis-ready. While the company is a global business, it operates off of regional supply chains. Holt also praised the responsiveness and resilience that digital technology can introduce to the supply chain during times of crisis.
A complete recording of the plant tour is available here. Watch for notifications from the MLC regarding future digital plant tours.

Hunting for Treasure at Intertape Polymer Group Inc.

“Watch the pennies and the dollars will take care of themselves.”
While that old saying might be a maxim for household budgeting, it also could describe Intertape Polymer Group Inc.’s (IPG) approach to developing an award-winning energy management program. Its essence: turn an accumulation of low-value opportunities into a gold mine of high-value savings.
The Manufacturing Leadership Council hosted a tour in February at IPG’s Danville, Va., facility, the company’s flagship plant out of 22 in North America. IPG also operates four plants in Asia and one in Europe and houses its corporate headquarters in Montreal, QC and Executive headquarters in Sarasota, FL. Their products include a variety of paper and film-based pressure sensitive and water-activated tapes, polyethylene and specialized polyolefin films, protective packaging, engineered coated products, and packaging machinery. IPG, with $1.2 billion in revenue in 2019, is the second-largest tape manufacturer in North America.
The company considers the Danville manufacturing facility to be “two plants under one roof” with one part of the facility focused on carton sealing tape manufacturing and the other part focused on stretch film manufacturing. Each has its own compressor room and monitors its energy usage separately. There are more than 300 employees at the 600,000-square foot manufacturing facility and adjoining distribution center.
IPG’s achievements in energy savings have earned the company many accolades, such as being recognized as an Energy Star partner since 2009 and being named a Sustained Excellence Partner of the Year every year since 2016. The IPG Danville facility was named a NASCAR Green E3 Challenge Award winner in 2016 and won Industry Week’s Best Plants award that same year. The IPG Danville facility has realized $5 million in energy benefits through a variety of continuous improvement activities including favorable contractual services.
For these achievements the company has utilized both internal initiatives and outside expertise. Externally, the company worked with Leidos for a turnkey energy management system (EMS) that offers visibility into energy usage at a machine and line level with the ability to track trends over time. The findings discovered from that system led to adoption of new practices for staggered equipment startup procedures to minimize energy demand, as well as improvements in equipment scheduling. Real-time energy usage data is displayed on an LED board within the plant (one for the tape operations side and one for the stretch film operations side). The EMS led to approximately $339,000 in savings in its first year after installation.
Internally, IPG has found great success through its employee-led energy treasure hunts. This is a two-to-three-day Kaizen event where 15-20 participants from different divisions of the company go into the facility equipped with an air leak gun, a FLIR (thermographic) gun to detect temperatures, and a thermometer on the hunt for low-cost and no-cost energy savings opportunities. Each team is given a directional focus, such as facility utilities, chillers/boilers/HVAC, or machine and process operations. Their findings are reported to management, and there is recognition for the team afterward and follow-up for how their findings were addressed.
While it might seem that all problems would be solved after holding just a few of these treasure hunts, IPG says that they did their first treasure hunt in 2013 and still identified  $100,000 in potential savings opportunities for future years from treasure hunts conducted in 2019, brought on by continuous changes in people, equipment, and plant configuration.
The company has also realized notable savings through its efforts in curtailing air leaks and improving air flow from its compressors. While IPG added new compressors to its facilities, it initially did so without updating the piping or other infrastructure that supported airflow. An airflow survey found turbulence created by piping bends and kinks, inefficiencies in the compressor system, and many air leaks. Improvements included installation of a demand expander, and eventually isolating two separate compressor rooms to minimize disruptions in the event of an outage. As a result, the plant can now run its compressed air system at lower horsepower with increases in the amount of air in the system. Similar to its energy treasure hunts, the company also deploys a three-person air strike team to regularly detect and correct air leaks throughout its facilities.
Up next, IPG has its eye on further improvements in sustainability, including reductions in its carbon footprint and landfill waste. It is also in the nascent stages of creating safety treasure hunts that mimic its energy savings program.
For companies looking to create their own energy management programs, IPG suggests using the many free tools available online through Energy Star; comprehensive information is available regarding how to organize and execute energy treasure hunts. They also suggest staying informed on the state average price of electricity to ensure utility rates are at or below average, data that is published online by the U.S. Energy Information Administration. If rates don’t fall within that range, the company suggests contacting the local utility provider to determine if lower rate class options are available.

