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I

f your manufacturing operation isn’t on the cloud, chances are pretty good that it may be in the future. Cloud computing is taking off with many manufac-turing operations opting to outsource the enterprise resource planning (ERP) software that manages their business and factory functions.

Today’s ERP software developers are starting to embrace cloud computing, where most IT functions are based off-site at either public or private cloud operations in data centers on the Internet, often at substantial cost savings ERP providers also are moving toward wider use of the Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) model, where customers essentially rent software instead of buying and installing it in a more typical “on-premises” scenario.

GR Spring & Stamping (Grand Rapids, MI) uses Plex Online ERP to help optimize metalforming production processes.

ERP Software

Takes Flight

Latest advances in cloud computing and

SaaS-based ERP software help optimize

manufacturing operations

Patrick Waurzyniak

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A majority of manufacturers have considered, evaluated or already implemented cloud-based systems, according to mar-ket researcher IDC (Framingham, MA). In its “Cloud

Comput-ing in ManufacturComput-ing” IDC ManufacturComput-ing Insights report, IDC found that 44.3% of manufacturing companies either have implemented or were evaluating cloud deployments, while 22% already have installed cloud-based systems.

Other research cautions companies considering cloud computing, including Gartner Inc. (Stamford, CT), which last month released its report, “Five Cloud Computing Trends That Will Affect Your Cloud Strategy Through 2015,” that contends continual monitoring and updating of cloud strategies is es-sential to success. The report is available on Gartner’s website at http://www.gartner.com/resId=1920517.

“Cloud computing is a major technology trend that has permeated the market over the last two years. It sets the stage for a new approach to IT that enables individuals and businesses to choose how they’ll acquire or deliver IT services, with reduced emphasis on the constraints of traditional software and hardware licensing models,” says David Cearley, vice president and Gartner Fellow. “Cloud computing has a significant potential impact on every aspect of IT and how users access applications, information and business services.”

Moving Manufacturing to the Cloud

ERP software developer Plex Systems Inc. (Auburn Hills, MI) has offered cloud-based systems exclusively for the last 11 years, notes Patrick Fetterman, Plex Systems vice president, marketing. The 17-year-old company specializes in offering Plex Online, a SaaS/cloud-based ERP system, to small to mid-sized manufacturers in a wide range of indus-tries including automotive, aerospace/defense builders, food and beverage, medical device manufacturers and metal-forming operations.

“The term ‘in the cloud’ means a lot of different things to different people,” notes Fetterman. “The first, and the easiest, step into cloud computing is what we call IAAS, or Infrastructure-as-a-Service. In this case, you still own the applications, but the hardware infrastructure is owned by somebody else.”

Other models include Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS), Fet-terman notes, that also offers users an application develop-ment environdevelop-ment. “The third level and the one in where my company’s involved is Software-as-a-Service [SaaS]. This means we own everything up into the data in those accounts,” Fetterman says. “We own the software, and our customers simply access the software, they pay for access to it. They

Manufacturing Software

The cloud-based Plex Online ERP offers shop managers a manufacturing-centric view of plant-floor operations.

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own their own data, they own control of the user accounts, etc., and everything else is controlled by the software as a service provider. So those are three different variations on the cloud that we hear about.”

Several key technology and market forces coalesced to create an environment conducive for cloud computing, observes Fetterman. These factors include Moore’s Law, the phenomenon of computing power doubling every 18 months; virtualization, the ability to build large network infrastructures that become virtual servers on the same hardware; and the rise of data centers that have become attractive to companies looking to cut costs by outsourcing IT operations.

“All those things have put in place the structure to deliver cloud services,” Fetterman says, “and it just happened to take place at the time there were a bunch of market forces pushing it all in the same direction. We all know that IT bud-gets have been cut dramatically and resources have been cut dramatically—no IT department is the same size it was even three or four years ago.”

The Plex Online system originally evolved from a manufacturing-execution system (MES) core that tracked everything starting at the loading dock or the shop floor, Fetterman notes. “It was all based on a pretty simple phi-losophy, which is you track everything at its point and time of origin, on the factory floor, on the loading dock, wherever it’s taking place,” he recalls. “Tracking it and controlling it at the point and time of origin, tracking all that data on the fac-tory floor, the founder believed that that’s about 90% of the value that’s created within manufacturing is those transac-tions. Once you have that data, you can measure where things go right, where they go wrong, and you can introduce improvement processes.”

“If our system is down, factories close.”

Today, Plex Online includes triple-redundant systems, including a hot-standby-fail data center in Asheville, NC, to deal with any potential network outages, Fetterman says. “Most of our customers, because it is a mission-critical sys-tem to them—our syssys-tem goes down, they stop manufactur-ing in the plants—will engineer a second redundant Internet connection between us and their factories. That kind of activity has gotten so inexpensive, you can put in a T1 for a few hundred dollars a month.

