Miki Lumnitz’s Weblog

about PLM

Posts Tagged ‘PLM for SMB’

Enable Your CM Processes for Mission Critical Process Management

Posted by mikilumnitz on July 8, 2009

Next week I will join the BOM summit 2009 which will occur at Chicago, Illinois, hosted by Razorleaf. We will discuss the business process coverage from Bidding to Service. The industry-specific needs and methodologies

Razorleaf will host a multi-day event for companies interested in understanding the methodologies and capabilities behind the ENOVIA SmarTeam BOM module and Engineering Express package. Product managers from Dassault and solution architects from Razorleaf will present the software’s capabilities, demonstrate detailed methodologies, and facilitate discussions among a uniquely focused peer group. Attendees will present and share their industry-specific BOM needs, further enriching the event.

The event is a follow-up to last year’s successful BOM Summit. One attendee had this to say about BOM Summit 2008:

“I think it [the event] was invaluable, frankly. I would highly recommend that anybody come. I think that the format was extremely appropriate and had a lot of value. The information that you could focus on here without having other interruptions… I would definitely come again.”
- Maureen Murphy
Engineering Services manager at AS&E

http://www.razorleaf.com/events/bom-summit-09/

Posted in BOM, Engineering, PLM, mid-market | Tagged: , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

PLM for the Mid-market Supply Chain

Posted by mikilumnitz on June 2, 2009

Today, an article I wrote have been posted on the Supply & Demand Chain Executive website, in the “In Depth” section.

clip_image001

Below is the link and full text.

http://sdcexec.com/web/online/In-Depth/PLM-for-the-Mid-market-Supply-Chain/4$11358

PLM for the Mid-market Supply Chain

A better look at a behind-the-scenes catalyst

Posted: May 21st, 2009 03:58 PM EDT

By Miki Lumnitz

In today’s global economic climate, companies around the world — from large OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) to mid-market manufacturers — face enormous challenges. It is easy to write off the problems of mid-market companies as comparatively insignificant. After all, they’re smaller; doesn’t that mean their problems are smaller too?

In reality, today’s mid-market companies’ face the same challenges as large OEMs, and they face them with fewer resources, less money and less ability to absorb risk. In addition, they have to deal with the increased competition in the mid-market, the increasing demand for a shorter product lifecycle, the pressure to develop more complex products than in the past, the management of multiple parallel projects and being part of the supply chain.

The Evolving Role of the OEM

The position of mid-market companies within the supply chain has undergone dramatic changes. OEMs, which may or may not be mid-market companies themselves, require increasingly more value, efficiency and sheer output from mid-market suppliers, and tend to deal with only the highest-level core and competitive competencies internally. For instance, in some industries, approximately 65 percent of final product development is outsourced to mid-market suppliers. Given such increased demands, suppliers need to differentiate themselves competitively by bringing specific knowledge and innovation to their products and to their relationships with the OEMs — it’s a matter of survival. If OEMs don’t see the results they need as quickly as required, they’ll gladly replace one supplier with another, or possibly shrink the supply chain altogether. Add to that the unpredictability of other suppliers’ actions (which affect the entire chain), and it’s clear that PLM isn’t a luxury — it’s a necessity.

The role of the OEM is changing. Ten years ago, the OEM controlled the entire supply chain and maintained all the specifics of product development in-house. Suppliers were part of an indelible hierarchy, with efficiency viewed as happenstance, not as an overarching value. As time went by and technology advanced, OEMs saw the benefit of collaborating with tier-one suppliers who were responsible for major product components. This trend hasn’t slowed — it has progressed from involving the traditional supply chain hierarchy to networks of suppliers.

The consequence of this change is that OEMs can no longer dictate the systems and methodologies used by their suppliers, as they are connected to multiple OEMs and to other companies. In the future we will undoubtedly see more and more networks of suppliers exchanging intellectual property with multiple OEMs across industries and with each other.

PLM Adoption in the Mid-market

For the large OEMs of the world the use of product lifecycle management (PLM) is practically a standard. However, in the mid-market — the segment that contains the vast majority of the world’s manufacturers — the use of PLM is not as prevalent.