Clif Bar: A ‘Different Kind’ of Manufacturer

Can a manufacturing company’s operating model be built around a set of core values?
In the case of Clif Bar, the family- and employee-owned energy food company founded in 1992, the answer is a resounding yes.
Just how Clif Bar did so, and how its value-based operating model has played out in how it makes its Z Bar, Luna Bar, and other energy food products, was the subject of an NAM Manufacturing Leadership Council plant tour at the company’s three-year old manufacturing plant in Twin Falls, Idaho.
Nearly 40 manufacturing executives gathered at Clif Bar’s shiny 300,000-square foot plant to hear how Clif Bar’s culture drives its sustainability efforts and to see how it makes nearly 1.5 million energy bars a day with a workforce of about 300 employees.
Clif Bar was actually not in the business of manufacturing per se until 2016. Until then, Clif Bar used contract manufacturers to produce its food products. But as the company grew and matured it came to realize that it needed to control its own destiny more, and it wanted to further lean into its values-based, 5 Aspirations business model.  This operating model permeates Clif Bar’s entire business from top to bottom, and can be summarized as follows:

  • Sustaining Our Business – building a resilient company and investing for the long term.
  • Sustaining Our Brands – creating brands with integrity, quality, and authenticity.
  • Sustaining Our People – creating an inclusive environment where employees can grow and succeed as they live the lives they want to live.
  • Sustaining Our Community – promoting healthy, sustainable communities, local and global.
  • Sustaining Our Planet – conserving and restoring natural resources, and growing a business that operates in harmony with the laws of nature.

And so Clif Bar decided to build its first manufacturing facility, a greenfield effort, in Twin Falls, and to let the 5 Aspirations guide its design and implementation. The facility was architected based on what Clif Bar officials call a “biophilic design” – bringing nature, in the form of natural light, natural materials and vegetation, to the occupants.

The Twin Falls plant has more than 200 large windows, many of which stretch from ceiling to floor, that provide large amounts of natural light. Walls were built using local stone, providing a rough-hewn but dramatic look to the interior of rooms and common areas. An aerobic biological treatment plant processes water on site. And two megawatts of solar power currently provide one-third of the plant’s electricity needs.
Clif Bar launched its sustainability program in 2001 and transitioned to organic ingredients in its products in 2003. In 2018, it achieved a milestone of purchasing one billion pounds of organic ingredients to date. Each year, Clif Bar donates one percent of revenues to communities in which it does business. So far, it has donated $49 million, and contributed over 15,000 hours of employees’ time each year.
The privately-held Clif Bar does not release specific financial data, but does say that it has achieved a 15% 10-year compounded annual growth rate.
Over the course of an eight-stop tour, MLC members saw the plant’s production, warehouse, syrup tank, kitting room, baking and cooling, packaging, and palletization operations. MLC members also saw the plant’s state-of-the-art fitness center.
Helping to manage the plant’s operations is what Clif Bar calls its Visual Bakery System, essentially an Internet-of-Things application that gathers and reports data from plant floor equipment. Using large display screens, the system was devised jointly by manufacturing and IT, and shows the status of work orders and other KPIs by line. The system interfaces with the company’s MES and J.D. Edwards enterprise resource planning system.
Energy bar ingredients move through various stages in the plant, including the syrup room, which houses five 275,000-gallon tanks. A Clif Bar official said the weight of syrup in one tank is equal to the weight of 20 elephants. And in the kitting room, unique ingredients, such as chocolate, are added into the process by hand.
Once energy bars are formed, the bars enter a long oven tunnel and  then pass through cooling tunnels. After going through the cooling process, the bars are wrapped using an automated system, inserted into cartons, and then placed in corrugated master cases. A robot-controlled palletizing operation places 486 boxes on each pallet. Shipping follows. The entire process, from forming the bars to palletization, takes one hour, Clif Bar officials said.
During a question-and-answer session, company officials emphasized that Clif Bar’s 5 Aspirations are supported by a set of what is called “Ingredients”. These are desired cultural behaviors and are headlined as create, connect, inspire, own it, and be yourself. Employee reviews are built around the Aspirations and the Ingredients and communication meetings always cover all five Aspirations, not just one or two.
But a key operational metric for the Twin Falls plant, officials said, is continuous improvement, a process that requires relationships, open communications, collaboration, and, above all, trust.
Looking ahead over the next three to five years, Clif Bar officials were asked what improvements they would like to see at the Twin Falls facility. Greater supply chain flexibility and agility, a stronger international footprint, a higher percentage of women in the bakery workforce, and better IT systems integration were cited by officials.

