2018年6月24日星期日

motorcycle inspection

Sunchine Inspection, a professional one-stop international inspection provider, focus on providing more flexible and humanized inspection serviceto clients from all over the world.
Sunchine Inspection, Thinking for you and doing for you!
China Office
Room 2203, 22/F, Building 03, Zhongtai
International Plaza, 311, Middle Jiangdong
Road, 210019 - Nanjing - R.P.China
Tel: 0086-25-6809 3658
Fax: 0086-25- 8609 3678
Contact: Mr. Francois SHI
Managing Director in China Office
Mob: 0086-18951633559
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BY RENAUD ANJORAN
When a factory gets sold, the new owner generally brings a new general manager (GM) in.
And what does the GM do? He evaluates the top managers and seeks to replace the under-performers. This is expected in a typical factory turnaround.
He typically finds the replacements among his former team — at his former employer. It allows for quick hires of proven managers and engineers.
However, as Kim Pen from Chinese Manufacturing Consultants tells me, it can backfire violently.
Why?
First, the new GM, and the people he brings in, can get in conflict with the old team. That’s a disaster. And it often happens in China, where the staff is often tied to their managers more than they are to the company.
That risk is even stronger in a small factory of 200 or 300 workers because relationships are more personal than in large structures.
Second, bringing in a new manager kills the harmony that was established among the managers. The whole team gets less stable, and needs to find a new way of working together.

What the GM should do

A new general manager who needs to turn a factory around should follow these steps:
  • Try to maintain the harmony in the current managerial team. Do not make big changes immediately.
  • Focus on coaching the current managers in the right way, and on instilling a sense of discipline. Some managers that have mediocre performance right now might thrive under better management!
  • Avoid rivalries or conflicts between departments. For example, make the factory’s performance (actual vs. target, day by day) obvious to all employees, and set up a common bonus plan. If properly introduced, it pushes all departments to work hand in hand.
  • In 3 or 4 months, the current managers will better understand what is expected of them. It will be easy to see which ones can adapt, and which ones should be fired (and there will be no surprise when a firing takes place).

How to drive improvement projects

The tendency is often to hire some support staff — maybe a project manager — to drive continuous improvement.
But using the current managers and supervisors can be much more effective:
  • The GM should set priorities for each of them: they should have a few improvement projects under way, in addition to dealing with their day-to-day jobs.
  • Every day, the GM can walk around, observe problems, and explain his view to the supervisors & managers of that area.
  • Every week, he can have a short review of the progress of the projects. A lot of pressure might be necessary!
  • As effective action plans get implemented, managers and supervisors will have less fires to put out… and more time to devote to improvement projects!
Now, what if the GM doesn’t have the capability or the time to drive these projects? Good manufacturing consultants can help. It would generally take this form:
  • A senior consultant helps set the priorities;
  • More junior consultants come in — maybe once a week — to make status updates and to provide engineering support.
Again, the consultants don’t replace the managers and supervisors. They set priorities for them, they give “homework to do”, and they come back to check what was done.
Unfortunately, a project manager seldom has the experience to set good priorities, and even more seldom has the authority to push managers hard when they are not delivering.
If some readers have related experiences, it would be great to read about them!
Article Source: qualityinspection

