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MSI Mold Builders:
Breaking Tradition
Roger
Klouda got into the
trade like most of the men and women in it – he followed in his father’s
footsteps. His father owned a tool & die shop for more than 25 years. When the
industry slowed in the late 1960s, his father established a mold repair business
and called it Manufacturing Specialties, Inc. From there the business blossomed
into a full service moldmaking operation and does business as MSI Mold Builders.
Roger
Klouda came by his
interest in the industry honestly, and he joined his father’s company as a
partner in 1978.
MSI
built primarily aluminum tooling for structural foam at first; then in the late
1970s the company started an injection tooling division, building high pressure
injection molds. Today, MSI Mold Builders designs and builds various types of
steel and aluminum molds for injection, structural foam, rim, blow, gas assist
and structural web processes, in addition to aluminum limited production
injection molds. The split is about 70% plastic injection, 30% foam, according
to Klouda, who is president of MSI.
The
company experienced a growth spurt beginning in 1989 when a new,
23,000-square-foot building was built. In 1994, a 14,000-square-foot
addition was constructed, making the current 37,000-square-foot headquarters as
it stands today. This plant employs 90.
In 1981,
MSI established its
Bentonville,
AR,
plant (MSI South), opening a new, 10,000-square-foot facility in 2000. There are
18 employees at MSI South. Finally, in 2001, MSI acquired the assets of an
existing mold shop in
Greenville, S.C., naming it MSI Southeast. That plant is approximately 20,000
square feet and employs 18.
Klouda
explains that his company builds molds for the computer and business machine,
medical diagnostics, material handling, sporting goods, lawn and garden,
appliance, consumer electronics, heavy equipment and transportation industries.
Though the company does not do any actual processing in house, it does have a
1,000-ton sampling press.
All of
this may not seem extraordinary, but when you realize the timeframe within which
this growth spurt happened and you listen to Klouda describe his company’s
corporate philosophy and all of the internal restructuring that was done, you
realize this is a mold company that is setting the mark for all other mold
companies to follow.
“It was
probably eight to 10 years ago when we realized that the conventional mold
making process was not very efficient,” Klouda explains. “So we embarked on a
planning session including all of our personnel. We wanted everyone to
contribute toward finding the best way to manufacture tools.
“One of the first things we
realized was we needed better management of the process and a better process for
building tools,” he continued. “We were like every other shop, your best
moldmaker became your lead man; your best designer was your lead designer and so
on. We realized we needed professional management. The key was getting the right
people in the right positions. We always had good people, but we lacked getting
the right guys in place. Our best toolmaker was not necessarily the best
manager.”
“We just
decided we needed a change and bringing outside people was an opportunity we
couldn’t pass up” Klouda says and it worked.
The key
came 4 years ago, he says, when MSI had the opportunity to replace some people.
They hired a financial person who knew manufacturing. They brought on an
engineering manager who had mold industry experience as well as management. MSI
also hired an Operations Manager who had more manufacturing operations
management experience. His name is
Steve Kimm.
Kimm
worked for 17 years at Amana Refrigeration, and most recently as the manager of
its industrial engineering group. His duties included improving the efficiency
of not only molding operations, but also stamping, vacuum forming, roll forming
and other manufacturing processes.
The
changes happened in about a six-month period. Klouda notes that it was hard to
get his mold makers to understand that they didn’t need a manager that is mold
savvy, but someone who knew more about manufacturing overall and could pull it
all together. But once the guys understood, everything began to come together.
Kimm
helped set MSI on the pathway to leaner operations by evaluating what is called
a value stream, and into what is a more streamlined operations process, plus he
got rid of waste in the plants which included machinery and equipment.
“I know
it works,” he says. “It reduces costs. MSI developed a Visual Scheduling System
or a Visual Factory where you can walk into an area and you know exactly what
the schedule and the priority is. You know the hours consumed, the hours sold
and you know the plan. You can see what is being measured and what has purpose.”
“We
completely departmentalized the plant,” Klouda explains. “We went from having
about 50 people on the floor with journeyman experience and status to about
eight doing the actual mold building work. Everyone is specialized in an aspect
of the mold building process now. Had you told me 10 years ago that I could turn
a moldmaker into an EDM Specialist and have him be happy, I would have told you
that you were crazy. But it happened.”
Klouda
says his employees get a sense of accomplishment today that they didn’t have 10
years ago. He says they truly understand that the needs of the industry or any
manufacturing operation, is to be as efficient as possible.
Kimm
says baseline productivity improvement was up by 18% after the first year. Four
years later he
measures an overall improvement of about 70% and the team continues to find ways
to improve further. “If you can’t offset the deflation of mold prices with the
efficiency improvements of the business, you will no longer exist”.
“You
always have to be evaluating what the customer is willing to pay for,” says Kimm,
who subscribes to lean practices including getting rid of clutter and
distraction created by equipment no longer utilized in a plant.
In
addition to the reorganization of his team, Klouda also put everyone in the
company through continuous process improvement training. The objective of that
was to educate his staff on how to gather data and how to make decisions based
on that data.
“We
wanted them to learn how to establish what the particular payback would be for
any action taken based on those decisions,” he explains. “We wanted them to be
able to make those measurements before putting anything new into place, whatever
it might be, in order to maximize on our investment of time and resources.
“One big
thing we’ve done is completely change the flow of the work through the plant so
that jobs literally move from one end to the other more efficiently,” he adds.
