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Insight


PART 2 (OF 5): ‘ABSORB VARIATION’ The Wheel of Five for Supply Chain Management


Absorb variation with stock and time


To help organizations recognize and effectively deal with good and bad variability, Involvation has developed the Wheel of Five for Supply Chain Management. This is Part 2 in a series of five.


O


f the five principles in the Wheel of Five, ‘Absorb variation with stock and/or time’ is possibly the one that is most commonly ignored. Rather than being absorbed as quickly as possible to reduce the upstream or downstream dis- ruption it causes, variation actually tends to be passed on and is intensified each time (bullwhip effect). Although this is often unintentional and even uncon- scious, the consequences are significant. Unlike capacity, stock and time make it possible to absorb variation so you can avoid this by freeing up time and/or stock and utilizing them differently. For exam- ple, you can add to stock when it is quiet and supply from stock when it is busy. Thanks to this so-called capacity stock, production can remain at a steady level despite variation in demand. Now, you might be thinking that this will result in more inventory and/or longer lead times. In fact, the opposite is true. Sufficient stock and time is often avail- able, but just not being used effectively.


Unreliable


In fact, GKN Fokker Hoogeveen proved this by introducing


smart inventory


buffers. Until recently, the company’s composite factory suffered from long, unreliable lead times and lots of work in progress (WIP). Analysis revealed that this was largely due to the use of Material


Mario Wiersema, Site Manager Logistics at GKN Fokker Hoogeveen: “There’s no more discussion about priorities.”


Requirements Planning (MRP) for opera- tional planning purposes. MRP relies on the Master Production Schedule (MPS) – and the lead time and processing time – being reliable, but that wasn’t the case at GKN Fokker Hoogeveen. This resulted in a backlog of orders and uncertainty about the scheduled starting times. The lack of clear priorities resulted in long and unre- liable lead times and a high volume of WIP.


However, the actual demand was rela- tively constant. Therefore, it was soon agreed that the priority should simply be determined based on the remaining stock and the remaining production time. The lower the remaining stock and the longer the remaining production time, the higher the priority should be and vice versa.


Colour-coded orders


To add extra value to the relative priori- ties, orders are colour-coded based on the current situation: red for ‘must be done now’, orange for ‘must be done soon’ and green for ‘not yet necessary, but can be done if there is time’. Red orders are


DDSCM’s wheel of 5 eliminate


waste of capacity,


stock and time


eliminate unnecessary variation


in demand and supply avoid overload


with workload control and spare capacity


chase variation


with insight in variation, potential flexibility and effective decision making


fast-tracked into production as quickly as possible, with little to no delay. Thanks to the green orders, Production always has something to do even if there is a lull in sales or if it is ahead of schedule. Some orders


are colour-coded blue,


which means they may not yet go into production (even if the MRP due date has passed) because the company already has more than enough stock of the item in question. “Particularly the blue-coded orders can sometimes be a sensitive issue,” says Erik Mathijssen, Logisti- cal Lead at GKN Fokker Hoogeveen. “If you’ve been focused on keeping the pipe- line filled for so many years, refraining from producing when it’s possible to do so can take some getting used to.” “Thanks to our smart buffers, our cus- tomers never have to wait for composite parts nowadays. And there’s no more dis- cussion about priorities. The team lead- ers know precisely where they stand and are no longer distracted. Things are calm and clear on the factory floor,” comments Mario Wiersema, Site Manager Logis- tics at GKN Fokker Hoogeveen. “We’ve reduced the WIP too, and we expect to reduce it even further when we imple- ment Wipcap, which will also factor the current available capacity into the order release decisions.”


end custo- mer


absorb variation


with stock and time


4


45


SUPPLY CHAIN MOVEMENT, No.40, Q1 2021


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