But perhaps most challenging are Engineering Change Orders (ECO), which are used to map Engineering requirements into Manufacturing requirements, and represent a major source of production bottlenecks within manufacturing organizations.
There are seven symptoms of an Engineering Change Order bottleneck:
Many organizations report that the ECO process consumes one-third to one-half of engineering capacity, slowing efforts to drive manufacturing process improvement. Some organizations have just given up try to improve the Engineering Change Order process; Christian Terwiesch and Christoph H. Loch note, “Both practitioners and researchers have tended to view ECO-related problems more as a tragedy than as a sign of process management.”
Consider this survey of Manufacturers Alliance for Productivity and Innovation members:
Given that even one engineering change can be expensive and time-consuming, with the downstream impacts often underestimated (one survey reports that 73% of organizations don't even know the actual cost of engineering change orders), the potential impact of a poor ECO process for manufacturers facing global competition is significant.
Four principles are critical to effective ECO process management:
An effective ECO process – and one that makes an accurate assessment of the costs of the ECO – must include effective management of the information that drives the process. This includes who initiated the ECO in the first place, how it impacts not only the product in question, but also other connected products, the true cost of redesigning the product, and how all of this interacts with inventory levels and supply chain requirements.
Core to manufacturing process improvement is improving the ECO process by implementing a consistent, predictable and auditable information flow between the functional areas impacted by ECO changes. One uniform document management backbone, used in multiple business areas, provides the ability to improve communication and reduce cycle time in the handoff of business functions across these functional areas.