teocaf said:Greg M said:Interesting that barnumb has 3 posts and all in the last 2 hours defending woodpeckers' inability to produce a rather simple product in a timely manner.
Your last post is a copy of one I've seen before. It only confirms what I'm saying. It's an amazing mom and pop operation that has grown beyond their ability to properly manage. That's not a bad thing but they need to hire professional management and logistic personal for the business side so that they can concentrate on the tool and quality side.
I don't need data to see that they can't even come close to meeting their shipping goals. Richard even admits that he has a difficult time predicting orders and then fulfilling them. Hire people that can do those things and then he can concentrate on what made his company special, quality tools that people are willing to pay for.
He waits until the orders are all in before he starts the production process which usually begins by ordering the raw materials. With people in place to run the business side of the company they could actually have materials on hand and begin production before they start taking orders. Proper analysis of past sales will produce fairly accurate numbers that they can begin to work off of.
It must be exhausting to be a industrial management consultant on top of everything else...
The products from this fine company may look "rather simple", but if you actually take the time to study such things as the manufacturing and quality steps involved, you'll find out that they're anything but simple.
I truly believe that the people running this company are diligently working to continually improve on all fronts and that they're doing it on their schedule, since they're the ones privy to all the variables involved.
In the meantime, since everyone is so freely doling out advice, perhaps i can also make a suggestion that might be helpful until your square arrives: grab your coupon and run on down to HF and get one of their squares to tide you over. just remember to add 3.5 degrees to your readings to arrive at 90. simple trig really. after all, isn't a cheap tool better than--oh i forget how that goes...
this is my first post on this thread and i'll try not too post too many more or too often because apparently there are new limits in effect...
In overall manufacturing terms these really are fairly simple products. Anodizing, at this late date, should be very well controlled for WP. I am sure they have batched enough product over the years that anodizing variables could have been identified and eliminated. It appears on the surface at least that WP has not learned how to run economically in smaller batch sizes. Tools and fixtures cannot be that complex and most products are of relatively small size, meaning machines should be capable of holding multiple setups that never need to be broken down or that can be re-established in mere minutes. If they are using primarily vertical machining centers they need to explore the advantages of horizontal machines, which would allow them to increase permanent fixture availability and workpiece load and unload while the machines continue to run. In contrast, Veritas has a product line far more diverse and complex and they manage to do it.
That said, the hardest part is to match a sales model to a complimentary production model. These, taken together, create a business model. WP may be very successful overall and one can argue their delivery shortfalls will not tick off a base of customers willing to wait for unique products. I am also quite sure, make that positively sure, that they are doing themselves some long-term harm that will cost them a huge amount of business going forward by so grossly missing delivery dates. Growth really needs to be managed and factored into the equation. To offer a host of OTTs at the same time you are moving into a new facility is not a good plan. It appears production planning is following sales initiatives instead of preceding it. Unique products will only get you so far. There are some obviously very talented people at WP. They need to focus like a laser on improving delivery instead of new products before a major part of their market gives up on them. Put another way, if your challenge is not knowing whether yor orders will be for 1 piece or 10,000, then you need to be able to handle either.