Photography by David Bohrer, director of photography, at the National Association of Manufacturers.

At Plant Tour, Amway Details its High-Performance Workforce Initiative

In 1979, McDonald’s launched the Happy Meal, ESPN hit the airwaves for the first time, and Sugarhill Gang’s “Rapper’s Delight” became the first Top 40 rap single. It was also a year when Amway undertook a massive hiring effort for its Ada, MI, manufacturing facility. Forty years later, that wave of new employees is moving on toward retirement – and taking its skills and knowledge with it.
Seeing the approaching predicament that the company was going to face with its labor force, leadership knew it needed a comprehensive, sweeping plan to reskill its workforce and modernize its culture in order to attract and retain new talent and move to a high-performance team model. That was the genesis of its ONE Team initiative, an employee-led program aimed at building employee engagement and retention while also giving the company a flexible, responsive workforce. It’s turning into a success story for its manufacturing operations, one that Manufacturing Leadership Council members were eager to hear about during an MLC plant tour of the Amway headquarters facility in early October.
Founded in 1959 by Rich DeVos and Jay Van Andel, Amway today is an $8.8 billion company with 16,000 employees that produces over 400 products in six manufacturing facilities around the world, including in Ada, California, Washington, China, India, and Vietnam. Some of its key brands, which are sold through a direct selling model in 100 countries, are Nutrilite vitamin, mineral, and dietary supplements; Artistry skincare and color cosmetics; and eSpring water treatment systems and XS energy drinks. Amway has a robust manufacturing operation in Ada, with facilities for personal care products, cosmetics, nutrition products, and more.
To its address its workforce issues, Amway launched the ONE Team strategy about two years ago. At its heart, ONE Team is a change management initiative. Key aspects of the process for developing and deploying the program include involving teams and employees into all aspects of design work and implementation; transparent and frequent communication to all employees throughout the entire process; and partnerships and alignment with critical resources such as HR and executive leadership, with consistent messaging and support at all levels.
’A Tale of Two Cities’
In its current state, Amway is operating plants with two different work systems – a traditional role-based work system, where the work is title focused and defined to a specific role, and a skill development work system, where work is skill focused and generic roles are identified by skill level. The transition moves operations from 18 role-based titles, such as Custodian, Hilo Driver, Production Clerk, and Line Operator, to five future-state skills-based titles – Technicians I-IV, plus a Front Line Leader role.
ONE Team is the solution to numerous challenges that Amway has encountered with its workforce – improving employee skills for multiple tasks, increasing flexibility to allow the workforce to “flow to the work” vs. facing production holdups due to staffing shortages, improving plant efficiency through labor cost and overtime reductions, and giving employees a clear path to career progression with an eye toward engagement and retention.
The ONE Team skills and progression framework is set up on a three-team matrix: Mix, Package, and Warehouse teams, each with its own skill development system.  Career progression takes place when an employee demonstrates both the technical and behavioral skills necessary for promotion. Once promoted, team members are expected to maintain those skills and  conduct the job tasks at the current level as well as the levels below their position. Team members are put into a job rotation to keep skills sharp, and they do not “graduate out” from performing any particular skill.
Currently, there are 140 employees of the 1100+ total North American manufacturing employees in the new skill-based system, with rollout planned for additional facilities. Two operations have fully transitioned to ONE Team and two others are in the process to complete their transition by the end of the year. Two additional operations are slated to complete program design work and make their transition by the second quarter of 2020.
The Benefits of ONE Team
The teams that are currently operating under the new model are seeing high labor utilization rates, favorable financial performance measures vs. their targets, and higher levels of employee attraction and retention.
In addition to broader deployment of ONE Team, the company is also building a strategy for automation deployment that will move them towards hands-free materials movement and significantly reduce usage of low-skilled temporary labor. The Ada facility is currently deploying 31 cobots mostly for packaging and palletizing and is exploring self-driving vehicles and mobile conveyance tracking.
Asked what they’ve learned, Amway’s leadership says they have found it’s incredibly important to have employees included at every step of the journey, and to create a strong linkage to company values. They also say that top-down support is critical to success and that a dedicated core team is necessary to keep the transition going. Moreover, successful execution requires “doing it right” vs. being “driven by schedule.”
Amway says they will continue to seek opportunities for sensible automation deployment and will keep going full steam ahead with its transition to high-performance teams.