“If our system is down, factories close. Even in the power outage that hit the East Coast in 2003, our data center was up and running, and if our customers had power, they could get access to the Internet and use the system.”

While data security still is a concern to many customers, Fetterman says most are satisfied after they view the scope of Plex’s data center operation at its Auburn Hills headquarters, where it maintains leased hardware that operates Plex Online for ERP customers. “Our biggest servers have 32 quad-core processors,” Fetterman says, “and we’re up to about 44–45 TB of data that we’re storing and something like 25 or 30 mil-lion SQL transactions on a daily basis.

“There are certainly some circumstances, where for gov-ernment-regulated privacy issues, you can only do it on-prem-ises or in your own private data center,” he adds. “But we have people that are building power systems for an advanced defense fighter, and for people who are building the batteries for the space shuttle still in operation. We have people using our system in DoD and government-related manufacturing.”

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Manufacturing-Centric ERP

Demand for cloud-based systems is growing, concurs Chad Meyer, director of product marketing, of Epicor Software Corp. (Dublin, CA), a developer of ERP systems using the SaaS model. Just a few years ago, people dismissed the cloud, he notes. “Now, it’s a constant flow of prospects asking, ‘Do you have cloud-based ERP?’ I like to call it SaaS/ERP. At the highest level, there are general concerns about security of data. In manufacturing, it’s even tougher. There are not a lot of options.”

Epicor’s software is positioned similarly to Plex’s, he adds, and is focused on factory work-flow. “The core of our manufacturing is built from the shop-floor costing area, then it moves into financials,” Meyer says. The software includes a manufacturing execution systems (MES) module that is tightly integrated with other modules for

Manufacturing Software

With Global Shop Solutions’ One-System ERP software, users can select from many modules offered for managing and tracking the status of manufacturing operations on the shop floor.

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small installations to companies with about $50 million in annual sales.

Epicor, acquired in 2011 by Apax Partners, last month an-nounced it had acquired Internet AutoParts (IAP), a provider of business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce software solutions for automotive replacement parts distributors, jobbers and vehicle repair businesses. IAP-managed and hosted eStores are integrated with Epicor’s PartExpert database that contains more than 8000 manufacturer product lines.

Installing Manufacturing Best Practices

Serving discrete manufacturing operations, Global Shop Solutions’ (The Woodlands, TX) One-System ERP Solutions offers global forecasting and shop management capabili-ties for small to larger manufacturers in the automotive,

says Dusty Alexander, Global Shop Solutions president. “Next, get rid of all their manual spreadsheets. It’s bad in the US, but it’s worse outside the US. People want American technology. Last is to go paperless in the office and the shop.”

Since the BP oil spill, manufacturers have placed an increased emphasis on scanning material certification data for the automotive and oil industries. “Now you’ve got to track everything with raw material certifications,” Alexander says.

“When you go to ship your parts, it eliminates a lot of pa-perwork,” adds Mike Melzer, Global Shop’s VP of operations. “Our software lets you do this electronically on the network. With paper, the accuracy’s not 100%.” Barcode scanners en-able workers to scan in the data quickly and accurately.

Global Shop Solutions’ customers mostly are using the company’s ERP with the on-premises model instead of relying

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Manufacturing Software

F

ounded in 1976 to serve the growing demand for precision aero-space components, Mac Machine currently provides the national defense, commercial aircraft, and medical diagnostics and implant industries with a variety of precision parts, assemblies and weldments, all designed and produced at its 20,000 ft2 facility in Baltimore, MD.

A leader in precision manufacturing technology, Mac Machine com-bines state-of-the-art five-axis machines, toolholding systems, and the latest CAM verification software with traditional machinery to develop and produce highly sophisticated parts and assemblies for companies like Honeywell, Northrop Grumman, Sandia National Laboratories, and Zimmer Medical. ISO 9001-2000 compliant, Mac Machine also complies with standards AS-9100 and Rev C. NAD CAP Certification #115110-D.

In 2009, the shop hired Alvin Moore as its Global Shop Solutions ERP administrator with the mission to coach employees in improving their skills while ensuring the company reaped the full benefits of using a fully integrated ERP system. Since then, Mac Machine has implemented a number of changes in how the company uses the software that have resulted in significant time and cost savings.

For example, Honeywell purchases large quantities of parts from Mac Machine on a regular basis, sending a daily report consisting of more than 3500 lines identifying each individual order and whether the pur-chase orders are planned or confirmed. Previously, Mac Machine had two workers spending upwards of 30 hours a week printing out spreadsheets and trying to keep track of everything on the report. With Global Shop’s Forecasting and Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) module, it now takes one person about three hours per week.

