Look down the length of Mastip’s factory in Avondale in Auckland and you can see two separate businesses. On one side a jobbing shop mills steel into manifolds, on the other a production line makes nozzles. The company needs to draw on as many as 5,000 components at a time. But demand fluctuates so wildly that the monthly requirement for any one item can vary from just two to 500. Most manifolds are purpose-built, and only about 60% of nozzles use standard sizing. Planning, Mr Dawes says, “is the most important thing for us, because if you get it wrong you get it horribly wrong, and if you get it right you can make real gains.”
Previously, finished manifolds would lie waiting to be shipped because their nozzles hadn’t been made. Overcoming this meant much finer planning, so when they sought a better ERP system, Abel was the only system able to track and record every step of all their processes.
From the moment an order is signed, Abel now shows them instantly the availability and location of all components. (“Abel tells us where the bits are.”) To minimise retooling, Abel groups “families” of jobs in sequence, and also ranks components by urgency so jobs can be reprioritised to meet orders. Bringing planning and scheduling together for what is effectively Just in Time production, Abel also integrates all processes into the company’s financials. Says Mr Dawes, “We could not have grown as we have without an ERP system like Abel.”
They also like the way that Abel allows them to switch on new functionality without significant upgrades and the associated cost. The Abel team continue to identify areas where the company can make gains. When helping them resolve an unexpected urgent internal planning issue, Chris Renfree, Mastip’s General Manager, says Abel went well beyond the call of duty.
“They dropped everything and had people here straight away to help us find an answer. There was no back and forwards, or delay. It was a level of service that is much more than I have seen from any other software company. The job was just done.” This is, of course, what speed and adaptability are all about.