Modern Machine Shop

DEC 2017

Modern Machine Shop is focused on all aspects of metalworking technology - Providing the new product technologies; process solutions; supplier listings; business management; networking; and event information that companies need to be competitive.

Issue link: https://mms.epubxp.com/i/909538

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 22 of 140

20 MMS December 2017 mmsonline.com ONE-OFF Commentary My column last month presented ideas from Mike Griffith, chief operating officer of Major Tool and Machine (Indianapolis, Indiana), about attract- ing and retaining shopfloor employees. Most of you don't manage a 400-person operation such as that, so I thought it would be helpful to highlight the workforce development efforts of 30-person LeanWerks, located in Ogden, Utah. Like Mr. Griffith, Reid Leland, LeanWerks' president, was part of a workforce development panel I moderated at our recent Top Shops Conference. Here are a few of that shop's successful training ef for ts that he mentioned during our panel discussion, most of which required more of an investment in time rather than money: • Provide a path. LeanWerks' Technical Excel- lence Training (TExT) program is the cornerstone of its workforce development approach. One of the first steps in creating this program was final- izing a 10-level career path and identifying course segments. New hires begin with a 90-day shop fundamentals course that explains what LeanWerks and the TExT program are all about, and it also introduces them to very basic shop concepts. They then begin the career development portion of the How One Small Shop Develops Shopfloor Talent Here are a few of the workforce development practices a 30-person shop uses to grow its own shopfloor talent while providing pathways to manufacturing careers. program, which starts with a machine operator course, but offers additional courses covering senior operator, change-over technician, program- mer and process engineer. This program also includes courses for those who would like to become certified mechanical inspectors, quality technicians or quality engineers. • Use video. TExT uses a web-based learning management system (specifically, an inexpensive WordPress website with a LearnDash plug-in) to administer the program and present training lessons to employees. Many lessons include instructional video taken of actual LeanWerks shopfloor processes and practices to clearly out- line the steps required to complete tasks safely and effectively. To date, the shop has produced more than 200 such videos for its TExT program. It hired an intern from nearby Weber State Univer- sity who was studying multimedia journalism to film and produce the initial batch of videos. Videos are uploaded and accessed from Vimeo, a common video-sharing website. • Practice open-book management. OBM is a big part of LeanWerks' culture and consists of three primary elements. The first is financial train- ing, which explains concepts such as gross profit to operating expenses (GP/OE). The second is feedback with respect to business conditions, especially metrics such as GP/OE. That's because this metric clearly shows days when the shop makes money (the GP/OE ratio is higher than 1), loses money (the ratio is less than 1) and breaks even (when it is 1). The third is profit sharing. A monthly GP/OE of 1.2 or higher means that month's profits are shared with employees. DEREK KORN EXECUTIVE EDITOR DKORN@MMSONLINE.COM "The TExT program complements the shop's lean manufacturing approach by streamlining training efforts."

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Modern Machine Shop - DEC 2017