10 ways that ERP makes scheduling great

Published
August 25, 2023 - 08:15am
ERP and scheduling

Scheduling jobs is one of the most important tasks in a manufacturing enterprise. Given the amount of variability involved in scheduling a busy shop floor, it’s also one of the most complex and demanding.

ERP transforms the scheduling process by tracking everything that happens on the shop floor. It then combines the data with information you input through work orders, routers, BOMs, etc. to create the most efficient schedule. ERP helps accomplish the result every manufacturer wants – on-time delivery every time.

In its whitepaper "Scheduling Matters," Global Shop Solutions' Adam Grabowski outlines 10 ways ERP can help make scheduling great: 

1. Know the status of jobs in real-time
One of the biggest advantages of ERP scheduling is the ability to track jobs in real-time. With a few keystrokes, you can easily see the current status of any job, including where it’s been, where it is now, and where it’s going next.

You can also see whether it’s on schedule or lagging behind. Having access to this data helps identify bottlenecks while jobs are in progress to ensure they get completed on time.

2. Know your true capacity for machines, work centers, and personnel
When you can’t determine the true capacity of resources and people, you can only guess.

With ERP scheduling, the system automatically does the scheduling for you, in minutes rather than hours, with maximum efficiency and full capacity utilization.

Planners get a real-time overview of all work centers and available labor hours, allowing them to balance loads across resources by instantly identifying which ones have excess load or capacity. They can easily create work groups and assign alternate work centers for a resource, and can even modify the labor default schedule, including interjecting holiday schedules.

3. Easily move or reroute jobs for better forecasting 
When rerouting jobs, the inability to see how the changes will impact other jobs makes it difficult to adjust your schedule on the fly. It can also lead to accepting customer due dates hoping (rather than knowing) you can make them. 

ERP scheduling makes rerouting jobs simple with short- and long-term “what if” scenario planning. Simply insert a current or new job where it needs to go and the system automatically adjusts the schedule forward, backward, or globally. Seeing how job changes will affect the entire schedule improves forecasting and minimizes hot and past-due jobs.

4. Identify production bottlenecks in real time
Manual scheduling creates bottlenecks when multiple jobs get stacked on top of each other due to limited capacity. 

ERP reduces and in many cases eliminates these bottlenecks by automatically scheduling the right job on the right machine at the right time. It also identifies when and where the workflow will be light or heavy, allowing planners to adjust labor hours and move people around to balance the workloads. 

5. Instantly see how new or “hot” jobs will affect other jobs 
How many times have you pulled an ongoing job out of a machine to respond to a more urgent order, knowing you will lose money on the job? Many companies try to solve this problem by hiring more schedulers, which only adds to the complexity of the scheduling process. With ERP, you can insert a hot job and instantly see how it will impact current and future jobs on the schedule. 

ERP provides this scheduling picture by gathering data on workloads, available capacity, work center, and employee constraints, setup and run times, and more. It then calculates the changes to jobs on the schedule with precision. Planners can finitely or infinitely schedule, balance work center loads, engage in advanced labor scheduling, and immediately see the results. Armed with this information, planners can make decisions to maximize shop floor productivity and job profitability, knowing they can trust the data.

6. Accept customer due date requirements based on factual data 
With manual scheduling, setting due dates often relies on guesswork. ERP tracks what you’re making, how you’re making it, how many you’re making, and work in progress at any given moment. It uses this data to determine exactly when each job will be finished so you can confidently tell customers when they will receive their parts. 

Berlin Gardens, a manufacturer of indoor and outdoor furniture, builds strong customer relationships by providing short lead times and reliable due dates. Scheduling with Global Shop Solutions’ Advanced Planning & Scheduling (APS) module plays a key role in following through on those promises.

7. Salespeople will have confidence when promising due dates
From a sales perspective, one of the real strengths of ERP scheduling is the ability to turn a “no” into a “yes we can” when customers request difficult due dates. It does this by providing complete visibility of data on every job — from work order number to completion due date — in a variety of formats. 

Before accepting a due date, salespeople can quickly determine inventory levels, available work center and labor hours, the current status of jobs in progress, and other variables that impact production. If the customer’s requested due data isn’t available, planners can perform forward and backward scheduling to see if jobs can be moved around to accommodate the date. Either way, the decision is based on reliable data so sales reps can promise a due date with confidence rather than hoping production will get the job done on time.

8. Production managers have more time to manage 
With manual scheduling, production managers often spend inordinate amounts of time trying to fix the schedule. ERP allows them to do the job they were hired to do – respond to and manage events on the shop floor that require their knowledge, expertise, and judgment. 

Suppose a tool breaks and needs to be repaired, or there’s an unexpected bottleneck in a critical phase of a job. ERP scheduling frees up managers’ time to respond to these and other events that require in-the-moment decisions. It enables them to make better decisions and become a more proactive manager of people and resources.

ERP also elevates the managerial role to a more strategic level, enabling managers to make decisions that improve productivity and profitability. 

9. Lower production costs 
The ability to schedule quickly and accurately lays the foundation for a host of shop floor benefits, including lowering the cost of setup, production, shipping, and more. For example, when customers order the same part with different due dates, ERP reduces setup time by scheduling multiple jobs of the same part to run concurrently rather than days or weeks apart. 

The ability to see your true machine and labor capacity allows planners to avoid unnecessary overtime. Knowing exactly how long each step of a job takes reduces indirect labor because machinists know what to work on next and when to expect it.

Personnel engaged in staging and shipping finished goods can track the status of every job in progress and have everything ready to go when the job is complete. Utilizing these and other efficiency improvements, manufacturers can significantly reduce cycle times, making the business more competitive and profitable.

10. Sleep better at night 
The uncertainty that comes with manual scheduling creates tremendous stress. ERP software takes the stress out of scheduling by simplifying and automating the entire process. 

ERP software enables companies to achieve faster cycle times, better on-time delivery rates, reduced administrative overhead, lower labor and materials costs, improved productivity, and more. Companies can manage the numbers in real-time (instead of at the end of the month), leading to timely, informed decisions that enhance the future success of the business. 

More than just a production management tool, ERP acts as an ongoing process improvement platform that empowers the entire organization to become leaner, more efficient, and more profitable. You’ll sleep better knowing your scheduling and your business are in good hands.

Related Glossary Terms

  • centers

    centers

    Cone-shaped pins that support a workpiece by one or two ends during machining. The centers fit into holes drilled in the workpiece ends. Centers that turn with the workpiece are called “live” centers; those that do not are called “dead” centers.

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