How Oracle Chose a Five-Day Lead Time for Servers

Oracle Corp. is widely recognized as one of the largest software companies in the world. Founded in 1977, Oracle has developed and sold database management programs, applications, and other software products for decades, amassing more than 147,000 customers in 175 countries. In its 2019 fiscal year, Oracle posted $39.5 billion in revenue.
But less well known is that Oracle also manufactures computer hardware. The company got into the hardware business in 2010 when it acquired Sun Microsystems, which at that time was considered one of the leading makers of engineering workstations and servers.
With revenues today of about $2 billion, Oracle’s Sun server business represents only a fraction of the company overall. Still, its production volume of about 6,000 server units per year feeds both the commercial market as well as Oracle itself as the company continues to grow its data center footprint worldwide.
Most notably, Oracle quotes a five-day lead line on server orders. How it is able to do so was the subject of a Manufacturing Leadership Council plant tour earlier this month at Oracle’s 80,000-square foot manufacturing facility in Hillsboro, Ore.
MLC members learned about Oracle’s production model, its supply chain management operation, its emphasis on quality, and saw the company’s first steps into employing Internet of Things technology on the factory floor.
The Hillsboro factory, which assembles and tests more than 70 different types of server products including Oracle’s Exadata database server, traces its roots to the early 1970s under a company called Floating Point Systems, a manufacturer of attached array processors and so-called mini-supercomputers. FPS was sold to Cray Research, a maker of supercomputers, in 1991.  In 1996, Silicon Graphics acquired Cray, and shortly thereafter Cray’s Business Systems Division was sold to Sun. In addition to server assembly, the Hillsboro facility also plans for other products such as Oracle’s Micro POS equipment.
Over time, the factory’s fixed lead times have evolved. In 2005, for example, lead times stretched from 10 to 50 days. By 2010, the factory was able to offer eight- to 12-day lead times. And in 2015, a decision was made to fix lead times at five days.
“The five-day lead time was a choice,” said an Oracle executive during the tour. “The prior model had a lot of variability. But we wanted to increase customer satisfaction. And It is much easier to communicate a fixed lead time to a worldwide sales force.”
The Hillsboro factory employs a build-to-order assembly model that encompasses six external manufacturing partners. The internal process consists of mechanical assembly, cable assembly, testing, packing, and shipping. Data center standard 78x24x40-inch servers, each with up to 32 racks, are assembled in the factory. Oracle software is loaded into the systems and engineered to work with the hardware.
Customers order servers using Oracle’s Configure Price Quote Configurator system, which enables assembly instructions and testing specifications. The factory’s supply chain management process embraces a classic design, source, plan, make and deliver model. The supply chain is managed using Oracle’s supply chain cloud-based applications.
The entire manufacturing and assembly process, including supply chain partners, spans 20 to 24 weeks, Oracle officials said.
In one area of the production process, Oracle recently implemented an IoT application it calls “digital bins”, plastic box-like structures that are filed with components used in assembly whose weight is monitored by sensors that convert weight to piece counts. The technology is from a company called, appropriately enough, DigitalBins.com of Long Valley, N.J.
When components are used and the bin’s weight is reduced, the bins send out a replenishment signal. Managers receive an e-mail alert when a signal is sent. Factory officials said the digital bins are more accurate than physical counts of a bin’s components.
Oracle officials said the digital bin implementation is just the first step they are taking with IoT. “This is something that we really want to leverage to a full extent,” said one Oracle executive of the IoT. “We are looking to connect with our other manufacturing partners and get a better understanding of systems and data around our ecosystem.”
Asked about any “unintended consequences” that occurred as it was establishing its five-day lead discipline, Oracle officials said a measurement called the “atrocity metric” was set up to monitor mistakes that happened more than once.
“There were a lot of surprises that you didn’t think would pop up,” said one Oracle official. “Often times it would be an area of the supply chain that didn’t deliver and created a lot of problems on execution. If you have to reschedule an order twice, that’s an atrocity.”
The atrocity measurement worked, Oracle officials said, because it challenged the “will power” of staff members and enabled them to understand that they can overcome any challenge or obstacle.
A highlight of the tour was Oracle’s discussion of its sustainability efforts. The Hillsboro plant recycles 95% of its waste. In June, Oracle won the Manufacturing Leadership Council’s High Achiever Award in its Sustainability Leadership awards category for its Take-Back Sustainability Program.
Looking forward over the next few years, Oracle officials said they would like to see a number of supply chain advances take place, including tighter data integration in the chain.

