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Specification and Standards. World Class Supply Management requires supply management professionals and suppliers to be actively involved in the tactical and strategic development of specifications and standards to proactively reduce total costs of products and services.. Purposes of Specifications.
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1. Chapter 11 SPECIFICATIONS AND STANDARDIZATION
2. Specification and Standards World Class Supply Management requires supply management professionals and suppliers to be actively involved in the tactical and strategic development of specifications and standards to proactively reduce total costs of products and services.
3. Purposes of Specifications Communicate what to buy (user to buyer)
Communicate to suppliers what is required
Establish the tangibles to be provided
Establish the intangibles to be provided
Establish the standards for inspections, tests, and quality checks
Balance the diverse goals of individual departments & suppliers with product performance & cost
4. Considerations
5. Categories of Specifications
6. Simple Specifications Performance Specifications
Easy to prepare – works for complex items
Let’s expert (supplier) figure out best way to achieve desired performance – facilitates concurrent design
Allows supplier greater flexibility in meeting cost targets
Fit & Function Specifications
Same advantages – used for interfacing parts
Brand or Trade Names
good for off-the-shelf items
Samples
Works only for simple, robust designs
Danger in not knowing what attributes are critical
Market Grades – great if market grades have been established
Qualified Products – works only if item is extremely stable over time
7. Complex vs. Simple Specifications Complex or detailed specifications are descriptions that tell the seller exactly what the buyer wants to purchase
A simple specification for buying ketchup might be “12 ounce plastic bottle of Heinz tomato ketchup”
In contrast, ketchup specifications become complex if the actual recipe is given with ingredients and production procedures
A complex specification often goes beyond the design of a product, to include specifications regarding methodology, packaging, transport, delivery schedules, warranty and service
8. Complex Specifications Commercial Standards
This actually belongs under “Simple Specs”
Commercial Stds. are often included in more complex specs. (e.g., make an item per drawing using Comm. Std. xyz steel)
Design Specifications
Written descriptions
Engineering Drawings
A picture’s worth a thousand words
Material and Method-of-Manufacture
Makes it very difficult to assign fault when things go wrong
9. Combination of Methods Most industrial products require two or more methods of quality descriptions
The combination of Design Specifications and Engineering Drawings is very common
10. Organizational Approaches Informal Approach
Engineers do specs. w/ informal SM involvement
Supply Management Coordinator Approach
“materials engineer” liaisons
Early Supply Management Involvement (EPI)
Early Supplier Involvement (ESI)
EPI and ESI most often involve cross-functional teams
Consensus Development Approach
Non-team approach to cross-functional involvement
Cross-Functional Approach
11. Supply Management Research SM pro takes lead in investigating sources & alternatives
Availability of standard products suitable to need
Simultaneously compare specs, quality, and prices
Applicable trade provisions, restrictions or laws
Performance characteristics and quality
Information on the satisfaction of other users
Any costs or problems associated with integration
Distribution & support capabilities of potential suppliers
12. Writing Specifications Must be comprehensive, accurate, clear
Design and marketing requirements
Manufacturing requirements
Inspection & test requirements
Stores' requirement to receive, store, issue
SM's requirement for competition reliable source
Production's requirement to list substitutes
Blanket requirement for quality and lowest TCO
Standardization requirements
13. Common Problems Lack of Clarity
Limiting Competition
Unreasonable Tolerances
Remember – the best chance to reduce cost is in the design / specifications
14. Standardization A uniform identification that is agreed on is called a standard
Two types exist:
Industrial standardization --- the process of establishing agreement on uniform identifications for definite characteristics of quality, design, performance, quantity, service, and so on
Managerial standardization --- deals with such things as operating practices, procedures, and systems
15. History of Standardization Eli Whitney
Muskets for the U.S. Government
1904 Baltimore Fire
Lack of standard fire hose couplings
Henry Ford
Assembly line production of automobiles
Standardized at product level rather than at component level
Dell
Mass-customization through modular design
16. Types and Sources of Standards Types
International standards (e.g., ISO)
Industry or national standards
Company standards
17. Types and Sources of Standards Sources
International Organization for Standardization
National Bureau of Standards
American National Standards Institute
American Society for Testing and Materials
American Society for Quality
Society of Automotive Engineers
Society of Mechanical Engineers
American Institute of Electrical Engineers
Federal Bureau of Specifications
National Lumber Manufacturers' Association
18. Benefits of Standardization
19. Simplification Simplification is a corollary of standardization
Simplification means reducing the number of items a firm uses in its product design and carries in its inventory
Savings result primarily from:
Reduced inventory investment
Fewer SKUs and less safety stock
More competitive prices
Greater quantity discounts
Reduced clerical costs
Reduced handling costs
20. Standardization Programs Standards Team
Importance of Supply Management
Materials Catalog
Improved quality
Reduction in design time
Reduction of non-standard parts
Reduction of standard parts
Reduction of inventory
Benefits of centralization
Electronic Materials Catalogs
21. Concluding Remarks Specifications and standardization improve quality and value, while resolving design conflicts
Balanced specifications optimize the supply chain
Standardization refines and streamlines systems
Such refinement permits the production of low cost, high quality, differentiated products that are competitive in the global marketplace