Planning Capacity and Responding to Change
Transcription
Planning Capacity and Responding to Change
Planning Capacity and Responding to Change Barry Elliott © Oliver Wight Agenda Background The Journey to Business Excellence Integrated Business Management How to Deliver and Sustain Outstanding Business Performance © Oliver Wight 2 The approach is different The focus is on integration The approach is to: firstly, educate people and develop internal expertise secondly, develop appropriate processes and behaviours The results are great sustainable benefits in any industry © Oliver Wight 3 Background © Oliver Wight Defining what we mean by “Excellence” We “wrote the book”, figuratively and literally An excellent reference for how best to design and implement Integrated Business Management “Library” of hundreds of processes Nine Chapters, which we will discuss © Oliver Wight In more detail... The nine chapters of the Checklist are the following: 1. Strategic Planning 2. Managing and Leading People 3. Continuous Improvement 4. Integrated Business Management 5. Product Management 6. Demand Management 7. Supply Chain Management 8. Internal Supply Management 9. External Supply Management © Oliver Wight Focusing on where will be most beneficial Tackling the entire Checklist at once is not practical for any organisation Therefore, we have defined several “Milestones” to structure the appropriate approaches, depending on where focus should lie at various stages of development Class ‘A’ Checklist Sixth Edition Capable Planning & Control Milestone STRATEGIC PLANNING PROCESS (3) 1.3 Mission & Vision (a) 1.5 Strategic Planning (b,c) 1.11 Business Planning (a,b,d) PEOPLE (4) 2.13 Leadership for change (a) 2.1 Trust (e) 2.7 People Dev+ Edn. & Training Supplement 2.9 Communication (a,b,e) DRIVING BUS IMPROVEMENT (6) 3.5 Ownership & Accountability 3.6 Ownership & Improvement 3.7 Continuous Improvement 3.8 Framework for sustained improvement 3.21 Coy Perf Measures –balanced & integrated 3.22 Velocity (a) INTEGRATED BUSINESS MANAGEMENT (5) 4.1 Process designed (a,b,d) 4.2 Integration 4.3 Characteristics 4.9 Financial projections 4.16 Financial integration (definition + a,b,d) MANAGING PRODUCTS & SERVICES (4) 5.3 Integration 5.4 Day to day process integration 5.9 New Product Master Plan 5.10 Project Planning (a,b) © Oliver W ight © Oliver Wight MANAGING DEMAND (9) 6.10 Unconstrained demand planning 6.11 Process for multiple views 6.13 Demand Manager 6.14 Sales plans 6.16 Demand constraining 6.17Customer promising/satisfaction 6.18 Demand management 6.19 Demand Controller 6-BPM1 Aggregate Demand Plan (Sales Plan Performance) SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT (2) 7.13 Data Mgmt [definition + a,b,c,d at 95%] 7.10 Distribution & Logistics Planning INTERNAL SUPPLY (20) 8.3 Integration: Integrated Business Management 8.5 Master Supply Planning Process + Master Scheduling Supplement 8.6 Capable People 8.7 Material Requirements Planning (a,b,c,d) + Material Planning & Control Supplement 8.7e/8.9d Supplier Planning & Control + Supplier Planning & Control Supplement 8.14 Housekeeping & Organisation (d) 8-BPM1 Customer Service OTIF to Promise 8-BPM2 Aggregate Supply Plan (Production Plan Performance) 7.7e. Master Schedule Performance - applied to Supply Point (95%) 8.9 (a) Manufacturing Schedule Performance (95%) 8.9 (d) Supplier Delivery Performance (95%) 8.11(a) Item Master & Supporting Data Accuracy (95%) + 7.13d 8.11(b) Bill of Material Structure & Accuracy (98%) + 7.13d 8.11(c) Routing Structure & Accuracy ( 95%) + 7.13d 8.11 (e) Work Location Record Accuracy (95%)+ 7.13d 8.11 (f) Inventory Record Accuracy (95%) + 7.9 (b,c) 8.17 Behaviours demonstrate excellence characteristics 8.18 Behaviours demonstrate excellence characteristics MANAGING EXTERNAL SOURCING (2) 9.4 Supplier capability (a,c) 9.13 Supplier Relationships (a,c,d) 8.8 Capability Planning & Scheduling + Capacity Planning & Control Supplement 8.9 Executing the schedule (b,c,) + Production Planning & Control Supplement 55 elements to score Require avg 3.5 /5 Class ‘A’ Checklist Sixth Edition Revision 6 Capable Planning & Control Milestone STRATEGIC