Seeing the Future State of Distribution at Future Electronics

Now attuned to the fast-and-getting-faster world of e-commerce, consumers have come to expect a much shorter time window between when they click “buy” and when that item will show up at their door. That’s true of the average person who’s buying laundry detergent on Amazon, but also of industrial and commercial customers who are ordering specialized parts and components from vendors and suppliers around the world.
Future Electronics is perfecting this practice from its crown jewel distribution center near Memphis, TN, a site visited by a group from the Manufacturing Leadership Council on May 1. With a goal of delighting their customers again and again, Future Electronics faithfully follows a hyper customer-centric and supplier-centric business model. With customers ranging from hobbyists to OEMs, and those customers ordering from around the world, Future Electronics services them seamlessly, while also giving them flexibility for their preferred carrier, shipment speed, and shipment type (for example, parcel vs. pallet).
That vision has paid off for Future Electronics, which  has grown to be the third largest electronic components distributors worldwide. Founded 51 years ago in Montreal, Canada by Robert Miller, the company now has 169 locations worldwide. The Memphis distribution center, which consolidated facilities in Bolton, MA, and Montreal, Canada, was built in 2004. The company choose Memphis to tap into its rich transportation network – its airport is the world’s second-busiest cargo airport, only behind Hong Kong. The Memphis  area is served by five Class I freight railroads; its location close to several major interstate highways puts it within an overnight drive of more than 150 metro areas nationwide.
What customers and suppliers see on the front end is enabled by what’s behind the scenes: the awe-inspiring technology integrated into the Future Electronics distribution center. Held up as a world-class model of advanced distribution, visitors come from around the world to see it for themselves. The Memphis DC holds copious amounts of inventory and every SKU is stored in a secure, strict temperature- and humidity-controlled environment. Upon receiving components from suppliers, they are sorted into totes to keep like parts with like parts, one product type per tote or pallet, with the same date code range and same country of origin. Kept in 50’ x 600’ racks and retrieved by a fully automated crane system, product storage location is optimized for peak retrieval efficiency based on demand.
Product totes are then automatically transported to pickers to be sorted into customer totes and prepared for shipping. Orders go out on the same day they were received up to 8:30 pm for domestic ground air and next day via air at midnight ET.  A seemingly small thing, but perhaps with larger cultural implications: product value is not displayed anywhere on inventory, nor is any customer information visible to employees in the warehouse. In that way, employees aren’t tempted to be biased  on how they handle components that have low value vs. high value, or shipments for high-volume customers vs. smaller ones. In total, the facility has the capability to ship more than 120,000 different part numbers overnight.
It should also be noted that in the entire facility, the company has only three forklifts – two in use at any given time, with one spare. The company carries an impressive array of certifications: ISO 9001 (Quality Management System); AS 9120 (Aerospace Certification); ANSI/ESD 20.20 (Electrostatic Controls); ISO 14001 (Environmental Management Systems); and CTPAT (Customs Trade Partner Against Terrorism).
Additionally, Future Electronics offers consulting services to its customers to share best practices for supply chain and Lean practices. The Memphis DC has been so successful that the company replicated a near-exact copy for its European operations in Leipzig, Germany.
Company leadership says that being privately owned has allowed them to do things that would be difficult if their primary business focus was creating shareholder value, vs. creating value for customers and suppliers. Because their growth has been  organic rather than through acquisition, they are able to operate with consistency throughout all their locations, including in their IT platforms for operations, warehousing, transportation, and exporting.
Even though the company is a world-leading model of advanced distribution automation, company leaders still see room for improvement. They spare no effort  hunting for technology that will help them operate more efficiently, with a current focus on improving KPI visibility for all employees. Like their manufacturing counterparts, they struggle with finding and retaining workers and are working with tech schools and community colleges to develop materials handling curriculum.
With a forward-thinking mindset, a constant eye toward improvement and a solid strategy for growth, it seems there are many more exciting developments to come from Future Electronics.