In order to succeed and thrive, high-tech/industrial mid-market suppliers have to innovate and develop new products faster (with a target time-to-market projection of three to six months for the high-tech industry) and streamline operations and communications. They need to achieve global development excellence and increase efficiency by leveraging core competencies of the value chain and ensure on-time, on-cost and good-quality product delivery. They must also integrate regulatory compliance into product lifecycle processes to reduce business risk and sell products in global markets.

Adopting PLM isn’t a chore that companies must complete; it is a way to increase innovation and stay competitive. Product lifecycle management helps streamline business and development processes, especially with regard to collaborative engineering, standardization, mechatronics (multi-disciplinary product development integrating mechanical, electrical/electronic and software components that require unified bill-of-materials management — a "single version of the truth"), change management, components engineering and IP reuse. The resulting benefits are substantial:

  • Increased product innovation: By adopting new product introduction NPI methodology within a single engineering platform, from concept to manufacturing.
  • Global product development excellence: By leveraging streamlined global innovation networks and concurrent multi-disciplinary mechatronics product development.
  • Improved profitability: By leveraging existing products/components and creating modular new products that facilitate re-use in multiple applications.
  • Shortened time-to-market and improved ROI: By lowering development, manufacturing and purchasing costs while delivering improved product performance.
  • Increased control on costs, quality and delivery dates: By integrating quality and change management processes and enabling real-time decision making for all levels.
  • Ensured customer satisfaction: By being demand-driven and integrating customer requirements and specifications throughout the engineering process.

The PLM vision is wide and can touch almost every hidden corner of a company. This is why a phased approach is recommended, otherwise known as: "start small and grow as you go." It’s like eating a sandwich: You’re better off taking small bites in an orderly succession, rather than to try to eat the entire thing in one bite and risk choking. Product lifecycle management should undo process clogs, not create them.

Based on past experience, most mid-market companies start preparing themselves for PLM deployment by managing their design environment. They do this by creating a solid PLM foundation with computer-aided design (CAD) data and product data, and then they expand their implementation to cover the process from concept to manufacturing using an "item-centric" approach (including collaboration around the bill of materials (BOM) and process/change management), based on the same modular PLM platform. After making sure these elements are in place, PLM can be integrated with other enterprise processes through global collaboration and effective decision-making processes.

The greater the scale of the deployment, the greater the benefits are and, hopefully, the greater the adoption/acceptance by end-users. Starting the deployment from concept to manufacturing will attract the most end-users to the process (who will see the value of collaboration) and will spur user acceptance. Even if for each business process you initially choose to deploy the most simple and intuitive solution, and not necessarily the most advanced one available, you’ll succeed and grow as you go within the same PLM platform. Your initial focus should be on managing the process and getting people on board. Once you’ve completely taken care of that, then go ahead and gradually bring more advanced, complex solutions into the fold.

Real-world Example

As an example, let’s review Pentair Water, a company that opted to create a collaborative PLM global environment using ENOVIA SmarTeam’s solution. The major motivating factor for Pentair’s decision to deploy PLM was the need for the company to unite its many worldwide branches — especially in China and India — and to create synergies among its largely autonomous divisions. Up to that point Pentair had been distributing product data by express shipping CDs, e-mailing massive files or uploading information to non-secure FTP servers. All three of these methods posed an extreme risk to security, data consistency and speed. Pentair decided to implement PLM to reduce business risks and lower the overhead involved in meeting product quality standards.

Ultimately, Pentair executives used the PLM solution to address four needs: a common 3D design system, a single centralized data repository with a common model, a collaborative platform capable of supporting multiple locations, and a common approach to business process management.

The results the company has seen have been positive. Having a single source of data and a consistent data model with revision and version management allows multiple Pentair designers to simultaneously collaborate on a project, cutting design cycles in half while improving quality. Because PLM allows the company to avoid redundancy in its designs, Pentair has seen fewer mistakes overall and a decrease in the number of changes made at the tooling stage — when they’re the most expensive. Product lifecycle management has also cut down on wasted time searching through databases for information that may not exist and has improved collaboration between U.S. offices and manufacturing centers in China and India. PLM has become Pentair’s main solution for supply chain management, customer service, quality, production and purchasing.