PLANNING PROCESS (3) 1.3 Mission & Vision (a) [3.0] 1.5 Strategic Planning (bc) [3.0] 1.11 Business Planning (abd) [3.5] PEOPLE (4) 2.1 Trust (e) [3.0] 2.7 People Development (+ topic f *) [3.5] 2.9 Communication [3.0] 2.13 Leadership for change (a) [3.5] DRIVING BUS IMPROVEMENT (6) 3.5 Ownership & Accountability [3.0] 3.6 Ownership & Improvement [3.0] 3.7 Continuous Improvement [3.0] 3.8 Framework for sustained improvement [3.0] 3.21 Performance Measures – balanced & integrated [3.0] 3.22 Velocity (a) [3.0] INTEGRATED BUSINESS MANAGEMENT (5) 4.1 Process designed [3.5] 4.2 Integration [3.5] 4.3 Characteristics [3.5] 4.9 Financial projections [3.0] 4.16 Financial integration (abd) [3.0] MANAGING PRODUUCTS & SERVICES (4) 5.3 Integration [3.5] 5.4 Day to day process integration [3.0] 5.9 New Product Master Plan [3.0] 5.10 Project Planning (ab) [3.0] © Oliver Wight D-W-L Notes 8 MANAGING DEMAND (9) 6.10 Unconstrained demand planning [3.5] 6.11 Process for multiple views [3.5] 6.13 Demand Manager [3.5] 6.14 Sales plans [3.0] 6.16 Demand constraining [3.5] 6.17 Customer promising/satisfaction [3.5] 6.18 Demand management [3.5] 6.19 Demand Controller [3.5] 6.23 Aggregate Demand Plan Performance [3.5] SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT (2) 7.10 Distribution & Logistics Planning [3.0] 7.13 Data Mgmt (95%) [3.5] INTERNAL SUPPLY (20) 8.3 Integration: Integrated Business Management [3.5] 8.5 Master Supply Planning Process (+ h*) [3.5] 8.6 Capable People [3.5] 8.7 Material Requirements Planning (abcd + f *) [3.5] 8.8 Capability Planning & Scheduling (+ f *) [3.5] 8.9 Executing the schedule (bc + e*) [3.5] 8.14 Housekeeping & Organisation (d) [3.0] 8.17 Behavioural characteristics [3.0] 8.18 Planning behaviour characteristics [3.5] 8.19 Supplier Planning & Control (+ c*) [3.5] 8-20 Customer Service OTIF to Promise (95%) [3.5] 8-21 Aggregate Supply Plan Performance [3.5] 8.22 Master Schedule Performance (95%) [3.5] 8.23 Manufacturing Schedule Performance (95%) [3.5] 8.24 Supplier Delivery Performance (95%) [3.5] 8.25 Item Master & Supporting Data Accuracy (95%) [3.5] 8.26 Bill of Material Structure & Accuracy (98%) [3.5] 8.27 Routing Structure & Accuracy( 95%) [3.5] 8.28 Work Location Record Accuracy (95%) [3.5] 8.29 Inventory Record Accuracy (95%) [3.5] MANAGING EXTERNAL SOURCING (2) 9.4 Supplier capability (ac) [3.5] 9.13 Supplier Relationships (acd) [3.0] 55 definitions to score 35 Drivers @ minimum score 3.5 20 Support @ minimum score 3.0 * Signifies a supplementary topic NB: Original is a controlled Slide Class ‘A’ Checklist Sixth Edition Revision 1 Capable Planning & Control Milestone for Distribution & Logistics STRATEGIC PLANNING PROCESS (3) 1.3 Mission & Vision (a) [3.0] 1.5 Strategic Planning (bc) [3.0] 1.11 Business Planning (abd) [3.5] PEOPLE (4) 2.1 Trust (e) [3.0] 2.7 People Development (+ topic f *) [3.5] 2.9 Communication [3.0] 2.13 Leadership for change (a) [3.5] DRIVING BUS IMPROVEMENT (6) 3.5 Ownership & Accountability [3.0] 3.6 Ownership & Improvement [3.0] 3.7 Continuous Improvement [3.0] 3.8 Framework for sustained improvement [3.0] 3.21 Performance Measures – balanced & integrated [3.0] 3.22 Velocity (a) [3.0] INTEGRATED BUSINESS MANAGEMENT (5) 4.1 Process designed [3.5] 4.2 Integration [3.5] 4.3 Characteristics [3.5] 4.9 Financial projections [3.0] 4.16 Financial integration (abd) [3.0] MANAGING PRODUUCTS & SERVICES (2) 5.4 Day to day process integration (bd) [3.0] 5.10 Project Planning (ab) [3.0] MANAGING DEMAND (8) 6.9 Collaboration with customers (ade) [3.5] 6.10 Unconstrained demand planning [3.5] 6.13 Demand Manager [3.5] 6.14 Sales plans [3.0] 6.16 Demand constraining [3.5] 6.17 Customer promising/satisfaction [3.5] 6.18 Demand management [3.5] 6.19 Demand Controller [3.5] SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT (14) 7.3 Integration through Integrated Business Management [3.5] 7.9 Inventory Accuracy Control (+d,e*) [4.0] 7.10 Distribution & Logistics Planning (+f*) [3.5] 7.13 Data Mgmt (95%) [3.5] 7.20 Inventory management process [3.5] 7.21 Inbound process control [3.5] 7.22 Outbound process control [3.5] 7.23 Returns process control [3.5] 7.24 Stock