Understanding Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES)

Similar documents
siemens.com/simatic-it SIMATIC IT for Automotive Suppliers Answers for industry.

Proficy * Plant Applications. GE Intelligent Platforms. Plant Performance Analysis and Execution Software

Brilliant Manufacturing from GE Digital: The Manufacturing Software for Hybrid Industries

SAP Manufacturing Execution (SAP ME) Integrated and Real Time Production Execution. Eric Thieren Solution Sales Focused Business Solutions EMEA

Digitizing Complex Discrete Manufacturing Processes

Standardized Traceability Ratings for Manufacturing

7 Must-Have ERP Features for High Tech/Electronics Manufacturers

MES ERP. Critical Manufacturing, 2015

Case Study GTECH increases efficiencies in gaming machine manufacturing

Deltek Costpoint Manufacturing Solutions

November 12-15, 2018 ARIA Resort Las Vegas, NV Training Topics. Working Draft - Subject to Change

22 ways to get the most out of OEE and lean manufacturing disciplines

Digital manufacturing for traceability aids warranty management and quality assurance.

MANUFACTURING EXECUTION SYSTEM. Global Dom coordinates the whole plant by providing an integrated control and automation system.

Solumina MRO: Maintenance Execution. June 21, 2017

Production management your way

What Goes Where: Determining Most Effective Technologies for Real-Time Operations

Hybrid Manufacturing Methods

Shop Floor Data Collection is Critical to Being a Global Player Get it right using experienced pros to design and implement your system

Oracle Manufacturing Cloud

Subbu Ramakrishnan. Manufacturing Finance with SAP. ERP Financials. Bonn Boston

Wonderware MES/Operations

MMOG/LE Evaluation. Data Collection Process Improvement

2014 Software Global Client Conference

Real-time Visibility. RFID-enabled Applications for Manufacturing. Reference Guide OATSystems

Tech-Clarity Insight: Integrating PLM and MES. Realizing the Digital Factory

Oracle Manufacturing Cloud R13

Must-Have ERP Features for the Automotive Industry

Harley Davidson Walking SAP Tour Guide

Facility Management Feat. RFID

MES functionalities and requirements for 11T dipole line at LMF for studying and optimization of Nb3Sn magnet assembly process metrics

Disk Drive Manufacturers Move Ahead with RFID-Enabled Media Process Line

Integrated Quality Systems

DIGITAL INDUSTRY INNOVATION MAPS INDUSTRIAL MACHINERY & COMPONENTS. Digital Transformation Posters. Digital Industry Innovation Maps

Camstar Semiconductor Suite

Wonderware MES. Operations 4.0. Thommy Djupenström Senior Solution Architect Invensys Operations Management IOM

SUPPLY CHAIN VISIBILITY AND CONTROL SOLUTIONS

Real-time enterprise solutions for discrete manufacturing and consumer goods

Manufacturing operations Part 2: Operations monitoring & MES Information systems in industry ELEC-E8113

What is ERP? Source: Wikipedia

Leverage Data-Driven Manufacturing for Greater Productivity, Efficiency and Profits

Manufacturing and Warehouse Management for Food Processors

MES Software Evaluation / Selection

Leading Automotive Supplier Accelerates Lean Operations with EnterpriseIQ

Sugar factory automation and optimization. Control. Visualize. Optimize.

9 Questions Food and Beverage Manufacturers Need to Ask About Their ERP

SIMATIC IT for Discrete Industry Mechatronics Assembly Line V2.3 SP1

For the Medical Device Industry

IT 470a Six Sigma Chapter X

7 ways to improve your Production Planning using SAP Business One integration

Intelligent Software Solutions by Matthews Australasia

Case Study. Cosma International improves systems through collaboration with Solarsoft. Customer Spotlight.

Section 02. Who Can Benefit From ERP?

