World Class Manufacturing & Global Competitiveness
World Class Manufacturing & Global Competitiveness
World Class Manufacturing & Global Competitiveness
COMPETITIVENESS
Consequent with the economic liberation envisaged through globalization of industrial
collaborations, organizations, especially in developing countries are at present in the
midst of revolutionary transformation : that of competition shifting from the ‘industrial
age’ to an information age’. The emergence of the information era coupled with rapid
changes in industrial technology have made the business practices, marketing strategies,
customer orientation of companies in developing countries like India obsolete. So merely
deployment of new technologies will not suffice. Furthermore, availability of cheap
labour may not be advantageous for ensuring global competitiveness. The present paper
examines the issues arising out of the globalization and suggests measures for better
global competitiveness and ensuring better manufacturing excellence in Indian industry.
INTRODUCTION :
Organizations are at present in the midst of a revolutionary transformation : that of
competition shifting from industrial age to information age. During the industrial age,
companies succeeded by how well they could capture the benefits from economies of
scale and scope. Technology was important, but ultimately success accrued to companies
that could embed the new technology into physical assets that offered efficient mass
production of standard products. The emergency of the information era, which started in
the last decades of the twentieth century, made obsolete many of the fundamental
assumptions of industrial age competition. Consequently, companies could no longer
gain sustainable competitive advantage by merely deploying new technology into
physical assets rapidly. Intangible assets enable an organization to develop customer
relationships and loyalty, introduce innovative products and services, produce customized
high quality products and services at low-cost and with short lead times, mobilize
employee skills and motivation for continuous process improvements, and deploy
information technology effectively.
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UNDERSTANDING CUSTOMERS :
It has become important to understand customers’ needs and wants deeply and to
translate these into a unique value-added business mission. Companies capturing and
applying information at each point of customer contact will, therefore, be better off than
those that do not. Consequently companies will have to be able to apply and integrate
information technology into the entire product process (including research, design,
manufacturing, distribution, marketing, and after sales service).
GLOBALIZATION :
Consequently the economic activity today is becoming not merely internationalized but
more significantly it is becoming increasingly globalized ‘internationalization’ refers
simply to the increasing geographical spread of economic activities across national
boundaries which as such is not a new phenomenon. Globalization of economic activity
is qualitatively different. It is more advanced and complex form on internationalization
which implies a degree of functional integration between internationally dispersed
economic activities. Though globalization is a more recent phenomenon; however it has
already emerged as the norm in a growing range of economic activity. Almost every
sector of business is influenced by global forces due to globalization (Porter, 1986).
Globalization is characterized by:
ϖ increased pressure for improved product quality and reduced product price; and
evolution of business toward more comprehensive and continuous global
coordination and integration.
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To compete successfully in this dynamically changing environment, firms need to be able
to address effectively several key strategic issues:
Order Cycle: In many industry sectors as automobile, the product is built to customer
order and customer specific. The ‘order cycle’ begins when the customer places an order,
and ends with the delivery of the completed product to the customer. In these sectors,
therefore, a very key competitive issue is to shorten significantly the time the cycle takes,
for delivering the product to the customer as soon as possible (Stalk and Hout, 1990).
After-sales customer support: Customer support after the sale is a critical issue.
Customers are demanding a high level of service for maintenance including spare parts
availability and technical skills in service staff. Add on products and services such as
training, documentation, product upgrades, are also required. A high level of customer
support capability is required, but it can also be profitable.
Design cycle: In many industries, product life becoming shorter product lives. The time
it takes to conceive of a new product, design it, put it into manufacturing, and deliver it to
the market with a full support network in place - the design cycle – is becoming shorter
and shorter. A shorter design cycle also means a newer technology put on the market.
The company that takes six years to design a new car model today must be using the
1992 technology, while the company with three design cycle may be competing with
1995 technology.
Global coordination of research and development is driven by the need for product
development for global markets and by the recognition that unique research competency
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exists in many different countries and cultures. At the same time that a company strives
to tap these competencies, it also usually wants to take a cost-effective approach in that
undesired duplication and overlap be minimized. Managing R & D in a global situation
is specially critical. For example, in the pharmaceutical industry, clinical trials and
regulatory approval applications must be undertaken in many countries relatively
simultaneously.