VW Plant Tour, Wolfsburg, Germany: The Fast Lane of Mass Production

Hannover MLC Report Day 5 –– An hour’s drive outside Hannover, Germany, lies the city of Wolfsburg, home to Volkswagen’s massive showcase production facility, now Europe’s largest automotive factory, which produces an astounding 3,500 cars a day.

MLC Delegates on VW Wolfsburg Plant Tour

That was the venue for the MLC Hannover Fair Delegation’s special plant tour on its last day in Germany. MLC delegates were welcomed with an introductory video of the plant’s history and an overview of its current production scope, before embarking on a guided tour of the plant’s many production halls in a specially-designed people carrier.
The Wolfsburg plant began life in the mid 1930s when German design engineer Ferdinand Porsche was tasked to develop a ‘People’s Car’. The result was the iconic VW Beetle, which eventually went into mass production in 1946 following the end of the Second World War.
Today, the site covers an enormous six square kilometres, and has been expanded to include two fully-automated glass tower collection points for VW customers each housing 400 new vehicles, a multi-building Autostadt campus, a 5-floor auto museum, new VW model showrooms, shopping malls, restaurants, and even its own lake.
The factory is staffed by around 60,000 employees and has multiple automated processes supported by almost 4,000 industrial robots supplied mostly by Kuka and Fanuc. 10,000 of the plant’s employees work in R&D alone, developing next generation vehicles and drive trains.
10 million components and parts arrive at the plant from all over the world each day, including 36 types of steel needed for the production line. The stamping shop processes 2,600 metric tons of steel a day and its heaviest stamping machines apply a force of 7,700 tons every few seconds – about the same weight as the entire Eiffel Tower in France.
Each car has around 8,000 parts and 42 electronic components, and is individually identified by a single RFID chip containing detailed customized specifications and customer information as it passes through the 2-day production process. Visual and manual inspection and testing processes record around 4GB of data for each vehicle.
The paint shop even has arrays of fine dusting systems using banks of delicate Emu feathers to gently remove every speck of dust before the final coats of paint are applied.
The intense combination of human skills, digital automation, and technological ingenuity at such scale provided MLC delegates with an awe-inspiring insight into the complex and highly-orchestrated processes of mass auto production in action.
Some of the best moments, however, were yet to come as the delegates continued on a guided tour of the nearby Austostadt auto museum, featuring a host of classic car designs from both Volkswagen and other automakers through history, including Cadillac, Dodge, Jaguar, Alfa Romeo, Lamborghini, and Bentley.
First VW Beetle prototype in 1934

Included in the exhibition is a replica of the first-ever powered vehicle created by Karl Benz in the 1880s, and the original prototype of the VW Beetle developed by Ferdinand Porsche in the 1934.
2019 multi-million dollar Bugatti Chiron

And in an architecturally futuristic, deep black, sunken building nearby was one of the latest examples of the marriage of high-end precision engineering and artistic car design – a specially-created version of the multi-million dollar Bugatti Chiron.
The day ended with a celebratory farewell dinner for MLC Delegates at the Funky Kitchen restaurant above the music recording studios in the Peppermint Pavilion on the outskirts of Hannover.
MLC Executive Director David R. Brousell contributed to this article. Photography by Alyssa Dixon.

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