DocumentCode :
271620
Title :
Forecasting life-cycle costs of high quality tools
Author :
Hienzsch, Martin ; Schmitt, Renata ; Kühn, Thomas ; Schuh, Gunther
Author_Institution :
Lab. for Machine Tools & Production Eng. (WZL), RWTH Aachen Univ., Aachen, Germany
fYear :
2014
fDate :
12-15 June 2014
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
4
Abstract :
For decades scientists have analyzed globalized sourcing strategies and discussed their impacts on economies and businesses. Companies in the production field, in particular tool-makers in high-wage countries, are struggling to compete with companies from emerging markets. Due to lower costs for labor, energy and resources, tool-manufacturers from BRICS states offer tools at a lower price level. In reference to Porter, adapting a cost leadership strategy will not be sustainable for tool-makers from of high-wage countries. Thus their focus must be on providing higher tool quality and focus on new differentiation or segmentation strategies so as to retain a leading position in the global market. Within the 11th Transnational Collective Research Project Proposals (CORNET) program, the Laboratory for Machine Tools and Production Engineering (WZL) Aachen, Germany and its research partner IFT Vienna, Austria set up the “Total Efficiency Control” (TEC) project to focus on this topic. From the beginning in 2011 the TEC project has been supported by 14 German and Austrian tool manufacturers to enhance relevance. A Resource Consumption Calculation Tool (RCCT) was developed that allows the forecasting of total costs for tools over their entire life-cycle. The main aim is to enhance competiveness for tool manufacturers of high-wage countries by providing transparency regarding costs and quality. In a first step, a generic life-cycle for the tooling industry was defined and the major resource consuming factors were identified. These were subsequently broken down into 132 cost items. In close cooperation with the tool manufacturer 11 quality clusters were developed that define specifications of every tool clearly. Taking the cost items on the one hand and the quality clusters on the other hand allowed for the development of a two dimensional matrix showing elasticity´s of the interdependencies between specifications and costs. The tool manufacturer in- olved with the project provided input to help define the elasticity´s. Based on this matrix the RCCT shows that while higher quality tools have higher initial purchasing costs their costs in the utilization phase are lower due to e.g. less maintenance. Unfortunately the entire life-cycle costs are often not considered in the purchasing processes of the customer. The RCCT enables tool manufacturer to justify the price premium of high quality tools by demonstrating that the resulting lower costs during tool utilization make up more than 50% of the entire costs and therefore lead to a rapid amortization of the initial purchase price.
Keywords :
financial data processing; industrial economics; life cycle costing; machinery production industries; product quality; production engineering computing; Austria; Austrian tool manufacturers; German tool manufacturers; IFT Vienna; RCCT; Resource Consumption Calculation Tool; TEC project; Total Efficiency Control project; globalized markets; high quality tools; high-wage countries; life-cycle cost forecasting; market competitiveness; resource consuming factors; tooling-industry; Elasticity; Industries; Laboratories; Machine tools; Manufacturing; Recycling; Resource consumption; calculation of resource consumption; competiveness of tool manufacturer; life-cycle costs; tool improvements; tool life-cycle;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Technology Management Conference (ITMC), 2014 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ITMC.2014.6918608
Filename :
6918608
Link To Document :
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