INDIAN SCENARIO :
According to a recent report from World Bank on global economy, developing countries
over the next ten years will grow by nearly 5 per cent a year compared with a rate of 2.7
per cent in the rich industrial world and by 2020 India should be the 4th largest economy
in the world. Unfortunately, contrary to this prediction, India ranks number 45 in global
competitiveness among 49 countries, according to 1996 Global Competitiveness Report
of the World Economic Forum. From 35th in 1994 to 39th in 1995, and now to 45th,
India’s decline in its competitiveness is shocking. For a country such as India which
needs high growth levels to generate enough resources to alleviate poverty levels, this is a
dangerous prognosis. It is, therefore, critically important that immediate steps be taken to
reverse this trend.
Manufacturing is the process of adding value to raw materials and resources and is at the
heart of an economy. The last decade has witnessed fierce competition in the
international markets led by Japan and the newly industrialized countries’ major
competitive advantage. As against cheap labour experience, market share and technology
innovations are greater determinants of cost leadership than the cheap labour (Chandra
and Shukia, 1994). Superior product quality, design innovations, robust delivery
performance, customisation, and excellent after-sales service are the distinctive
manufacturing characteristics needed to gain competitive advantage. The ability to
deliver these capabilities rests on the management’s perspective on competition and the
manufacturing practices of the company.
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market is a vital determinant of the competitive advantage of an industry (Porter, 1990).
The size, consumer sophistication and the growth of domestic demand shape the
characteristics of an industries the scale economy that is essential for cost leadership. But
the quality of domestic demand rather than its quantity is more important in shaping the
competitive advantage of domestic industries. Quality of domestic demand has never
been nurtured by Indian manufacturers2 . To successfully compete with the world class
manufacturers in domestic as well as global market. Indian firms will have to offer high
quality product choices to domestic customers in order to create a sustainable base for
national manufacturing excellence!
MANUFACTURING EXCELLENCE :
In the changed globalize business environment, it is no more feasible to compete only on
the basis of costs without paying attention to the real customer preferences represented by
other product dimensions. Consequently, many new manufacturing approaches have
emerged over the recent time mostly as the reaction to dynamically changing situation on
the market place, where increased competition and market globalization greatly affected
the distribution of the market share and the profit margins. These new approaches to
manufacturing are based on a pragmatic philosophy distilled from worldwide experience
in manufacturing. Manufacturing Excellence could be attained by a combination of
several approaches to manufacturing such as the following Hall, 1987).
i) Value-added manufacturing, which means do nothing that does not add value
to the product or to the customer.
World class manufacturing was the goal of achieving and /or sustaining world class
competitiveness through manufacturing excellence attained through best practices. In
this context, different experts have expressed the goal and necessary practices for world
class manufacturing differently but always with the implicit goal of sustained
competitiveness in the global market place. For example, Schonberger, who introduced
the term ‘world class manufacturing’ (1986), states that world class manufacturing has
the goal of continual improvement in quality, cost, lead time and customer service, as
also the flexibility. Gunn (1987) suggest a number of criteria for evaluating a company’s
world class manufacturer status such as inventory turnover, quality defects and lead
times. According to Gunn, a company needs inventory turnovers in raw materials and
work-in-process (WIP) of some 25 to 30 per year to be a Class C world-class
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manufacturer, about 50 to 60 turns per year for a Class b status and on the order of 80 to
100 turns or more per year to be a Class A world class manufacturer.
Maskell (1991) states that world class manufacturing is a very broad term which
generally includes focus on product quality, just-in-time (JIT) Production Techniques,
Work-Force Management, and Flexibility in meeting customer requirements. Kinn
(1996) characterizes world class manufacturing by three core strategies of customer
focus, quality and ability (i.e. the ability to quickly, efficiently and effectively respond to
change), and six supporting competencies-employee involvement, supply management
technology, product development, environmental responsibility and employee safety, and
corporate citizenship.
