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Insights
on Excellence | "Insights
on Excellence" Archive
Why you may have the platform of a
work-force management technology system and not know
it
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR |
Stephen
Hawley Martin is
a former principal of The Martin Agency
in Richmond and the author of more than
half a dozen books including his newest,
Lean Enterprise Leader: How to Get Things
Done Without Doing It All Yourself.
He is editor and
publisher of The
Oaklea Press, a book publishing business
dedicated primarily to helping business
executives increase productivity.
He can be reached at shmartin@oakleapress.com
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by Stephen
Hawley Martin
for Virginia Business
January 4, 2007
When was the last time you read
something that caused you to dramatically change the
way you manage your business? I've been editing a book
that has that potential. Called "Working
the Clock," it's about a revolutionary new business
tool called Workforce Management Technology (WMT). It
uses data from automated time and attendance systems
to enable executives to "see" what's really
going on in their businesses.
Some companies run sideline businesses or build certain
products that lose money, for example, but they don't
know it. Overall, the company might be making money,
but a few products or business units may be very profitable
and make up for the losers. An enhanced automated time
and attendance system can help determine the winners
and the losers.
One company I know of manufactures a product for which
a single subassembly, one that may or may not be required
depending on a customer's needs, takes seven hours to
complete. By tracking the labor time on units with and
without the subassembly and calculating the actual cost
to build them, management was able to determine that
customers who require this subassembly were being undercharged.
The same product has another optional subassembly that
requires 25 hours of labor. Sometimes customers want
both these subassemblies. At other times, only one or
the other is required. Accurate work-force data enabled
the manufacturer to take a realistic look at what the
various combinations actually cost to build. Pricing
was adjusted up on some units and down on others so that
each variation remained competitively priced, but at
levels that made all of them profitable.
The data also helped the company get smart about how
work was scheduled through the plant. Imagine the wasted
manpower and poor plant utilization if an entire line
was held up for 25 hours because a unit needed a particular
subassembly.
Alternative routes were created that send products requiring
extra steps along different paths. At times units would
rejoin the main line, and then veer off again while an
infrequently-called-for subassembly was installed. This
might be compared to scheduling local trains that stop
at every station and express trains that run nonstop
from one large city to another. At times the local train
will need to get off the main line onto a side track
so the express can speed by and not have to slow down
and wait.
How is information collected about how much labor went
into a particular task? A number of ways exist including
time clocks and telephones. Another way is barcodes.
Visualize a laminated sheet attached to a clipboard with
rows of barcodes on it representing different activities.
A barcode-reading wand can be positioned nearby. As a
product moves into a workstation for a subassembly to
be installed, the employee simply scans the appropriate
barcode. When he's done he scans another. The product
moves to the next workstation, and this is repeated.
The information this produces can be use in several
ways. It can be used for cost accounting as described
above. It can measure a particular individual's performance
against others who perform the same task. It can help
establish the interval of time required for a particular
operation. Or it might be used to calculate the pay for
individuals who are compensated on a piecework basis.
In any event, it is valuable data that can be used to
help a company run its business more productively, yet
many top executives don't realize it's information that
may not be all that difficult to get. If your company
already has a time and attendance collection system,
you may already have the platform of a Workpforce Management
Technology system, and not even know it.
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Stephen Hawley Martin is a former principal of The Martin Agency in Richmond
and the author of more than half a dozen books including his newest, Lean Enterprise
Leader: How to Get Things Done Without Doing It All Yourself. He is editor and
publisher of The Oaklea Press, a book publishing business dedicated primarily
to helping business executives increase productivity.
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