Automation without People Is a Recipe for Failure
Luciano Sieber, CSCO of Colgate-Palmolive, recently forwarded me a Wall Street Journal article about Stanley Black & Decker’s (SBD) “doomed” factory automation push in Fort Worth, Texas. The subject line on Luciano’s email to me was: “Telltale story about automation without skills and faulty design.” We’ve discussed this topic more than once as a hurdle to transforming manufacturing.
The nugget in here is “not so easy!” The design principle is to religiously approach automation with a rock-solid understanding of how human skill and leadership are the unlocks for scaling up new technology in a manufacturing process.
Respect Your Machine Whisperers
Before throwing SBD under the bus, let’s be clear that the logic and even project approach – heading into this top-down initiative to manufacture CRAFTSMAN tools domestically for the US market – was smart. Decoupling from China in 2019 was a step ahead of most brands, and SBD had the formula right when they bet on automation to accommodate higher US labor costs. So far, so good, but then COVID hit, and plans changed.
The WSJ article nails the breakdown with dueling quotes: “[Steve] Stafstrom (then VP of Global Operations), who retired in 2021, said the factory’s struggles were exacerbated by attrition among ’gray-haired folks’ with deep knowledge of tool making, while [Tom] Felty (then an electroplating engineer in the plant) said turnover at the top of Stanley’s tool division contributed.”?
Long story short, gaps in the people plan seem to have foiled the business strategy.
Stafstrom’s comment points to something Zero100 discovered in research on future-proofing digitization skills, which is that supply chain automation requires a clique of “machine whisperers ” who intimately understand the processes being transformed by technology. This includes knowing how materials behave in conversion steps that involve heating, cutting, extruding, mold filling, or whatever else it may be. It also includes easily overlooked human capabilities like vision, spatial awareness, and manual dexterity.
This kind of detail is critical in manufacturing automation. Kevin McCoy, VP of Made for New Balance, is eloquent on this principle in shoemaking , which New Balance has done in the US for a century and is now scaling up as part of a top-down initiative much like SBD’s. McCoy’s relationship with the people in his Lawrence, Massachusetts factory and personal connection with the process are explicitly governing the company’s equipment design and deployment process.
Continuity Counts
The other half of WSJ’s dueling quotes paragraph is just as important. Electroplating engineer Tom Felty lamented turnover in leadership as a contributor to the failure. At a time of crisis during COVID, and in the face of challenges with equipment suppliers, customer expectation misses, and other typical bumps on the road to transformation, SBD cycled through no fewer than five presidents of the tool business, according to the WSJ. This lack of consistent leadership makes it hard for teams wrestling with new technology and tools as they work to "dial in" processes to scale.
In SBD’s case, the automation overhaul was never a complete disaster of technology or even process. The machinery worked but needed to be tuned, which would have required halving the production rate to allow operators to debug part placement and post-processing of stamped metal parts. Unfortunately, leadership’s public messaging to both customers and investors had boxed them in, with COVID delays eating up time buffers needed to solve problems.
Continuity could have helped buy time for plant teams to work through the issues while staying on course. Rival toolmaker Snap-on has transitioned to more automation in its US manufacturing operations, increasing the robot to human ratio from 1:100 to 1:8 – but this transition will take place over a period of twelve years, with CEO Nick Pinchuk at the helm.
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Robots and People Need Each Other
The lesson of SBD’s Fort Worth factory is that people strategy, technology strategy, and business strategy are inextricably linked. Automation replaces human work – in fact, that’s its purpose. But the business goal is less about cutting costs than it is about growing opportunity. In SBD’s case, the idea was to grow sales by pitching “Made in America.”
The robots may have been ready, but too little attention was paid to the people.
Written By:?Kevin O'Marah , Co-Founder?Zero100
Feature:?Deliveroo, AI-Powered Delivery Logistics
In our new feature, we go behind the scenes with Deliveroo to investigate their approach to big questions and themes facing supply chain professionals today. This month, we visited their HQ and a Deliveroo HOP site, speaking with Devesh Mishra, Chief Product & Technology Officer; Suzy McClintock, VP of Retail & Grocery; Mahana Mansfield, VP of Science; and Charlie Wren, VP of Delivery Product and Operations. We explored how they leverage machine learning to drive smarter delivery logistics, the importance of a culture of experimentation, and how data visibility impacts operational efficiency.??
Read or listen here ?as we uncover how Deliveroo’s experiences and insights can be applied across industries to move towards Zero Percent Carbon, 100% Digital supply chains.?
Learn more about us:?Zero100.com
Chief Strategy Officer @ Noodle.ai | Supply Chain Planning
1 年Yes, I agree completely with the premise of this article that #automation without #people is doomed. The only addition I will make is that people without automation is also doomed. This was captured in the article as increased productivity. The reality is that we have been faced with this conundrum for centuries. Bows and arrows were an incredible leap forward for the hunters who could neither get close enough to pounce on the prey nor fast enough to catch the prey once it was startled. However, simply putting a bow and arrow in a person's hands doesn't mean that they will know intuitively how to use the bow and arrow to hunt prey. Even if they understand the use of a bow and arrow intuitively, they have to hone their skills of aiming at and hitting a moving target. We saw this with manual lathes moving to CNCs. Without a doubt, there were a lot of skilled lathe operators that lost their jobs with the introduction of CNCs. However, there were lots of other jobs created, and it was only the lathe operators that couldn't adopt new skills that couldn't find jobs. The future #supplychainplanning will require the planner to change the #algorithms, not the #data. This will require a great deal of #skillsdevelopment