Information age has not affected merely the industrialized countries but also the
developing countries. Consequently, the environment facing developing countries has
also become increasingly more turbulent, dynamic and complex. A combination of
external and internal factors including population growth, weak infrastructure, foreign
indebtedness, asymmetric world infrastructure, foreign indebtedness, asymmetric would
relations and increasing inequalities between individuals, groups and regions has
prevented many developing countries from achieving significant socio-economic
improvements. Some developing countries such as India have, therefore, made
economic management their prime agenda. They are going through a process of
restructuring their economy to emphasize competition, integration with global markets
and increasing level of privatization. Consequently Indian manufacturing industry has
been thrust from the protected environment of the “licence-permit-quota” to an uncertain
environment of global competition and global markets.
Global competitors operating in global markets almost always tend to have world class
status as defined above. Therefore, to be globally competitive, Indian manufacturers
necessarily need to achieve world class performance. Oddly enough, as stated before,
developing countries such as India, China and Brazil themselves constitute a huge market
which attracts many world class companies from other countries to sell their products in
these countries. The domestic companies in these countries, are also constrained to
compete with these world class companies by virtue of their entry into the domestic
market.
Global
Exporters World -Class
Market Manufacturers
Domestic Multinational
Local Player
Local Global
Competitors (Fig.1-WCM)
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Thus, from Fig.1, it is evident that Indian manufacturers need to acquire the world-class
status irrespective of the fact that they are operating only in the domestic market or are an
exporter as well. Needless to mention though that achieving world-class performance is a
great opportunity for those who can make it, and for others, a serious threat. Though to
some extent the Indian manufacturers have realized this and trying to rise to the
challenge, will depend on their readiness to move themselves from a protected domestic
to world-class global manufacturing status quickly and confidently.
These two types of changes can be classified as either stable or dynamic. Stable change
in slow, evolutionary, and generally predictable, while dynamic change is rapid, often
revolutionary, and generally unpredictable. Taken together, these two types of changes
provide a matrix of four possible combinations of ‘change conditions’ that can confront
an organizations defines a strategic business model appropriate to the conditions (Fig.2).
This matrix of manufacturing strategies can serve as a valuable lens through which an
organization can (i) assess its competitive position by understanding where it has been in
the past; (ii) continuously choose a strategic business model appropriate to the present
and (anticipated) future environment, and (iii) clarify how to strategically align the
business and IT strategies, Infrastructure and process appropriate to the strategic model.
The matrix combinations and the relevant manufacturing strategies are described below:
Dynamic
Mass Innovation
Product Communication
Change
Mass Continuous
Stable Production Improvement
Stable Dynamic
Process Change
Fig.2 Manufacturing Strategies for Change
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(R&D) units within mass production organizations, such as Bell Laboratories. Such
organizations are inherently designed for change since product specifications and work
processes are unpredictable and constantly shifting. To compete under innovation
conditions, organizations decentralize decision-making, broadly define jobs, develop few
rules or procedures, and subjectively evaluate performance.
While mass production and innovation have been the predominant forms of competitive
strategy during the 20th century, today the situation has changed with neither
simultaneous stable-stable change in such a situation, two more strategies emerge as an
option to manufacturing firms.
MASS CUSTOMIZATION :
Organizations in a number of industries are facing customers making increasingly unique
and unpredictable product demands. However, the basic processes that these companies
are instituting to meet these demands soon evolve into identifiable patterns enabling the
companies to build stable but flexible platform of process capabilities. Such companies,
therefore, need to be organized and managed for mass customization (Pine, 1993). It is
the ability to serve a wide range of customers and to meet changing product demands
through product variety and innovation, while simultaneously building on existing long
term process experience and knowledge that results in increased efficiencies. The focus
of these firms is on individual customer fulfillment through flexibility and
responsiveness. The major distinguishing characteristic of the mass customization
strategy is the capacity to produce product variety rapidly and inexpensively. This
requires a set of modular process capabilities with a linkage system that allows them to
be brought together instantly for any particular customer order. Consequently, instead of
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centralizing all decision making for a single value chain, these organizations centralize
coordination and control in the hub of a web of loosely linked processing units.
CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT :
In some industries, such as automobiles and machine tools, the nature of product demand
is still relatively mature, stable, large, and homogeneous. But the competition in these
industries is based on dynamic process terms, i.e. the organizations are competing by
achieving constant improvement in process quality, speed, and cost. The focus of
organizations in these industries is on customer satisfaction through process
improvement. As opposed to mass production firms, they are very customer or market
focused, striving to better satisfy the market as a whole through continuous process
improvement. These organizations manage rapid innovation and use of new process
capabilities and therefore require systems and structures that facilitate long-term
organizational learning about product but simultaneously achieving radical changes in the
processes. To make process innovation efficient, these organizations employ cross-
functional teams that collaborate to improve processes or plan for product enhancement.
The members of these teams then turn to their function specific transformation. In this
sense the teams of continuous improvement firms need to be as process-innovation’
organizations and as process efficient as ‘mass production’ firms.
Time-based Competition
Time is the primary competitive motive of business in the 21st century. It does not mean,
however, that other motives such as cost, quality and service can be ignored. In fact
these are prerequisites to sustain competitiveness. But the winning factor is provided by
time (Stalk 1988) and enhancement to the basic products. Reducing time is not critical in
and of itself – it is the benefits achieved through time reduction in the form of greater
cash flow, less inventory, quicker customer response, and ultimately, greater profits,
which make time-based competition worthwhile (Handfield, 1995). Moreover, time-
based competition worthwhile (Handfield, 1995). Moreover, time-based competition
does not just refer to manufacturing but to the entire product / value supply chain, which
includes product development, order processing, supplier delivery, reproduction,
manufacturing, final assembly, and distribution. Thus, in the manufacturing
environment, time-based competition becomes the highest priority to gain responsiveness
and flexibility (‘Fig.3) (Meyer, 1990).
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Market
mm
diversification,
flexibility
Productivity
Turnover
Growth
Responsiveness and flexibility have several important dimensions (Table 1). One is
product mix, the need to support maximum variety in end products with minimal
disruption to the manufacturing operations. Other relate to upgrading of plant and
equipment in order to start product quickly. The driving force behind this priority setting
is the need and the wish to respond to virtually any customer request just-in-time.
Flexibility, on the other hand, is the response of a system to environmental uncertainties
(‘the unknown customer’). Thus, the 1990s which will no longer be pushed forward by
technology but will be controlled by information feedback. This leads us to the challenge
industries are facing today: how to manage knowledge.
MANAGING KNOWLEDGE :
In the 21st century, the productivity and, even more important, the effectiveness of
managers and white-collar workers will become critical to long-term survival. The
effectiveness of these experts depends on their smooth integration into the organization.
Therefore, in the era of advanced specialization, integration of dispersed knowledge will
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become progressively more difficult to accomplish and more costly to achieve.
Knowledge will become scarce and the most crucial and expensive economic resource.
Coordination
Once a company has defined its manufacturing strategy, it has to initiate mechanisms for
managing product complexity as well those for managing demand uncertainty in the form
of uncertain orders, both perhaps at the same time. The challenge of managing product
complexity is to improve productivity (goal of ‘mass production’ strategy) whereas the
challenge of market uncertainty is to improve flexibility (goal or ‘mass customization’
strategy) (Meyer, 1990). Product complexity is managed by breaking down a
manufacturing task into a number of sub-tasks and operations. Executing these sub-tasks
and operations in parallel improves productivity. But if different sub-tasks are performed
by different workers (‘division of labour’), then the productivity improvement is
restricted by coordination costs which may otherwise exceed the productivity gains. This
is also true for the expert knowledge, which is the other resource require to execute
operations. Thus a basic problems in manufacturing is the problem of coordination
which could be stated as follows:
ϖ After exploding a manufacturing task into thousands of sub-tasks, how difficult and
costly integrated manufacturing and effective knowledge management.
Unfortunately, there have been many discussions on national infrastructure and macro
economic policies in the national media but very little attention has been paid in
designing policies that map managerial practices to manufacturing excellence of
world class status. While macro-economic factors affect the investment climate and
the extent of resources available to enhance productivity, they fall to define and
control the parameters of competition, viz. cost, quality, delivery and flexibility
(Chandra and Shukla, 1994). The economic reforms in India have already started
opening up new challenges and opportunities before the Indian industries. Whether
the Indian firms will be able to capitalize on these opportunities and elevate
themselves as viable global competitors, shall depend primarily on their dynamism
and ability to transform themselves into world class manufacturers – the sooner, the
better and perhaps safer!
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