gokaldas exports 1 - TBM Consulting Group
Transcription
gokaldas exports 1 - TBM Consulting Group
gokaldas exports 1 Overview Company Overview Lean Journey Lean Success Story The Model Plant Effects of Recession Opportunities for Grow th Next Steps 2 I NDI A A Paradox 3 Gokaldas Exports LTD. India s largest apparel exporter Is a family business recently bought over by Blackstone An organization founded on the values of passion, performance, people & products. ONE STOP SHOP for the world s most preferred brands 4 Gokaldas Exports LTD. Sales 250 Million Dollars (31st March, 2008) Factories 45 (31st March, 2008) No. of people 45,000 (31st March, 2008) No. of machines Capacity 25,000 2.5 million garments / month 5 SPORTSWEAR 6 CASUALWEAR 7 CASUALWEAR 8 One Man One Vision It was his vision that gave birth to this remarkable company in 1970. His far sighted vision and ability to plan, execute and manage resulted in the phenomenal growth of Gokaldas Exports. The Late Jhamandas H. Hinduja To set a precedent in the global garment manufacturing industry through continuous innovation, exceptional products, focused services and enhanced customer satisfaction. 9 Madanlal J. Hinduja Chairman Rajendra J. Hinduja Managing Director Ashwin R. Hinduja Chief Operating Officer Dinesh J. Hinduja Executive Director Vivek M. Hinduja Chief Operating Officer Gaurav D. Hinduja Chief Operating Officer 10 12/2006 NIKE LEAN VENDOR SUMMIT 03/2007 TBM ASSESSMENT 05/2007 FIRST KAIZEN EVENT AT PLANT 08/2007 EXECUTIVE EXCHANGE AT PORTUGAL 09/2007 CEO BOOT CAMP 03/2008 POLICY DEPLOYMENT 04/2008 FIRST LEAN CERTIFICATION FOR 12 PEOPLE 05/2008 BREAK OPEN TO 4 NEW PLANTS 09/2008 FIRST BUSINESS PROCESS KAIZEN 10/2008 GEX SUPERVISOR TRAINING 12/2008 100TH KAIZEN EVENT 03/2009 2ND SML 11 Model Plant Euro Clothing Company (ECC1) 12 Training Supervisor Shop Floor 13 Cutting Before Lean After Lean 14 Sewing Line Before Lean After Lean 15 Finishing Before Lean After Lean Balanced to Takt Time 16 One Piece Flow in Finishing 17 Lean Fund 18 The Success Story POINTS FOR IMPROVEMENT BEFORE KAIZEN AFTER KAIZEN RESULTS Work In Progress Approx 2.5 Days One Day Decrease by +50% avg Productivity 2.1 pcs/day / person 3.0 pcs/day/ person Increase by 43% 5S Not Measured Level 1 Needs Improvement FPY 85% 92% Lower DR Efficiency 35% 55% Adhere to Takt Time Facility Capacity Avg . Approx 135,000 pcs/month 200,000+ / month Increase in Production Changeover (Peak Production) Approx 5-6 Days Improved by 40% Increased Run Time 19 Lean Savings Chart Cost / Min - INTEX 2/ TA - 6 January 2008 March 2009 3.00 Implemented Lean in 4 factories 2.50 2.00 Cost / Mi n 1.50 Basel i ne 1.00 Li near (Cost / Mi n) Mar-09 Jan-09 Nov-08 Sep-08 Jul-08 May-08 Mar-08 0.00 Jan-08 0.50 Total savings of $2 million in 1 year Total investment (Consultancy and Salaries) $1.2 million Cost / Min - GI/ TUC Improvement in 3.5 3 2.5 Cost / Mi n 2 On-time Delivery 80%+ to 90%+ Basel i ne 1.5 Li near (Cost / Mi n) 1 First Pass Yield 75% to 85% Mar-09 Feb-09 Jan-09 Dec-08 Nov-08 Oct-08 Sep-08 Aug-08 0 Jul-08 0.5 Customer Satisfaction 20 Opportunity vs Threat Jan 1, 2005 : quotas on apparel exports were removed Quantum leap in opportunities for Indian industry in US and European markets Indian apparel exports grew by 28% in 2006 Gokaldas grew by 17% in 2007 In contrast . Gokaldas grew by 2% in 2008 US and European markets started slowing down INR USD parity went through a roller coaster INR appreciated by 14% between April 2007 and Dec 2007 Indian exports sector had no prior experience to handle such movements .. Everybody suffered! Then came the recessionary trends and INR depreciated back by 24% 21 Opportunity vs Threat Sha re of U S Appa re l I m port s M a rk e t a nd Annua l Grow t h Ra t e s (US$ in millions) We have lost share to Bangladesh / Vietnam : Both lower cost producers 22 2008 The Recession Several retailers closed shop One of the worst Christmas sales season for apparels, in living memory 7% de-growth over last year Bankruptcies reported Specifically Steve and Barry s, Mervyns filed for bankruptcy Pacific Sunwear, Lane Bryant, Fashion Bug, Catherines downsizing Foot Locker winding-up 140 stores, Ann Taylor closing 117 outlets Eddie Bauer, Cache, Talbots, J Jill, GAP Inc, Goodbye Levitz, Home Depot, Macy s Pep Boys, JC Penny, Lowe, scaling down operations UK stores closures include Woolworth, Mosaic, Adams Childrenwear, Blooming Marvelous Over 600000 jobs already lost in Indian Textiles and Apparel industry industry is still counting . and the 23 The Strategic I mperative The grow th opportunity is phenomenal India is the 6th largest nation in apparel exports and 3rd among the Asian countries: 1. China $92.0 billion 2. Bangladesh $11.2 billion 3. India $9.7 billion 4. Vietnam $8.4 billion 5. Cambodia $4.0 billion 6. Pakistan $3.0 billion 7. Sri Lanka $3.0 billion Indian apparel exports have only 3% share of global trade (USD 345 billion) 86% of the total production in the small scale sector Consolidation is bound to happen We must position ourselves to leverage this opportunity through Lean Manufacturing 24 Sales turnover vs EBI TDA 300 16% 14% 250 240 12% 220 12% 14% 13% 12% 210 195 200 9% 180 10% 160 150 8% 120 EBITDA% Turnover (USDMillion) 12% 13% TURN OVER EBITDA 6% 100 4% 50 2% 0 0% 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 Financial Year Projected Impact of Lean: Sustain and improve EBITDA levels despite a 25% drop in Sales 25 Manpow er and Sales Turnover Trends in Mapower and Turnover per person 60000 5.20 50000 48000 5.0 Manpower (No.s) 42979 40000 5.00 5.0 42000 4.7 38000 35201 4.80 4.60 30000 20000 27237 4.5 4.5 4.40 4.4 4.20 4.3 10000 Turnover per person ( USD ' 000) 51441 Manpower Turnover per person 4.00 0 3.80 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 Financial Year Impact of Lean: Turnover per person improves significantly and gains are sustained despite a downturn 26 The Next Step Policy Deployment Matrix 27 Policy Deployment Projects Lean Sigma Go forw ard Plan - Productivity Project ( March 2009 March 2010) Improve Productivity by 30% this year I mprove PCD hit rate from 30% to 90% by March 2010 The Human Resource Project Reduce Attrition from 120% to 80% Reduce Absenteeism from 15% to 8% 28 Lean Sigma Productivity Project I mplement and sustain LeanSigma in 15 additional plants by March 2010, including training of adequate KPO, supervisor and plant management ( approx. 75% of capacity) Annual I mprovement Projects: Improve CPM from $0.05 per minute to $0.04 per minute Reduce rejection from 2.5% to 2% Improve OTP from 85% to 95%+ Reduce DR from 6% to 3% 29 Gokaldas Production System ( GPS) Factory Start Number of People Supervisor Wave 1 (5 Plants ) May-07 Mar-08 8997 186 Wave 2 ( 8 Plants ) Apr-09 Jul-09 10,013 216 Wave-3 ( 9 Plants ) July-09 Dec-09 9875 200 Total 28885 602 30 Action Plan Resources Hire 45 KPOs 15 by May 1st and 30 by end June Hire and train 4 KPO Leads, (1 for five plants ) by end June 09 Approximate Annual Salary - $750,000 31 Action Plan Training Provide 4+4 weeks of certification training to 15 new KPO s by end June and balance 30 by end August. Provide 2 weeks training to 100 plant management personnel (FM, PM, QAM, IE, Supervisor, Cutting incharge & Store incharge) of wave-1 & 2 plants by April/May-09. Provide 2 weeks training to 600 supervisors of wave-2 & 3 plants by June-Oct09 Consulting Schedule 30 calendar weeks of training and SKB from April 2009 to March 2010 Total Investment $1million 32 Challenges The CAVE Dwellers Answering WIIFM High Labour Turnover Sustain the Improvements 33 Questions? 34 Thankyou! 35