definition record accuracy [4.0] 7.25 Shipping Schedule Performance [3.5] 7.26 Aggregate Distribution Plan Performance [3.5] 7-27 Customer Service OTIF to Promise 95% [3.5] 7-28 Inventory Levels (turns) [3.5] 7.29 Total Delivered Cost [3.5] INTERNAL SUPPLY (11) 8.5 Master Supply Planning Process [3.5] 8.6 Capable People [3.5] 8.7 Material Requirements Planning (abcd) [3.5] 8.8 Capability Planning & Scheduling (abde) [3.5] 8.9 Executing the schedule (bc) [3.5] 8.14 Housekeeping & Organisation (d) [3.0] 8.17 Behavioural characteristics [3.0] 8.18 Planning behaviour characteristics [3.5] 8.19 Supplier Planning & Control [3.5] 8.24 Supplier Delivery Performance (95%) [3.5] 8.25 Item Master & Supporting Data Accuracy (95%) [3.5] MANAGING EXTERNAL SOURCING (2) 9.4 Supplier capability (ac) [3.5] 9.13 Supplier Relationships (acdf) [3.0] 55 definitions to score 2 Drivers @ minimum score 4.0 35 Drivers @ minimum score 3.5 18 Support @ minimum score 3.0 * Signifies a supplementary topic NB: Original is a controlled Slide © Oliver Wight D-W-L Notes 9 The Philosophy People are the key to success Education drives behavioural change Create internal experts Develop multi-disciplined teams Improve business to World-Class / Best Practice levels Formal environment Consistent processes, clear responsibilities and accountabilities Continuously improve Deliver sustainable results through integration © Oliver Wight 10 The Journey to Business Excellence Oliver Wight 11 ©© Oliver Wight Integrating the Business - Maturity © Oliver Wight Integrating the Business - Prioritising One agenda and set of numbers Designing for our processes Keeping to plan across the Business Working together to solve problems Automation and business integration True cost of work Consistent working Driving out defects in all processes Ownership and improvement With Education and Training at Every Step © Oliver Wight 13 OWI 0171-02 Integrating the Business - Prioritising Sales and Operations Planning DFM/DFC Supply/Demand/ Project Management Team working Automation and business integration Activity costing ISO 9000 ISO14000 Closed loop control of all processes 5S/TPM With Education and Training at Every Step © Oliver Wight The Journey to Business Excellence All companies are on a journey to Performance Improvement but many do not recognise the journey or where they are on that journey or what to do next. One needs to understand the journey, how the techniques fit, when they should / shouldn’t be deployed, and work through the multiple transitions showing how a business focus enables Performance Improvement. Enables upper quartile performance in any industry sector and hence become an industry leader. It also maps the way to becoming an upper decile business. © Oliver Wight 15 Integrating the Business - Maturity The Maturity Journey Transitions on The Journey through Phases 1 & 2 © Oliver Wight Phase II Process Excellence • Joined up processes, reliable, knowledge captured and failure free • Self managed teams • Responsive optimisation of the business in pursuit of business strategy • Upper decile performance Process Competence • Integrated Business Management drives rolling management, strategy deployment and directed business improvement. Upper quartile performance • End-to-end process excellence – process thinking, streamlining and capability, process organisation, process measures - velocity, responsiveness, variability • Managing the extended supply chain. Phase I Capable Planning & Control • Capable Planning & Control practices and standards attained across all processes • Co-ordination across the business and ‘one set of numbers’ secure through S&OP process • Educated workforce driving honesty and openness, ownership and accountability, realistic plans, data integrity, democracy in planning: autocracy in execution • Business performance is 95% capable Foundations of Planning & Control • Data management • Understanding • Practices and Processes for Planning & Control in design and / or implementation for Supply, Demand, Product Management, S&OP and Financial Integration Disconnected Management Processes • Informality and fire-fighting • Plagued by unplanned