Trace, Track and Control: High Production Output at Low Costs

Benefits. + + Consistent quality to recipe specification. + + Increase asset utilization and operational efficiency

Supplier Quality System Survey

UNIT II PRODUCTION PLANNING AND CONTROL AND COMPUTERISED PROCESS PLANNING

EnterpriseIQ Intelligent ERP & MES Software

Get Insight & Get Optimized

MANUFACTURING EXECUTION SYSTEM

ROTEK. IIInnInstI Instrument Corp. ISO 9001 Quality System Manual

Medical Devices. Epicor for. Functionality. Meeting the Challenges for Medical Devices

Think ROI, Not Cost When Evaluating ERP Software

EBITDA Optimization for High Tech Manufacturing

Camstar Electronics Suite

Integrated Manufacturing Operations for CPG & Process

Production Operations Excellence for A&D Tier Suppliers

TRACEABILITY: SOLVING CHALLENGES & ADDING VALUE IN ELECTRONICS MANUFACTURING

Your strategic MES partner. By: Sam Chen

MANUFACTURING EXECUTION SYSTEM

3 October 2017 Page 1 of 5 BellHawk Systems Corporation

MOBILE SUPPLY CHAIN VISION WITH DSI. Bill Hill VP International Sales Operations

UC! Web ASSET TRACKING SOFTWARE. A Better Way to Track Items and Manage Data

Designing the production of tomorrow today. Your path to the Smart FOOD Factory with CSB

AMI AutoAGENT Shop Floor Manager

take control of your assets Secure Cloud-based Asset Management Solutions

NCODE Manufacturing Executions Systems OEE & Downtime Tracking

Advanced Automation and Digitalization for the Automotive Industry

MANUFACTURING ERP SOFTWARE NEEDS ASSESSMENT CHECKLIST BY SHELDON NEEDLE

Smart Manufacturing in the Semiconductor Industry - Realizing the Digital Factory Vision

Guidance for Managing Product Change

RFID in Manufacturing Industry

Synergy Software is Tailored for Your Business

Solution Delivery Services Bring your Real-time SPC Program to Life

Food & Beverage / CPG Industries

SAP Digital Manufacturing Strategy

Filling Margins. Manufacturing execution systems offer new recipes for success in CPG operations.

Langham Creek Machine Works, Inc.

Production Management and Scheduling

Siemens PLM Software. Tecnomatix. Digital manufacturing solutions empowering manufacturers to realize innovation. siemens.

AUTOSIMPLY. Manufacturing Order. Features. About AutoSimply

Manufacturing Operations Management. Software evolution for your manufacturing revolution

Traditional Costing Systems

Maximize yield and throughput Conform to quality standards and ensure food safety Achieve full traceability and raise efficiency

Visual Controls : Applying Visual Management to the Factory

MANUAL QUALITY CONTROL & QUALITY ASSURANCE

Formula Control & Lot Traceability which pays for itself.

Optimizing Performance Bench Scale Service Checklist

Only focused on production itself, not the infrastructure to support the production

Food Processing Software The right product at the right time

Transcription:

Understanding Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES)

What is a Manufacturing Execution System (MES)? AMR Research, a Boston-based industry and market analysis firm, defines a Manufacturing Executing System (MES) as a functional layer of information technology that links business planning and shop floor control systems to deliver to manufacturing an achievable and realistic production plan. To help understand AMR s explanation the term shop floor control system should be defined as: A system for using data from the shop floor to maintain and communicate status information on shop orders (manufacturing orders) and on work centers. Shop floor control can use order control or flow control to monitor material movement through the facility. The major sub-functions of shop floor control are: 1. Assigning priority of each shop order 2. Maintaining work-in-process quantity information 3. Conveying shop order status information to the office 4. Providing actual output data for capacity control purposes 5. Providing quantity by location by shop order for work-in-process inventory and accounting purposes 6. Providing measurement of efficiency, utilization, and productivity of the workforce and machines. The major sub-functions for flow control are based primarily on production rates and feeding work into production to meet these planned rates, then monitoring and controlling production. (APICS Dictionary, 12 th Edition)