PLM and Emerging Industries

The benefits from adopting PLM are tangible across all industries, but not all companies in all industries are currently mature enough in how they view PLM to effectively adopt it. When we look at the PLM market (especially in the mid-market), analyzing it within a technology wave, it’s rather difficult to determine whether it’s in a "growth" phase or "maturity" phase. A closer look at segmentation is necessary to make that call. Companies from some of the manufacturing sector’s "traditional" industries (automotive, aerospace & defense, industrial equipment, high-tech, energy & process, shipbuilding, consumer goods) tend to be ready to adopt PLM, while other manufacturing industries (consumer packaged goods, construction, medical devices) aren’t so easy to read.

The markets that many would define as being emerging industries (including apparel, pharmaceuticals and business services) are still in their respective "growth" phases. This means that most of those companies in the mid-market will be ready to adopt PLM only after several years. This puts the pressure on the aforementioned "traditional" manufacturing companies to adopt PLM as they already face competitors that have implemented PLM and thus have an advantage over them.

Companies within the emerging industries, on the other hand, should understand that if they can successfully adopt PLM before their competition, they can jump ahead in their market, bringing more innovative products to the forefront in shorter amounts of time, using quicker development strategies and making better use and reuse of their company’s intellectual property.

Obviously, deploying PLM will require a culture change within the company. The challenges involved in implementing PLM will be minimal, provided that the selected solution delivers industry best practices and modular out-of-the-box packages; offers the flexibility and openness required to fine-tune the out-of-the-box packages in accordance with existing company process; and most importantly, ensures a low total cost of ownership. After all, streamlining your mid-market company’s product lifecycle management should not break the bank.

As final note, the current economic situation in the global market is indeed a momentous challenge, but it is also a huge opportunity. By the time it ends, some companies will have disappeared, but others will be there, armed with dedication to innovation and a willingness to evolve. Product lifecycle management can help your company see future opportunities that transcend current challenges.

Posted in BOM, Design, General, Manufacturing, PLM, mid-market | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

PLM isn’t just for big companies anymore

Posted by mikilumnitz on February 26, 2009

Here is a talkback by Ed Miller, president of CIMdata Inc. published in Manufacturing Business Technology,02/24/2009

PLM isn’t just for big companies anymore

By Ed Miller, president, CIMdata Inc. — Manufacturing Business Technology,02/24/2009

Historically, product life-cycle management (PLM) was practical mostly for large, distributed enterprises with the extensive resources needed to invest in and deploy the systems, understand the approach, improve the technologies, validate benefits, and establish organizational practices to make PLM effective. Companies that originally invested in PLM often were the big OEMs in industries such as automotive and aerospace, with complex global facilities and far-reaching supply chains.
For the most part, PLM solutions for these large organizations are all-encompassing enterprise systems focused on issues that affect multiple domains such as program management, engineering, manufacturing, purchasing, asset management, and quality. Typical functionality includes program management; CAD file management, CAD integrations, bill-of-material (BOM) and bill-of-information (BOI) creation and management, document management, visualization, strategic sourcing, and extensive workflow management capabilities to automate various complex processes.
Recognizing a tremendous market potential, PLM suppliers have and are continuing to adapt these same capabilities for small and midsize companies that aren’t content to let PLM remain the domain of industry behemoths. These smaller companies desire the same support for global collaboration and creation of innovative approaches to their own product development problems.
Although these companies have many of the same requirements for PLM as their larger counterparts, they also have these differing characteristics:
• Limited information technology (IT) resources;
• Limited process improvement resources;
• Demand for low total cost of ownership;
• Demand for fast business impact; and
• Demand for minimized risk.
As a result, PLM for small and midsize companies must be provided in the form of:
• Cost-effective solutions (software and services) with low initial cost, and low ongoing costs;
• Limited installation/implementation support requirements to reach production operation; and
• Packaged solutions with pre-configured processes to provide templates and guidance in achieving best practices with the solutions.
For small and mid-sized companies that design or engineer simple parts or components, configuration management support typically isn’t a critical PLM requirement. As a result, with these types of companies PLM solutions are implemented to support data vault management, workflow automation, and applications that sustain specific needs in the engineering or manufacturing process—e.g., change management, engineering release and quality assurance.
For companies that design or engineer medium to highly complex products such as engines, turbines or machine tools, these capabilities often are supplemented with configuration management support.
PLM solutions for small and midsize companies are delivered to such companies from various suppliers. Major PLM players all have such systems, generally licensed and supported by networks of value added resellers (VAR). In addition, smaller niche PLM providers and regional suppliers often are aimed primarily at small and midsize companies, frequently in certain industries.
Key factors for small and midsize enterprises to consider include the ability to deliver out-of-the-box applications and easily tailored solutions based on best practices that support the organization’s product and process related information creation and management requirements.
Above all, the PLM solution must be simple enough to be clearly and easily understood. If not, companies should keep looking for a solution that meets their basic requirements. Such a search takes time and effort, but the work soon pays off in benefits that give competitive advantage to forward-looking companies of all sizes that implement PLM.

