
ACROSSTHEBENCH
A Shirt of a Different Color
In today’s tool shop facilities it is apparent that a communication/teamwork chasm still exists, which must be addressed in order to improve operations.
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LEARNMORE
Tools of the Trade
You wouldn’t think of not giving your shop workers the tools of the trade. Are you giving the people in accounting, sales, shipping, etc. the tools of their trade? The Entitlement Culture I loved my job. We had 15 full-time unionized mold repair technicians and more than 600 active high cavitation molds shuttling in and out of 55 presses at a MPP (mold pull pace) hovering around five to eight per day. This was more than enough work to keep us blue-shirts flush with all the overtime hours that we could handle. We worked on a mold as long as we wanted (called milking) and management pretty much stayed out of the shop for fear of being asked one of the following questions: “What should I do now, boss?” or “Do you know a better way?” Covert Maintenance Knowing that no one in the plant had a clue as to what we should or should not be doing any time of the day or stage of repair, a mold repair tech could—without raising much suspicion—visit just about every department in the plant. Trips to molding (checking on my mold), assembly (making sure the parts aren’t jamming the feed track), front office (hey, my badge just quit working), and the warehouse (I’m looking for some sample parts) when things got boring in the toolroom were a common occurrence. The trick was to keep a rag in your hands and don’t stand in one place too long. Old habits die hard when it comes to maintenance cultures and as I continue to hear from toolmakers, repair technicians and the management personnel who really want to improve operations, it is apparent that a communication/teamwork chasm still exists in many companies, so a little blue-shirt insight here is appropriate. Color-Blind Could Be a Good Thing And although not my particular style, it makes sense that the Japanese mandate that everyone in the plant wear the same type of uniform. With this dress code, one needs to earn the bonehead moniker…instead of it being automatically associated with the color of your shirt. Maintenance personalities remain basi-cally unchanged over the years with one glaring difference—everyone feels the enormous pressure of offshore competition. The added anxiety of watching jobs disap-pear overnight seems to exacerbate already delicate relationships between not only salary and hourly, but interdepartmental issues between toolroom and processing. It seems we get so wrapped up with our seat on the bus that we forget where the bus is going and what it needs to get there. It takes a sharp management group that knows where, when and how to hire, motivate, train, discipline and direct a team of experienced, skilled, tenured, opinionated, moody, proud and competitive veteran tradesmen, who make their living the old-fashioned way: combining tools and a knowledge of the practical applications of their specific trade. And now, with the above group of workers heading into their golden years, you also need to include a younger, energetic, better educated, inexperienced, coddled and undisciplined worker into your maintenance metrics. Trading Spaces and Shirts So it seemed like a smart idea to “good-ole-boy” my way around the new shop and attempt to get things done through the buddy system. But all that got me was a couple of buddies, no real improvement or accomplishments. So once I began to move some serious cheese around through implementation of a new documentation system, my popularity took a severe hit, for even my two new buddies were not comfortable being accountable for work they performed. Also discomforting was recognizing that I had come full circle, and that many of our old shop traits were now issues that I had to deal with—kind of like watching yourself turn into your parents. The next seven years was spent getting used to a new shirt while working with a group of repair techs and putting into practice a few unwritten “codes of conduct” that I believe are worth sharing. Codes of Conduct For Salary Folks Don’t:
For Hourly Folks Don’t:
Everyone brings something to the table. Regardless of what color shirt is worn, that person adds value to the company and it is our job as team players to understand the different roles and to mesh smoothly and effectively to ensure long-term company survival. |
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