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<br>Who is an Ideal Shop Floor Manager?<br>To answer this question we first need to identify the broad parameters that will establish his effectiveness.
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Who is an Ideal Shop Floor Manager | The Machine Maker Who is an Ideal Shop Floor Manager? To answer this question, we first need to identify the broad parameters that will establish his effectiveness. These are: 1. Knowledge of his Job and Objectives 2. Knowledge about his Resources 3. Knowledge about his people (actually the most important resource and hence listed separately) 4. Awareness of Safety, Environmental and various Statutory Rules & Regulations 5. Updated knowledge/information on New Developments 6. Awareness of performance benchmarks 1. Knowledge of his Job & Objectives
An ideal shop floor manager must have a comprehensive knowledge of all the aspects of the allocated job. The manager must have all the responsibilities completely embedded in the mind. These are: a. What are his specific responsibilities? b. Who are his customers and what are their needs and priorities? c. Who are his suppliers (Purchase, Stores, Shops prior to his in the manufacturing sequence) and what are their limitations and what support/ clarifications they need from him so that they can serve him better? d. His work targets – both quantity and time e. What are the work methods or methodologies to be used/ deployed to achieve the desired output in the time and cost specified? This will typically decide make-buy decisions f. What are the parameters for evaluating performance and information collection & reporting necessary for doing so 2. Knowledge about his Resources What are his resources? Classically, these are the 5 Ms – men, materials, machines, methods and money. The first, i.e. men, is very important and in a class by itself, so it is discussed separately, below. Methods have already been alluded to in the first point, above, whilst Money we are excluding from the discussions here because it is assumed that the Shop Floor manager is operating under a sanctioned budget where the required money is already allocated. The following is what he needs to fully know about his other resources, i.e. machines & materials: a. His plant and machinery and their state of fitness for operation For example, he must ensure that all machines are in working condition at their optimum parameters – if a machine is working but can run only at half its speed, then that is not working at its “optimum parameter” and should not be called or understood as working machine.
He needs to ensure that the operators carry out routine maintenance every day (e.g. cleaning, oiling, greasing etc.) and that the Maintenance (or Engineering) Department carries out the scheduled Preventive Maintenance regularly. b. Availability (physical and operational) of auxiliary equipment, tools, jigs, fixtures, dies, spares etc. Very often machines are available and working but the required Jigs/ Fixtures/ Tooling are not available or cannot be found! This renders the working machine absolutely impotent – it simply cannot be used. Hence, a great deal of attention is required to ensure proper and full availability of such auxiliary equipment/tools. c. Input Materials used and required by him – their availability, scarcity and caution to be exercised in their handling and use Again, if machines and tooling are available but the input material is NOT, then once again no output can be achieved. So while keeping attention on his own machinery and tooling, the shop floor manager also needs to constantly check and regularly follow-up for timely and adequate availability of required input material as per budgeted production plan. 3. Knowledge about his People (his most important Resource) Knowing your people is not confined to just recognizing their faces or knowing their names – a pity that many managers do not even know that! “Knowing your people” in this context means much more as listed below. a. Names, sections where working, in which shift b. Age, experience and qualification, c. Strengths (Skills and special competencies) d. Shortcomings (limitations) both in terms of skills as well as attitude/behavior e. Hence, areas where he/she needs training, guidance, counselling f. Potential for growth As can be seen, knowing really means knowing their strengths, weaknesses and potential so that they can be assigned the right jobs/ responsibilities and taken off from assignments where