Posted in News, PLM, mid-market | Tagged: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

ENOVIA SmarTeam Engineering Express (SNE) – What do people really think?

Posted by mikilumnitz on July 1, 2008

As part of my work you can imagine I am meeting a lot of customers, potential customers, resellers and PLM professionals all over the world. it is always nice to hear what they think about what we in ENOVIA SmarTeam delivers to the PLM market. I have already wrote to you about Technicom review of ENOVIA SmarTeam Engineering Express in my previous post ENOVIA SmarTeam Engineering Express Review by TechniCom.

This time I have the opportunity to give you the view of a PLM professional, Jonathan Scott.

Jonathan is a senior PLM consultant from Razorleaf Corp. and has vast experience in PLM, methodology wise and technically.

So, here is Jonathan’s view… this is what people really think…

Dassault Introduces Engineering Express (SNE)

Those of you keeping up with Dassault’s latest announcements related to ENOVIA SmarTeam have certainly heard of SmarTeam Express. This relatively new offering (first introduced on top of V5R16) is a fresh approach to PDM. Several players in the PDM market have tried to offer watered-down versions of their software in an effort to make it easy to adopt PDM. The trouble has generally been that either a) there is no easy way to get from the junior version of the software to the senior version without rip-and-replace, or b) the junior version is missing really critical capabilities (like an API or a database). For their part, Dassault chose to make their offering a streamlined, not crippled, version of ENOVIA SmarTeam. The difference is obvious; you can do anything with the Express offerings that you can do with good old ENOVIA SmarTeam – the Express version just takes some of the distractions out of the way up front.

Dassault’s first installment of the Express lineup was SDE, or SmarTeam Design Express. SDE is targeted at CAD designers and CAD workgroups, in organizations large and small. The offering is a collection of pre-configured ENOVIA SmarTeam elements, including a focused data model, some great customizations, well-designed Profile Cards, and optimized settings. The “streamlined” part of SDE is that users don’t have to think about (or even see) information in the system not related to CAD work. Project tasks, contacts, bills-of-material, and other advanced system capabilities are turned off, allowing users to focus on revision management and relationship management of CAD data. It’s important to note though that “turned off” implies that these other features can be turned on if and when the time comes.

That brings us to SNE. SNE is SmarTeam Engineering Express (SEE is a Dassault designation for another piece of software, so SNE was selected instead). SNE is built on the same data model as SDE, making it easy for new users of the system to add capabilities by removing or applying various Express behaviors and configuration elements. SNE targets the overall engineering process, as a superset of the CAD design process. If I was to offer a slogan for the combined SDE/SNE package, I would say that it, “manages product data from concept through manufacturing”. That includes change processes, BOMs, CAD data, and related documentation.