“Through Forecasting and EDI, Global Shop imports the data from Honeywell,” explains Moore. “I run the report once a week on Monday night. On Tuesday, we run the Work Order Action Required report. The software tells us everything we need to do without spending 30 hours on manual labor.

“None of the information has changed; what’s changed is how we’re using it in Global Shop. As a result, I spend about three hours analyzing the EDI report. The two people who used to manually track the report now spend their time on other activities and nobody has to touch anything.”

The system also has enabled Mac Machine to go paperless on the shop floor. Previously, an engineer would create a work order and give it to

a scheduler to review. Now, all work orders are created and delivered electronically through the Global Shop system.

To facilitate this process, Mac Machine installed five Graphical User Interface (GUI) stations on the shop floor. In addition to facilitating the flow of work orders, the GUI stations also serve as the primary focal point for collecting work data. Rather than using manual time cards to track their time, operators now electronically log on to jobs through the GUI screens. And instead of jotting down comments or notes on paper work orders, they enter all in-formation into the system at the GUI stations. “In addition to eliminating lost work orders and speeding up workflow,” Moore says, “going paperless also eliminated work processes that were reducing our productivity.”

The system’s Advanced Production Scheduling (APS) module also is a major time saver, Moore notes. “We constantly run parts that are completely different in shape, size, and complexity from the job that came before it,” he says. “The ability to schedule all these diverse jobs through Global Shop is a huge benefit. It’s much faster and more efficient than manual scheduling. Plus, Global Shop’s schedule modifier makes it easy to schedule multi-pallet machines, which we frequently run. What I really like about APS is its flexibility, which allows us to schedule in many different ways. When a customer calls in with a last minute change, APS handles it with ease.”

Integrated ERP Helps Streamline Shop

The Global Shop Advanced Production Scheduling (APS) module saved Mac Machine time in machining parts (inset) for aerospace and other industries.

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on-premises.”

The company’s most popular ERP software modules are scheduling, data collection on the shop floor, and more lately document collection for certification, he adds. “EDI [Electronic Data Interchange] is definitely picking up,” Alexander notes. “What it does is basically both systems are connected through a third party, through a trusted link. A customer like John Deere will pay off with a shipment, send an EDI ASN, Advanced Shipment Notice, and instead of me having a guy send P.O.s once a week or once a day, they’ll pull their EDI. If you ship 25 things a day to somebody, it eliminates a person on both sides—and the savings are huge.”

Gesture-Based Systems Coming

With its new Dynamics AX ERP system introduced last year, Microsoft Corp. (Redmond, WA) has incorporated new touch-screen capabilities into its ERP package which is used in discrete, process and mixed-mode manufactur-ing, according to Rakesh Kumar, global industry product director of manufactur-ing for Microsoft Dynamics ERP.

“Now, it’s a constant flow of

prospects asking, ‘Do you

have cloud-based ERP?’”

“We have introduced touch-screen inputs onto AX 2012, so people can use touchscreens to manage their business with a lot more ease,” Kumar says. “This is also fueling innovations that can go into the shop-floor control. One other area, though somewhat

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com-mands to control equipment on an automotive assembly line or in other factory settings.

When the Windows 8 operating system debuts late this year, such natural user interface (NUI) input capabilities could hold potential for future use with tablet computers used in factory-floor settings, similar to the way Microsoft’s Kinect uses touchless gestures today for videogame systems. “In the years to come, there will be a significant transforma-tion in the way the shop floor is managed from a software perspective, which is very exciting,” Kumar adds. “The key point is that in Microsoft AX 2012 we changed a lot of commands from the traditional viewscreens and mouse to instead use touch.

“EDI is definitely picking up.”

“Essentially the way the data is being entered will change significantly in the time to come,” Kumar adds. “In AX 2012, we have introduced touchscreens, and that is a major, major investment from us to move from the mouse-based to the

touch- and gesture-based capabilities.” Such gesture-based equipment could soon be installed on the shop floor, and independent software developers also are working on gesture-based interfaces to provide touchless commands that could be installed on assembly lines and in other harsh factory or cold-room environments. ME

Manufacturing Software

Epicor Corp. Ph: 949-585-4000 Web site: www.epicor.com

Global Shop Solutions Ph: 800-364-5958

Web site: http://www.globalshopsolutions.com Microsoft Corp.

Ph: 888-477-7989

Web site: www.microsoft.com/dynamics Plex Systems Inc.

Ph: 888-454-7539 Web site: www.plex.com

Want More Information?

Touch-screen interfaces added to Microsoft’s Dynamics AX 2012 ERP system will be supplemented by gesture-based interface capabilities in the future.

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