Interview with Martin Prasch, VP Sourcing & Manufacturing
You have been working in Amer Sports as the Global Director Lean
& Operations Excellence since June 2011. What have you been doing?
Thanks
to the exciting responsibility for Lean and Manufacturing, I first
started by visiting our factories and suppliers all over the world,
assessing their maturity on manufacturing processes and especially in
regards to Lean management*. Where necessary, we started the Lean
journey program with trainings and workshops on site almost right away.
With the condensed findings we formed a Global Lean and Manufacturing
strategy, and set up a community of practice with all Amer Sports
operations and factory leaders. A key part of that was to clearly define
what is unique versus the industry and our suppliers, and align this
with our corporate strategy.
How did you make all this actionable in the different factories?
To
support all the development we created a Process Excellence System to
document our standards and provide training on tools and methods,
similar to the well-known Toyota Production System that is the origin of
Lean.
Your area of responsibility widened last summer. What did the change include and why was it done?
Since
summer, I am also leading the Amer Sports Global Sourcing Practice
community and the related Amer Sports Sourcing legal entities. There are
obvious linkages and commonalities across our sourcing and
manufacturing, as the processes at our suppliers are similar to the
processes in our own factories. We need the best value whether we source
or manufacture, our decisions need to be fact based and future proof.
Together with the brand and category sourcing leaders, we review the
global and category specific sourcing and make-or-buy strategies. All of
this is well aligned with our corporate strategy and supported by our
well running sourcing back-office functions.
How big is Amer Sports’ Manufacturing and Sourcing organization in total?
We
are running 12 factories that we own, mainly in Europe, Eastern Europe
and North America with about 2,500 employees, supplying about 40% of our
COGS (cost of goods sold). Mainly this production is related to our
Winter Sports Equipment and Fitness business. Also, we have some 200
people taking care of our 200+ suppliers, mostly located in Asia.
Besides, we have a third way of operating: for specific products and
markets, i.e. due to our scale or outstanding technology and
intellectual property, we cooperate very closely with exclusive
suppliers close to the markets, and call them hybrid factories. Mainly
this is related to Winter Sports Equipment and Cycling.
How would you describe the present level of Amer Sports’ Operations and Sourcing?
With
our divisional and portfolio based setup, we are coming from rather
decentralized sourcing and manufacturing operations. The integration of
global sourcing started in Asia some five to six years ago. I started
the manufacturing integration one and half a year ago and now all areas
are running Lean/Continuous Improvement Programs (CIP). But of course we
are not Lean yet, and moreover, Lean/CIP is a never-ending journey. In
addition, we need to continuously review our manufacturing and sourcing
footprint and our process landscape to further gain scale and synergy.
What are your main tasks in 2013? What is the main focus? And why?
In
2013, we need to roll-out the new sourcing strategy approach to all
product categories, supporting our corporate complexity reduction
program. This means we need to systematically implement and enforce
supplier development programs to work together on process optimization,
harmonization and integration, to reduce cost and further improve
service and cash flow. To boost innovation and technology, we need to
leverage our know-how on sourcing and manufacturing. And we must not
drop the ball on the Lean journey.
* Lean Management and similarly Lean Manufacturing
refers to an approach, attitude and a set of tools to improve service,
reduce lead time, inventory and cost by creating flow and eliminating
waste all along the supply chain from the supplier to the final
customer. Everything that is done to a product that is not adding value
for the final customer is considered to be waste.
( Text by Amer Sports)
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