they are likely to falter or make mistakes. It also requires inputs of training, guidance and counselling so that they can grow to their full potential and thus get motivated to perform at their peak capabilities. 4. Awareness of Safety, Environmental and various Statutory Rules & Regulations Safe working conditions and adherence to Environmental regulations is an extremely important area even though this may fall under the conventional area of “hygiene standards”. The fact is that no one can perform to his full potential unless he/ she feels fully safe in the work environment. Take a very simple example of a slippery floor, either due to water or oil spill. In such a case, people will walk very slowly and carefully instead of walking briskly or running across in case o emergency. As a result, pace of work will distinctly slow down leading to fall in output and lowering of productivity, simply because he floor is slippery! To ensure that people feel safe and untroubled by any environmental/ecological disaster, the following points need to be taken care of: a. Use of PPE (Helmets, Safety Shoes, Masks, Goggles, Ear Plugs, Slings etc.) by all employees in his work section b. Proper execution of all safety and precaution measures while operating machines in his shop – this requires properly planned training to be given to all employees on the respective machines they operate and to every worker when he/she shifts to a machine that he/she is going to operate for the first time. The training itself can be a 15 min to half-an hour session; but it must be given, without exception. c. Proper earthing of all electrical machines/equipment in his shop and regular check of the same as per recommended practice d. Full and free access to Fire Extinguishers and Electrical Switchboards in his department – this is extremely important and, sadly, the most violated. e. Regular training and Mock Fire Drills ensuring that sufficient (ideally, all) employees know how to use the Fire Extinguishers and other such equipment – Mock Fire Drill does not mean that a fire is lit and the instructor puts out the Fire – that is demo, not training ! Training in this case means that each and every attendee actually take the Fire extinguisher off the hook on the wall, rushes to the Fire and then operated the Fire
extinguisher himself to put out the Fire. Only then will they get the familiarity and the confidence to put out a fire when it happens for real. f. Aisles, Staircases and Emergency Exits always kept fully free for speedy movement/ exit and prevention of accidents g. Promptly attend to any leakage (air, water, gas, steam, oil, coolant) to prevent accident and pollution h. Ensure proper and adequate lighting in all areas especially staircase, corners and blind turning to avoid accident caused by poor visibility 5. Must keep himself abreast of changes and developments in his sphere of working and all related areas Without doubt this is the most important requirement for a successful Shop Floor Manager because only careful attention to this aspect will save him from obsolescence. The areas where he needs to constantly update and keep himself abreast are: 1. Technological 2. Regulatory / Statutory 3. Competitive 4. Environmental / Safety / Societal All technological developments do not immediately translate into a product or even a prototype – hence, one will not come to know about them in newspapers and magazines. You will need to institute a conscious search (which is now easy through the internet) of developments, in areas of your interest, in technical magazines or in the work of well-renowned Industrial Product Development & Design Labs or reputed Technology Institutes. Similarly, you can keep your self-updated by becoming member of Professional Associations related to your work. Constantly scan newspapers and government websites to know if any new laws or restrictions are being contemplated by regulatory/ statutory or Environmental/ Ecological authorities. Examine if it affects you. If any of these bodies invite public views before enacting a new law, send them your views.
Constantly read about what your competition is doing or what it has achieved, where it has clipped; only this alertness will help you keep ahead of them. 6. Must constantly benchmark himself against best performance parameters, internationally, and strive to attain and surpass them This calls for self-motivation which pushes you to strive to be the best. For this you need to know “what is the current best”, where do you stand in relation to that and how do you reach there or, even, surpass it. This will call for extensive reading, meeting with people in the profession and exchanging notes, calling up friends and colleagues in similar or related business o know “what is going on” – in other word taking a lot of interest in the world around and making conscious efforts to understand and spot the direction in which the world is moving. While the above may sound a theoretical ideal, it is not impractical. There are countless examples of managers, across industries and countries, who are living embodiment of the above principles and you can also become one of them, should you wish so. Best luck to you on an exciting journey towards excellence. About Us THE MACHINE MAKER, an authentic magazine from the house of MART Info Media Private Limited with 14 years of experience in Indian manufacturing sector, is all geared up to cover the growth of this new age manufacturing sector in India with special thrust on the makers who will make this happen. Read and Advertise with us to be part of this growth. Contact Us THE MACHINE MAKER
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