optical inspection

Sunchine Inspection, a professional one-stop international inspection provider, focus on providing more flexible and humanized inspection serviceto clients from all over the world.
Sunchine Inspection, Thinking for you and doing for you!
China Office
Room 2203, 22/F, Building 03, Zhongtai
International Plaza, 311, Middle Jiangdong
Road, 210019 - Nanjing - R.P.China
Tel: 0086-25-6809 3658
Fax: 0086-25- 8609 3678
Contact: Mr. Francois SHI
Managing Director in China Office
Mob: 0086-18951633559
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BY RENAUD ANJORAN
Here are some interesting or useful articles that I found recently.
Checking Chinese suppliers or partners carefully before starting a business relationship is extremely important.
Yet China is making it pretty clear that background checks on companies or individuals (without their consent) are not welcome. They are, in many cases, illegal!
Another interesting article from the New York Times, about the difficulty of auditors to find the real in factories.
The inspections are often so superficial that they omit the most fundamental workplace safeguards like fire escapes. And even when inspectors are tough, factory managers find ways to trick them and hide serious violations, like child labor or locked exit doors. Dangerous conditions cited in the audits frequently take months to correct, often with little enforcement or follow-through to guarantee compliance.
And what is the root cause? First, the type of audits:
Dara O’Rourke, a global supply chain expert at the University of California, Berkeley, said little had improved in 20 years of factory monitoring, especially with increased use of the cheaper “check the box” inspections at thousands of factories.
And second, the bad habit of subcontracting the work:
Unauthorized subcontracting, or farming work out, to an unapproved factory (as was the case for the Quaker Pet Group order in China), is very common.
So what is the solution, according to experts?
You can never visit facilities often enough to make sure they stay compliant — you’ll never have enough inspectors to do that. What really keeps factories compliant is when workers have a voice and they can speak out when something isn’t right.
Andrew Reich doesn’t seem to agree with the above article.
Retailers, brands and importers are more concerned with CYA (covering their asses) then in making real improvements and protecting workers. This is the ROOT of the problem, and we all know if your root is rotten you ain’t going to grow a very nice tree.
He goes on to describe the perverse incentives that social compliance audits have created in the supply chain.
Callum Makkai gives two GREAT tips to improve the supplier verification process:
  • If you need to pay for the initial sample charge, insist to wire money on their company bank account. If they can’t give you that information, they are probably not a serious supplier.
  • If you need to pay the courier fee for sending the samples, don’t just give your account number to the supplier — instead, ask your courier to pick the samples up. This way, you know the supplier’s address, and you can compare it to the address on the business registration.
Liz Long gives small buyers a few tips on how to organize their China sourcing activity.
Here are a few of her suggestions:
  • Keep all contacts in Excel, with comments etc.;
  • Set up the quoting process so that you compare apples to apples;
  • Using a CRM software to keep track of all interactions with suppliers.
Etienne Charlier gives us three tips on how to request quotations from Chinese suppliers, based on actual examples.
Stephen Ashcroft, a “purchasing and proposals coach”, came up with a list of behaviors observed in suppliers who tried to take advantage of the buyer.
Here are a few good ones:
  • Shift responsibility to sub-contractors to avoid accountability.
  • Blame pressure put on price by the buyer at the time of contract for performance shortfalls, and then try to renegotiate the price.
  • Escalate minor difficulties to prevent them being raised in the future.
  • Exaggerate costs of variations and changes to enhance profit.
Article Source: qualityinspection

pipe inspection

Sunchine Inspection, a professional one-stop international inspection provider, focus on providing more flexible and humanized inspection serviceto clients from all over the world.
Sunchine Inspection, Thinking for you and doing for you!
China Office
Room 2203, 22/F, Building 03, Zhongtai
International Plaza, 311, Middle Jiangdong
Road, 210019 - Nanjing - R.P.China
Tel: 0086-25-6809 3658
Fax: 0086-25- 8609 3678
Contact: Mr. Francois SHI
Managing Director in China Office
Mob: 0086-18951633559
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BY RENAUD ANJORAN
On Tuesday morning (in 2 days), the Sourcing Forum of the European Chamber of Commerce in China will hold this seminar in Shenzhen:
How we hire, train, and evaluate our internal QC inspectors:
Experience sharing in inspectors management.
Two speakers, from local buying offices, will share their experiences.
After that, I will be moderating a panel discussion with these 2 speakers, and with Hubert from AKA Outspring (who trains inspectors).
We will focus on these general topics:
  • What profiles we try to hire as internal inspectors;
  • How we train our internal inspectors;
  • How we manage our internal inspectors, and what documents guide them in their work;
  • How we evaluate and reward our internal inspectors, to keep them in the long run;
  • What type of problems we have had with internal inspectors, and what we do to avoid them.
And we will also try to go more in depth:
  • Do your inspectors only do inspections? How to manage seasonal productions?
  • Do you have a QC department, totally separate from the merchandisers/purchasers?
  • Do you send merchandisers/purchasers in inspection from time to time? Regularly? Never?
  • Do your inspectors give advice to the factory on the way to correct quality problems? How does this work?
  • Where do problems come from? Negligence and laziness? Repeated contact with the same suppliers? Insufficient training? Loose guidelines and imprecise checklist?
I hope to see you there.
Article Source: qualityinspection