“When a mold comes off one machine it goes right to the next machine rather than
to the rack in between processes. It’s right there for the next guy to work on.
This cuts down on what we call ‘non-value added time.’ The customer may not care
about this operational change, but the costs and time associated with downtime
adds no value to the job in their eyes either.”
Klouda
says his company probably manufactures in excess of 200 molds per year. The
departmentalization the company went through goes right down to some of the
smallest mold building tasks.
“We have
four guys in the plant that make every ejector box for all of those tools,” he
says. Most mold shops have a tool crib with bolt stock, ejector pin stock and
other components. One guy then oversees inventory and the rest of the guys have
to go to him. It just doesn’t make sense anymore.
“In our
plant, there is an assembly area where everything they need to assemble the tool
is there when they need it,” he continues. “They don’t have to chase it down.”
Klouda
says he’s working on is getting a vendor to put ejector pins and other mold
components in his plants on consignment. He feels that there are a lot of hidden
costs involved in the process that one doesn’t see on the tool. Having someone
keep his company stocked up once a month would save time and money because his
tool room would have everything his guys need when they need it.
Taking the Art Out of the
Part
Klouda
breaks an age-old mold industry image when he says moldmaking is not a one of a
kind industry where every mold is unique in and of itself. Rather, it behooves
the industry, in his opinion, to apply good manufacturing principles to it. At
least that is what he is doing at MSI.
“All
molds are basically the same and where you can apply a conventional
manufacturing processes to you should do it so that you have more time to do
more customized work,” he states. “Standardization and minimization of resources
is critical to more streamlined operations and cost savings.
“Focus
on standardization and efficiency and don’t look at a mold as an art form, but
as a manufacturing process,” he advises. “We [moldmakers] have spent too much
time trying to defend what we do as an art form when our customers just see a
tool. If they could get by without molds, they’d do it. There are parts of our
business that are somewhat artsy, but then again, there’s not that much that’s
art.”
A strong
statement, but Klouda assures you it is the right way to look at things. His
company’s success is proof enough.
Getting
down to brass tacks, Klouda cut 10 people out of the operation three years ago.
“We
didn’t miss a beat as far as sales are concerned,” he says. “No one ever walked
up to me and said ‘you got rid of the wrong guy.’ It’s a mistake to think that
someone that is producing at 60% is better than not having anyone at all. It’s
just not true.”
Getting
the team to all pull in the same direction has been key to MSI’s success, he
explains. The company has not had a decrease in sales of any significance over
the last three years.
“This
year we’ll probably be up about 20%,” says Klouda. “Part of that is because of
the streamlining process. What took 14 weeks to build five years ago now takes
8-9 weeks – and it hasn’t been that hard.”
The
greatest gains have been from removing the dead time as well as the excuses. No
longer is “We can’t do it because …” an acceptable response. The current
attitude is “What do we have to do to make it happen.”
Even
during the slow time, if you can call it that, MSI was investing in equipment.
For example, Klouda purchased a 5-axis, high-speed CNC machining center (can
handle blocks 64x110”) and this year a second one is budgeted for.
“We
believe in having state of the art equipment and it’s really the only way we can
compete,” he says. “We’re maximizing on what we have in machines and people. The
new machine will be for bigger molds.”
Kimm
agrees state of the art equipment is important but he says it’s the processes
within the plant that make the difference.
“Some of
the best improvements on efficiency were made during the time we were using the
same old machinery we’ve always had,” he asserts. “It’s streamlining the
process, not just capital improvements, that make the difference.”
In terms
of sales and service, Klouda says it is because his project managers don’t
manage tools on the floor that they have time to manage customers and prospect
for new customers and sales. He and his managers have spent a lot of time
basically training their customers to know what is required at their end if they
want the short lead times and quality tools. He says the customers have been
receptive to their input and some solid working relationships have been
established as a result. He also says that it’s a lot of work, but it’s
necessary.
The
Engineering Services Department is probably the next area up for reorganization,
Klouda says. His team is just starting a review process to establish criteria
for shorter lead times.
In
addition to reorganization, the company brings in consultants – people who
understand how to help people make decisions and identify problems. Klouda’s
goal is not to have these consultants solve the problems, but to help employees
identify opportunities and facilitate the solution, as well as training in the
decision making process.
“It
helps cut through the internal political crap and get to the heart of the
problem,” he says. “It’s an education for us, because my guys learn that the
things we are asking them to do is not MSI management trying to do something to
them, but instead it’s wanting good processes in place for accomplishing goals
while cutting time and costs.”
Klouda
says his company shares all pertinent costs with the people in the plant – labor
percentages, repair budgets, building budgets, etc. The purpose is to ensure
they understand what it takes to build a tool.
“We
figure the smarter they are about these things the more they can help us,” says
Klouda. “We’re not open book, but we’ve trained them to recognize where costs
affect or don’t affect operations.
“I would
say 90% of the guys are more trusting, helpful and believing because of their
involvement; the rest are still skeptical,” he continues. “You're never going to
get everyone together on that, but I'd like to see more improvement. It’s been
an eye-opener for some of them, especially in the continuous improvement process
– when they do their numbers and there’s no payback on some of the ideas they
have.”
There’s
obviously been some payback for the company overall, and Klouda sees that
continuing far into the future.
For more
information on MSI Mold Builders, go their website at
www.msimoldbuilders.com, or call 319-848-7001. |