It may appear that an MES is a relatively new class of system, although it is has been around for 15+ years awareness of MES continues to grow as the rate of acceptance increases. The adoption of MES has expanded as companies realize MES is used to evaluate and manage production activities using the latest technologies to support traceability, monitoring, and management of shop floor activities. It can be confusing to obtain an exact description of MES in that many designations are perceived to fill the Manufacturing Execution space, such as: Shop floor execution systems, supply chain execution system, manufacturing operations management, assembly management systems, plant floor visibility solution, enterprise production system, and data collection solutions. However, MES is a distinct functional group, not to be confused with systems that only address one or two aspects of a complete MES system. Central to an MES is the execution aspect, as in Manufacturing Execution System versus planning, as in Enterprise Planning. As in all ventures planning has its significance, however planning without execution is ineffectual. An MES is not one single simple application. An effective MES consists of an integrated set of production activity and support applications that have been developed using correctly matched technologies. With so many components creating an MES, implementing an MES in a variety of degrees becomes possible; from uncomplicated WIP tracking to a solution integrated throughout a plant floor collecting data, monitoring,

and managing resources while co-existing with other systems such as Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Product Lifecycle Management (PLM), and Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition (SCADA). The real key to understanding an MES is to be aware that it simply automates the information loop between the shop floor and enterprise information systems. An MES makes up-to-the minute shop floor information available companywide, which allows a swift response to conditions and requirements. Bottom line, MES is the ideal application to collect data needed by any other system in the organization, providing a real-time database for traceability while providing information for continuous improvement in operations. Why Consider a Manufacturing Execution System (MES) Today s intense economic conditions favor manufacturers who can do more with less and do it faster, better and more cost effectively. Manufacturers are experiencing rising material and overhead costs and are looking for ways to implement lean processes and better visibility of the shop floor, including quicker turnarounds which keep inventory low. To assist manufacturers in accomplishing this, an MES offers a foundation of realtime data and details for continuous improvement and decision support. Current economics continue to influence manufacturing toward shorter and smaller production runs with more stress on quality and complex regulatory requirements. An MES offers access to real-time shop floor information to allow quick and timely responses to any challenge that could negatively influence efficiency, quality and regulatory compliance.

There is one certainty, that good data is required to get good information. An MES system supplies that good data by offering uninterrupted visibility into production operations, gaining a complete overall view of the shop floor. Unlike an ERP that measures transactions in terms of days, weeks and months, an MES measures movement on the shop floor in terms of hours, minutes and seconds. With the robust approach an MES offers, manufacturers are able to capture and manage data to make mission critical decisions and react in a timely manner throughout an organization. Functionalities of a Manufacturing Execution System (MES) MES compliments the capabilities of an ERP, helping to leverage an organization s ERP investment. Both systems collectively supply information, which creates more accurate schedules resulting in realistic production plans, shorter cycle times, less WIP and lower inventory. MES also provides the shop floor control and visibility needed to effectively deal with multifaceted traceability requirements. Using real-time good data from automated transactions collected from the shop floor, MES links supplier information, lot numbers, serial numbers, time/date or other records to the appropriate finished goods, back to the work order or demand signal. MES not only provides production people with accurate information so they can schedule precisely, but also offers an electronic network for performance improvement. The following is a list of 11 functionalities of an MES system as described by the Manufacturing Execution Solution Association (MESA) International:

