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News Release from: The Manufacturing Institute | Subject: Manufacturing Advisory Service
Edited by the Manufacturingtalk Editorial
Team on 21 February 2006
Increase manufacturing speed and
flexibility
'Diet doctors' at MAS North West have helped UK manufacturers to go 'lean' and 'power up' their productivity by a total of GBP 173million by increasing manufacturing speed and flexibility.
Manufacturing companies seeking to tone up their performance and fight the flab are being offered a proven 'diet' to put them in top shape for 2006 "Forget the GI and Atkins diets, the Lean programme will add muscle to any enterprise," advises Dr Julie Madigan, chief executive of The Manufacturing Institute, which delivers the DTI's Manufacturing Advisory Service (MAS) in the North West
This article was originally published on Manufacturingtalk on 5 Oct 2005 at 8.00am (UK)
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Since 2002 'diet doctors' at MAS North West have helped regional manufacturers to go lean and power up their productivity by a total of GBP 173 million.
Among them, is Liverpool's Brainboxes company, an award winning computer technology firm, which is working with the MAS team to increase manufacturing speed and flexibility - creating nimble production systems that ensure the business responds rapidly to market demand for its cutting edge new products that are exported across the globe.
The company combines excellence in innovation (applying 30% of its expenditure to research and development) with lean manufacturing - to compete successfully against the low cost manufacturing economics of South East Asia.
Further reading
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Almost GBP 200,000 in funding is available to UK's North West manufacturing companies who want their key personnel to benefit from acquiring The Diploma in Manufacturing.
Support for manufacturing enhanced
The Manufacturing Institute, a non-profit making organisation driven by manufacturers for manufacturers, is to deploy Epicor for Service Enterprises software.
According to chairman Eamonn Walsh: "The only way forward for UK manufacturing businesses is to implement the correct lean manufacturing - removing the waste in current systems, streamlining processes and concentrating on creating value that customers will pay for." Such attention to excellence has won Brainboxes many plaudits, including the 2005 European Electronics Industry Manufacturer of the Year Award.
But it is not just manufacturers which can benefit from lean thinking - many service sector organisations, such as the NHS, are pursuing a lean efficiency drive - adopting the techniques first pioneered by Toyota in Japan.
Added Dr Madigan: "It is no accident that Toyota is forecast to become the world's top car maker.
There is not an ounce of fat within the company, which continually strives to eliminate waste and add customer value." She said: "Many local manufacturers have toned up their processes through embracing lean thinking, but fewer have gone all the way like Toyota to extend this good practice throughout the entire business and beyond through their supply chain.
Fewer still apply lean practice to their products, which can typically cut cost by up to 25%." The MAS team, together with its associate partners, can help the UK's Merseyside manufacturing businesses to beat the bulge to create the nimble products and businesses that can take on the best and win.
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