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Posted on Sunday, May 21, 2006

Manufacturers go 'lean' to become more efficient

By streamlining their operations, some companies see costs drop and output rise.
May 16, 2006

Despite sales of almost $100 million a year, Torrance manufacturer Pelican Products Inc. ran its plant like a low-cost start-up: Picnic table workstations lined the factory floor. Workers handed parts back and forth. To clear room for work, employees loaded pallets of inventory into the parking lot each morning.

"We were founded in a garage and we still did things with a garage-type mentality, only 26 years later it was a much bigger garage," said John Padian, chief operating officer at the maker of waterproof plastic cases and high-tech flashlights.

Pelican overhauled its production line four years ago, implementing "lean manufacturing" principles. Daily working capital requirements plummeted 70%. Productivity soared. Annual sales hit $105 million in fiscal 2005.

Professional audio gear maker Anchor Audio Inc., another decades-old Torrance garage start-up, recently made a similar move. Improved efficiency enabled the company to trim its workforce by more than half, increase production volume by 40% and free up money to invest in product development, owner David Jacobs said.

Manufacturers that hope to thrive in California's high-cost, heavily regulated business environment can learn from Anchor and Pelican. Both companies look to trim fat from every corner of their operations, allowing them to invest in innovation.

"To survive today you have to move faster because there is always somebody out there trying to figure out how to make your product better, faster or cheaper," said David Braunstein, chief executive of Torrance-based California Manufacturing Technology Consulting, a not-for-profit organization whose clients include Anchor and Pelican.

Manufacturing is a vital piece of the state's economic health. Factory jobs have traditionally been the ticket to the middle class for many workers. Each manufacturing job represents three to five additional jobs in the local economy, the consulting organization said.

But the sector is struggling, Braunstein said. Although Southern California would still be the nation's largest manufacturing state based on the number of manufacturing jobs here, according to the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corp., the numbers have declined sharply. Los Angeles County has lost 410,800 manufacturing jobs in the last 15 years.

Small and medium-sized manufacturers such as Anchor and Pelican can have an especially tough time dealing with rising costs and overseas competition. They don't typically have the resources of larger companies, including staff experts such as manufacturing engineers.

That's one reason the productivity gap between small and large manufacturers has increased, Braunstein said.

Teaching the principles of lean manufacturing, which moves a product rapidly through a plant from start to finish to reduce excess inventory of goods and raw materials, is one of the key programs of California Manufacturing Technology, one of 52 federally subsidized manufacturing resource centers.

"Probably a quarter or less of the manufacturers in Southern California use it, so there is potential for a lot more improvement," Braunstein said. He estimates the average return on investment in the process is two to four times its cost over the first couple of years.

Privately held Pelican had been cushioned against the cost of its inefficient operations for years, relying on a stream of new products and its high-end niche to drive sales and protect earnings.

Even growing pressure from international competitors and the expense of doing business in California was not strong enough to force the company to cut costs by sending its local manufacturing jobs to cheaper markets overseas.

" 'Made in the USA' is one of our biggest selling points" and is appreciated by customers including police departments, firefighters and the U.S. military, Padian said.

Maintaining that designation, though, has become increasingly expensive as the rising costs of labor, healthcare, real estate and energy squeeze cash flows.

"It became pretty clear to us that we would have to become more sophisticated on the manufacturing side," he said.

Pelican's lean manufacturing initiative enabled the company to make more products with fewer workers. One example: It increased output by 50% on its line of popular Sabrelight flashlights while trimming the number of workers needed to build the items by 40%.

Pelican has avoided layoffs by shifting the extra workers to new products.

"New products have probably accounted for 15% of our annual 20% growth in sales," said David Parker, the company's founder. The 69-year-old chief executive recently sold the business for $192.5 million to Behrman Capital of San Francisco, a private equity firm.

 
 
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