Function 1. Resource Allocation and Status 2. Operations/ Detail Scheduling 3. Dispatching Production Units Description MESA International 11 Detailed MES Functions Manages resources including machines, tools labor skills, materials, other equipment, and other entities such as documents that must be available in order for work to start at the operation. It provides detailed history of resources and insures that equipment is properly set up for processing and provides status real time. The management of these resources includes reservation and dispatching to meet operation scheduling objectives. Provides sequencing based on priorities, attributes, characteristics, and/or recipes associated with specific production units at an operation such as shape of color sequencing or other characteristics which, when scheduled in sequence properly, minimize setup. It is finite and it recognizes alternative and overlapping/ parallel operations in order to calculate in detail exact time or equipment loading and adjust to shift patterns. Manages flow of production units in the form of jobs, orders, batches, lots, and work orders. Dispatch information is presented in sequence in which the work needs to be done and changes in real time as events occur on the factory floor. It has the ability to alter prescribed schedule on the factory floor. Rework and salvage processes are available, as well as the ability to control the amount of work in process at any point with buffer management. 4. Document Control Controls records/forms that must be maintained with the production unit, including work instructions, recipes, drawings, standard operation procedures, part programs, batch records, engineering change notices, shift-to-shift communication, as well as the ability to edit as planned and as built information. It sends instructions down to the operations, including providing data to operators or recipes to device controls. It would also include the control and integrity of environmental, health and safety regulations, and ISO information such as Corrective Action procedures. Storage of historical data. 5. Data Collection/ Acquisition This function provides an interface link to obtain the intra-operational production and parametric data which populate the forms and records which were attached to the production unit. The data may be collected from the factory floor either manually or automatically from equipment in an up-to-the-minute time frame. 6. Labor Management Provides status of personnel in and up-to-the-minute time frame. Includes time and attendance reporting, certification tracking, as well as the ability to track indirect activities such as material preparation or tool room work as a basis for activity based costing. It may interact with resource allocation to determine optimal assignments. 7. Quality Management 8. Process Management 9. Maintenance Management 10. Product Tracking and Genealogy 11. Performance Analysis Provides real time analysis of measurements collected from manufacturing to assure proper product quality control and to identify problems requiring attention. It may recommend action to correct the problem, including correlating the symptom, actions and results to determine the cause. May include SPC/SQC tracking and management of off-line inspection operations and analysis in laboratory information management system (LIMS) could also be included. Monitors production and either automatically corrects or provides decision support to operators for correcting and improving in-process activities. These activities may be intra-operational and focus specifically on machines or equipment being monitored and controlled as well as inter-operational, which is tracking the process from one operation to the next. It may include alarm management to make sure factory person(s) are aware of process changes which are outside acceptable tolerances. It provides interfaces between intelligent equipment and MES possible through Data Collection/Acquisition. Tracks and directs the activities to maintain the equipment and tools to insure their availability for manufacturing and insure scheduling for periodic or preventive maintenance as well as the response (alarms) to immediate problems. It maintains a history of past events or problems to aide in diagnosing problems. Provides the visibility to where work is at all times and its disposition. Status information may include who is working on it; components materials by supplier, lot, serial number, current production conditions, and any alarms, rework, or other exceptions related to the product. The on-line tracking function creates a historical record, as well. This record allows traceability of components and usage of each end product. Provides up-to-the-minute reporting of actual manufacturing operations results along with the comparison to past history and expected business result. Performance results include such measurements as resource utilization, resource availability, product unit cycle time, conformance to schedule and performance to standards. May include SPC/SQL. Draws on information gathered from different functions that measure operating parameters. These results may be prepared as a report or presented online as current evaluation of performance. Source: MESA (Manufacturing Execution Solutions Association) International

Benefits of Implementing a Manufacturing Execution System (MES) Depending on what questions a manufacturer is seeking quick answers to; the benefits of MES are many and varied. An MES is capable of tracking genealogy from the shop floor throughout a product s life cycle and processing the data into information that can be used by management immediately to identify issues and allow real-time adjustments to operations, supplier material resolution and streamline recalls. Some of the key benefits and capabilities an MES provides are to: Effectively deal with complex genealogy and traceability requirements, using automated transactions from shop floor workers and machines to tie lot numbers, serial numbers or other data to the appropriate finished goods back to the work order. Efficiently trim down scrap and waste through real time production reporting and limit the number of bad parts and wasted material. Eliminate equipment downtime and successfully increase uptime by having access to up-to-the-minute scheduling of machines, resources and machine maintenance. Reduce the cost of recalls by using track and trace capabilities to trace back to each incoming lot, subassembly, and part or item used; and after locating the start of a problem track out to the current location of all end products experiencing the problem.

There are many benefits that can be experienced through the implementation of an MES and together all of these benefits allow a manufacturer to realize major productivity improvements, improve customer satisfaction and obtain an overall competitive advantage in the marketplace. About Freedom Technologies Freedom Technologies is a complete identification, tracking, and data management solution provider. Freedom Technologies solutions meet traceability guidelines for the automotive, medical and military industries. Error Proof also extends itself as a robust Manufacturing Execution System (MES) to manage and monitor shop floor operations. Since 1991, companies have been seamlessly integrating Freedom Technologies' Error Proof and ID ADVANTAGE software with their new or existing hardware and systems. By offering software applications designed for monitoring, managing and controlling production line operations, Freedom Technologies ensures the accuracy of the manufacturing and shipping procedures. In conjunction with our applications, Freedom Technologies offers UID/direct part mark readers, vision verification systems, lasers and RFID solutions. For more information, please visit www.freedomcorp.com.