events © Oliver Wight 16 © Oliver Wight T121 1-0 OVE 11 The Oliver Wight Journey to Class ‘A’ © Oliver Wight 17 Principle Objective of Integration © Oliver Wight Integrated Business Model MANAGEMENT BUSINESS REVIEW STRATEGY BUSINESS PLAN PERFORMANCE PRODUCT MANAGEMENT REVIEW SUPPLY REVIEW DEMAND REVIEW SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT MARKET MANAGEMENT SUPPLY POINT MANAGEMENT PROJECT MANAGEMENT DEMAND MANAGEMENT SUPPLIER MANAGEMENT RESOURCE MANAGEMENT SALES MANAGEMENT PROCUREMENT MANAGEMENT © Oliver Wight PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT PROCUREMENT MANAGEMENT How Do We Respond to Change ? FUNCTIONAL PERSPECTIVE I “second guess” that plans may or may not happen I assess the impact this will have I compensate for change based on what effect it will have on my function and it’s measures I take defensive action to protect my function Everyone has a view, takes different actions, no coordination © Oliver Wight IBMP1-20 EAME 0207-02 How Do We Respond to Change ? BUSINESS PERSPECTIVE We have a process to identify change occurring in the business We ensure that we understand the change and its full business wide implications We enable cross-functional discussions and alternate planning We identify choices and recommendations to optimise the business © Oliver Wight IBMP1-21 EAME 0208-01 Integrated Business Management Oliver Wight 22 ©© Oliver Wight First Priority – A Company Must… Bring demand and supply in balance Understand impact of new products on demand and supply If you don’t do these things first, your time will be consumed dealing with the consequences of demand and supply being out of balance. There will be little time and energy to grow the business © Oliver Wight Multiple Sets / Single / Integrated Set of Numbers MULTIPLE SETS SINGLE INTEGRATED SET UPSIDE GAP DOWNSIDE © Oliver Wight 24 Integration STRATEGY / TACTICS / OPERATIONS STRATEGIC PLANNING BUS. PLAN S&OP TACTICAL PLANNING OPERATIONAL PLANNING Source: Coldrick, Ling © Oliver Wight 25 Integrated Business Management (Sales and Operations Planning) Brings together all the plans for the business (customers, sales, marketing, development, manufacturing, servicing & financial) into... integrated set of plans Monthly process Reviewed by management at an aggregate (product family) level Reconciles supply, demand and new product plans at both detail and aggregate level and tied to the business plan Definitive statement of what the company plans to do for the near / intermediate term covering a horizon sufficient to: Plan cross-functional resources Support business planning © Oliver Wight 26 Integrated Business Management (Sales and Operations Planning) MANAGEMENT BUSINESS REVIEW STRATEGY BUSINESS PLAN PERFORMANCE PRODUCT MANAGEMENT REVIEW SUPPLY REVIEW DEMAND REVIEW © Oliver Wight 27 ‘What if’ Business Scenario Planning Management needs to have the ability to evaluate the impact of changes to the plan © Oliver Wight Management Business Review O/T Delivery Performance Total Number of Changes 30 40 50 20 60 10 70 1st Pass Test Percent 50 25 75 100 80 60 40 3 1 3 2 0 0 0 7 7 12 6 8 6 11 0 100 20 Last Project Current Current 0 KPI Dashboard 30 25 SUPPLY 20 15 BUDGET 40 Revenue 125 35 20 40 Current Last Project Business Review RE SOURCE A Customer's Rating P LANNED CAPACITY (DE MONSTRATED OUTP UT) A S TD HRS OR UNITS B 0 +4 +8 © Oliver Wight 29 175 200 Current Plan FY9x Project Cost to Date 150 125 W EEKS Months 100 Plan 175 200 Actual SUMMARY BY FAMILY SUMMARY BY FAMILY SUMMARY BY FAMILY Budget Current Plan Previous Plan Demand Prior Year MAJOR Budget CHANGES Current Plan ________________ Previous Plan Prior Year ________________ MAJOR Budget CHANGES ________________ Current Plan Previous Plan Prior Year ________________ ________________ ________________ MAJOR CHANGES________________ ________________ DECISIONS MADE ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ DECISIONS MADE ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ DECISIONS MADE ________________ ________________ VULNERABILITIES ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ VULNERABILITIES ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ VULNERABILITIES ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ Alignment to Business Plans Alignment to Strategy 150 100 RE QUIRE D CAPACITY C Summary by Family Business Trends – Demand, Supply & NPI Change Key Assumptions Vulnerabilities / Opportunities Financial Impact Recommendation 30 ACTUAL Other 30 25 10 ACTUAL Last Project 25 Margins DEMAND PLAN 35 20 Current -8 4- Goal #No. of Late Deliveries Weeks #N o. of On-Time Deliveries Engineering Strategic Programme Strategic Programme Strategic Programme Strategic Programme Strategic Programme Strategic Programme Strategic Programme Strategic Programme Strategic Programme Strategic Programme Strategic Programme Strategic Programme Strategic Programme Strategic Programme 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Supply Supply Inventory Inventory Demand MAJOR ASSUMPTIONS ________________ Inventory Supply Demand MAJOR ASSUMPTIONS ________________ ________________ ________________ MAJOR ASSUMPTIONS ________________ DECISIONS OUTSTANDING ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ DECISIONS OUTSTANDING ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ DECISIONS OUTSTANDING ________________ RECOMMENDATIONS________________ ________________ ________________ AND COSTS ________________ ________________ RECOMMENDATIONS________________ ________________ ________________ AND COSTS ________________ ________________ RECOMMENDATIONS________________ ________________ AND COSTS ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ The Maturity Journey Example: Integrated Business Management Mature Integrated Business Management • Drives responsive optimisation of the business in pursuit of business strategy • Continuous Reconciliation, managing gaps and alternative scenario planning Integrated Business Management • Rolling business management process including gap analysis versus strategy and focus on competitive priorities • Integrated Reconciliation is the driver: business analysis provides underlying understanding, drives improvement priorities and gap closing actions • Process frequently reshapes to meet changing organisational structure • Used to deploy and drive the value proposition Capable S&OP • Process is established driving integrated operational and financial planning • Full suite of KPI’s to drive operational effectiveness, achieving 95%+ capability • Issues are identified and this is the decision making process • Annual budgeting process removed – S&OP numbers drive forward plans • Team working behaviours are demonstrated throughout the process Foundation S&OP • All elements defined with correct accountability, KPI’s and structure • Focus is demand /supply tactical balancing • Initiate integrated supply chain KPI’s • Challenging behaviours but not yet team working Disconnected Management Processes • Traditional management meeting focused on the past • Annual budgeting process with poor basis for forward projections • Functional/silo management – few/unaligned objectives & measures • Defensive functional behaviours © Oliver Wight IBMEP8-30 EAME 0183-09 Implementation Oliver Wight 31 ©© Oliver Wight The Oliver Wight Proven Path © Oliver Wight Oliver Wight Class A All business processes integrated Integrated set of numbers Routine things happening routinely Planning ahead, preventing rather than correcting Easier to deal with crisis when you are in control The whole is greater than the sum of the parts © Oliver Wight 33 Focus of Attention Managing Director Senior Management Middle Management Team Leaders © Oliver Wight 34 Strategic Strategic Plan Plan Business Business Plan Plan S&OP S&OP S&OP S&OP & & SCM SCM Demand Demand & & Supply Supply Mgmt Mgmt Execution Execution Horizon Time Fence Topic 1 – 5 Years 3-4 Months Strategy 1-5 Months 1 Month Tactics 1-5 Weeks 1 Week Operational Planning 1-5 Days - Scheduling Business Performance Improvements Class A Companies 80% 68% 70% 60% 50% 40% 29% 30% 20% 24% 17% 9% 10% Source: Benchmark Research Limited. Nov 1997 © Oliver Wight 35 Continuous Improvement Activity Supplier Delivery Performance Inventory Performance Costs Customer Service 0% Class A Companies © Oliver Wight 36