Dates Oct 16, 2008 - Oct 17, 2008 Feb 19, 2009 - Feb 20, 2009 Jun 25, 2009 - Jun 26, 2009 Sep 21, 2009 - Sep 22, 2009
Cost (2008):
$2,495.00
Cost (2009):
$2,495.00
Accelerating Cost Reductions for the Leaner Manufacturing Enterprise enables finance and operations executives to accelerate sustainable cost reductions without creating systemic problems elsewhere in their companies.
Participants of this 2-day executive course learn how to lower the total cost of manufacturing, create working capital, save money by partnering with suppliers, reduce the asset-drain of work-in-progress, reduce procurement costs, and improve factory utilization. Attend this highly-interactive course to gain practical ideas for immediate implementation in your organization.
Benefits
Contents
Who Should Attend
Instructor
Hours & Credits
Lower costs by learning how to identify and reduce waste in your company
Improve results with new methods for allocating burden and overhead
Create product cost reductions and improve margins by increasing effectiveness of all workers
Save money with a new understanding of how to partner with suppliers
Learn new ways to access working capital to grow your business
Identify and reduce the asset drain of work-in-progress
Positively impact the bottom line by learning how to improve factory utilization
Prerequisites for Accelerating Cost Reductions
How asset, cash, quality, and customer service management relate to cost management
Economic drivers that impact gross margins
How cost management can fund your future
Understanding the Real Cost of Your Products
Eight elements of financial costing
Three elements of competitive costing
Three elements of managerial costing
Accelerating Production Cost Reductions
Improving production effectiveness and cycle time
Factory utilization and production line costs
Flow production and Just-in-Time (JIT) methods
Eliminating non-moving Work-in-Process (WIP)
Eliminating defects and scrap and rework costs
Using value-engineering tools to identify and prioritize waste
Scheduling to reduce underutilization costs
Choosing on-shore or off-shore production sources
Accelerating Material Acquisition Cost Reductions
Reducing total material acquisition costs
Reducing material content and real material cost
Replacing procurement transaction costs with annualized agreements
Drivers of supplier’s costs
Measuring your supplier’s cost reduction curve
Moving quality’s role to your supplier’s factory
How to convert your purchasing function to a true supply chain organization
Concurrent Workshops 1 and 2: Reducing production and material acquisition costs
Accelerating Inventory Reduction and Capital Creation
Why inventory is NOT an asset
Dramatically reducing inventory...quickly
Setting safety stock levels, order points, and lot sizes
Reducing WIP inventory investment
The relationship of lead-time to inventory investment
Accelerating Product Development Cost Reductions
Reducing the design cycle and improving time-tomarket
Determining to create designs internally or externally
How design costs get into product line P&Ls
Measuring performance of knowledge workers
Concurrent Workshops 3 and 4: Reducing inventory levels and product development costs
Accelerating Logistics Cost Reductions
Why store inventory
Identifying cost trade-offs in logistics
Using time-to-shelf as a competitive weapon
Price and cost relationships in logistics
Finished goods inventory, customer service, and shareholder value
Reducing Information Management and Transaction Processing Costs
Getting your information management system to pay off
Information system cost drivers
Improving information systems performance and effectiveness
Outsourcing opportunities in IS
Assuring information integrity
Concurrent Workshops 5 and 6: Reducing logistics and information management costs
Eliminating Non-Value Activities From Administrative Functions
Relationship of administrative activities to events to where costs ultimately manifest
Source of administrative waste
Difference between burden and overhead costs
Ways to attack obvious and systemic waste
Reducing the TOTAL Cost of People
How to stop the growth of unnecessary support personnel
Identifying systemic waste in support functions
Ten ideas for reducing the cost of employees
Rethinking metrics in order to shape a ‘variance curious’ culture
Concurrent Workshops 7 and 8: Reducing administrative and people costs
Needed Changes to Cost Accounting Processes
Nine ‘litmus test’ questions for cost accountants
Three requirements of a truly informative cost accounting system
Accounting for time and waste
Allocating overhead to individual products properly
Implementing value-based cost accounting in a manufacturing environment
Cost accounting systems that change behaviors
Why net contribution management is more important than gross margin management
Using new P&L formats and value engineering for real cost reduction
Mounting an Accelerated Cost Reduction Initiative
Identifying serious cost drivers in your company
Distinguishing controllable and control resistant cost drivers
The link between cost drivers and shareholder value
Cost reduction responsibilities
Designing an Ongoing Cost Reduction Process
Overcoming technical, organizational, and cultural barriers during implementation
Designing a successful cost reduction initiative
Documenting and justifying cost reduction initiatives
Cost management critical success factors
Rewarding for significant cost reduction initiatives
Identifying what participants can do when they return to their companies
Finance and accounting directors, operations and general management interested in reducing costs at their companies.
Alan G. Dunn Oct 16, 2008 - Oct 17, 2008
Feb 19, 2009 - Feb 20, 2009
Jun 25, 2009 - Jun 26, 2009
Sep 21, 2009 - Sep 22, 2009
Alan G. Dunn
Alan G. Dunn is president of GDI and chairman of GDI's business investment firm. He specializes in global manufacturing management, cost management, and business finance. Previously, Mr. Dunn was a partner at Coopers & Lybrand and a vice president at Gemini Consulting.
Mr. Dunn has worked with: AlliedSignal, American Cyanamid, Amgen, AT&T, Ballard Power Systems, Baxter, Boeing, General Instrument, General Motors, Intel, Johnson & Johnson, Lockheed Martin, Loral, Monier Lifetiles, Phelps Dodge, Sony Corporation, Sybron Dental Specialties, Technicolor, Toshiba Corporation, United Technologies, U.S. Borax, the U.S. Department of Energy, and Warner Bros.
Mr. Dunn is an international educator, speaker, and author on performance measurement, manufacturing systems, cost management, value engineering, business process reengineering, information systems management, business transformation, corporate governance, and business finance. He has addressed the American Production and Inventory Control Society (APICS), the Council of Logistics Management (CLM), the Product Development Management Association (PDMA), the Society of Manufacturing Engineers (SME), the National Association of Accountants (NAA), and the Young Presidents’ Organization (YPO). Mr. Dunn teaches the Caltech Industrial Relations Center course, Drive Business Performance Through New Metrics & Incentives and the manufacturing cost strategies course, Accelerating Cost Reductions.
His articles have been published in the Los Angeles Times, Journal of Manufacturing Systems, Material Handling Engineering, Automation, Production and Inventory Review, Managing Automation, Warehouse Cost Digest, Transformation Magazine, and Industrial Engineering Management.
Mr. Dunn has served on the boards of directors of both public and privately held international companies in the aerospace, asphalt production, automotive, and nutriceutical sectors. He is currently an active member in the National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD). The NACD chose Mr. Dunn to receive their 2007 Private Company Director of the Year Award. This award is given to a director who exemplifies the knowledge, leadership, and excellence in corporate governance that the NACD strives to promote through education, publications, and public service.
Participants are invited to attend a dinner the first evening of the course, providing an oppportunity to share information and ideas with the instructors and other participants.
The California Institute of Technology Industrial Relations Center is registered with the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA)
as a sponsor of continuing professional education on the National Registry of CPE Sponsors. State boards of accountancy have final authority on the acceptance of individual courses for CPE credit. Complaints regarding registered sponsors may be addressed to the National Registry of CPE Sponsors, 150 Fourth Avenue North, Suite 700, Nashville, TN, 37219-2417. Web site: www.nasba.org.
Comments from Past Participants
“This is a great program – the best on this topic. The content is logical, direct and applicable. Alan Dunn provides many good takeaways.”
Christopher Chase Controller Alcoa CSI
"Attending this course with other controllers from my company was helpful. We gained common knowledge and language that will help us implement ABC costing, inventory management and procurement improvements. Alan Dunn’s presentation style was enthusiastic, and plenty of real life experiences made the course interesting.” Anthony Wade Mears Financial Controller - Oswego Works Novelis