The Expresses each ship with a methodology guide describing the answers to not just the “how-to” questions, but also the “why” questions. With this, Dassault is providing a powerful tool, a quick-start approach, and best practices built right into the software. What’s really clever about SNE is the way that it incorporates more than just mechanical design. For instance, SNE includes a process for managing ECAD (electrical CAD) files and BOMs side-by-side with MCAD (mechanical CAD) and software design information. The complete product structure can be managed and manipulated in a revision controlled environment (let’s see ERP do that).

SNE contains an even larger set of useful automations and customizations than SDE. Best of all, the latest versions of these Expresses were designed to work together. So what started as a good idea, “provide a streamlined PDM tool with best practices built-in”, has become even stronger in the second addition to the Express line-up. SNE is available on top of V5R18 (at no additional cost, I should mention). Based on the successes and capabilities of SDE and SNE, I am optimistic about the value of the other Express offerings Dassault has in the works.

You can find the article also in Razorleaf web site: http://www.razorleaf.us/dotnetnuke/Newsletter/June2008/tabid/156/Default.aspx#922

Posted in BOM, Design, Engineering, PLM, mid-market | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

PLM for SMB – who are those companies?

Posted by mikilumnitz on July 1, 2008

PLM for the mid-market

This post is in continuation to my previous post in this subject ‘Do Mid-Market companies need to adopt PLM?‘ and the question in hand is who are those mid-market companies? what are their characteristics?

I will try to specify those companies to maybe share some light on this matter.

Mid-market company in the PLM world

Unlike what we would have think, the mid-market companies develop today very complex products and need to use complex development processes (in the past we could see mid-market companies developing simpler products, but not any more) and they need to do so with fewer people. which means they face essentially the full range of challenges in the PLM world but must be much more efficient in solving those. In addition to that, they face higher competition than in the large OEMs.

Those companies are not anymore local but global (could be even in very small sites) and tend to grow faster. They are usually working across industries (if I am a mold maker for automotive probably I develop molds also for other industries) and they are in most cases part of value chains (need to exchange and collaborate with other companies, do not have responsibility to the end product end to end).

Another interesting characteristic would be the organizational structure. because of the fact that those companies tend to work in more small projects in parallel, they will use in most cases matrix organization instead of hierarchical/program organization.

You will find that the users (the engineers) are integral part of the decision making team and therefor have higher end user influence on decision makers. in general you could say that in those companies you will find more individual view versus corporate process view. This does not reduce those companies’s need to standardize their business processes. 

Those companies usually have fluctuating cash flows & unpredictable revenue stream with limited IT resources. Which leads to the fact that they did not rush to implement the traditional PLM because of low budget and low risk capacity.

Do you have the feeling we are talking about your neighbor carpentry workshop? if yes, you are wrong. We are talking about companies up to around 1 billion $ revenue…

If you find most of the characteristics above fits your company… congratulations! your company is a mid-market company and my guess will be that ENOVIA SmarTeam will fit your company PLM vision.

Posted in General, PLM, mid-market | Tagged: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Product lifecycle management 2008 summit in Israel

Posted by mikilumnitz on June 27, 2008

PLM 2008 summit:

This month the Product lifecycle management 2008 summit will be held in Israel. this is the 5th PLM summit held, introducing very interesting topics (not only because I will present… :-) ):

  • PLM also for SMB
  • Optimization of overall processes throughout the product lifecycle
  • Time to Market
  • Culturing – the culture change as a result of implementing PLM
  • PLM as 3D experience
  • PLM for SMB versus PLM for ENT
  • PLM – for anyone in any place
  • PLM architecture – SOA, Web services
  • The tight relation between Design, PLM, Product to society and economics

Our PLM sessions:

We will present in 2 sessions in this summit:

  • PLM for SMB – The importance and knowhow of PLM rapid deployment
  • From concept to manufacturing  – was never easier to reach
  • Interesting customer implementation case

and in the second session:

So, for all of you that happened to be in Israel during July 8th, come and join us… for those of you who will not be able to attend, I promise to give you highlights and insights afterwards here in my blog… so keep your subscription…

Posted in News, PLM, PLM 2.0, mid-market | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments »