Federal investigators have grounded all of Boeing's new 787 Dreamliner jets after reports that the aircraft's
lithium-ion batteries were overheating and catching fire. Various analysts blame their outsourcing
strategies to be the most important flaw behind this debacle. Boeing, an iconic
American company that is a symbol of American manufacturing decided to
outsource its key components, both nationally and internationally for their new aircraft, the Boeing 787, as a way of lowering costs and accelerating
development. The approach was estimated to reduce the aircraft’s development
time from $10 to $6 billion.
Source: www.newyorker.com and bloga350.blogspot.com
However
the end result was the opposite, the project outcome was billions of dollars
over budget and three years behind schedule. Boeing adopted this approach not only to reduce cost but, to improve travel experience for
their customers by using new materials (carbon fiber,
aluminum and titanium) that would allow for increased humidity and pressure to
be maintained in the passenger cabin, offering substantial improvement to the
flying experience. The lightweight composite materials would enable the 787 to
fly nonstop between any pair of cities without layovers. Also, to
improve the value for its immediate customers (Airline companies) by improving
the fuel efficiency and an electrical system using lithium-ion batteries,
resulting in 20 percent less fuel for comparable
flights and cost-per-seat mile 10 percent lower than for any other aircraft.
Once the aircraft was released, it
became the fastest selling plane in aviation history. The stock price exploded
and the C-suite (Corporate suite or important senior executives) received their
bonuses. But the reality has since set in. Boeing 787 was subjected to a lot of
complaints such as braking problems, fuel leak, cracked windshield and
electrical fires, and emergency landing in Japan due to overheating of lithium
ion batteries. Critics have blamed the company’s strategy to offshore its
suppliers, more than 30 percent came from overseas, including the Japanese-made lithium-ion battery that is one of the
prime concerns for Boeing.
Second is the risk of outsourcing complicated products. Complicated
products like aircraft involve a necessary degree of outsourcing, simply
because the firm lacks the necessary expertise in some areas, e.g. engines and
avionics. However Boeing significantly increased the amount of outsourcing for
the 787 over earlier planes from 30 to 50 percent for their previous models to
70 percent for the 787.Boeing embraced outsourcing in the 787 as a means of reducing
costs and the time of development.
But Outsourcing didn’t cut costs and increase profits; instead, it
drove profits and knowledge to suppliers while increasing costs for the mother
company as told by Hart-Smith. Boeing didn’t follow Hart-Smith’s advice and
outsourced the engineering and construction of the plane long before the
product was designed and the relative costs established. The results have been
disastrous. Boeing’s 787 projects are many billions of dollars over budget and
the first planes were delivered over three years late.
Source: liftndrag.blogspot.com
Third is the risk of offshoring. Some degree of outsourcing in other countries is an unavoidable aspect of manufacturing a complex product like an airplane, because some expertise exists only in foreign countries. For example, the capacity to manufacture Lithium-ion batteries lies outside the US (in Japan). Boeing had no choice but to have the batteries made in another country.
Third is the risk of offshoring. Some degree of outsourcing in other countries is an unavoidable aspect of manufacturing a complex product like an airplane, because some expertise exists only in foreign countries. For example, the capacity to manufacture Lithium-ion batteries lies outside the US (in Japan). Boeing had no choice but to have the batteries made in another country.
While there is nothing in
principle wrong with necessary offshoring, the cultural and language differences
and the physical distances involved in a lengthy supply chain create additional
risks. Mitigating them requires substantial and continuing communications with
the suppliers and on-site involvement, thereby generating additional cost.
Boeing didn't plan for such communications or involvement, and so incurred
additional risk that materialized.
In order to gain an edge
over its competitor after losing market share to Airbus in the late 1990’s,
boeing decided to focus on reducing the selling cost and provide an improved
experience to its immediate (airlines) and secondary customers (passengers).
The intention of Boeing was on the right track but the implementation of their
supply chain strategies was where they made mistakes. Better coordination and
better flow of information between the parent company (Boeing) and their
suppliers, and nullifying the innovation risk by proper testing methods could
have helped reduce such variability in their products. Other than the suggestions stated above, what strategies do you think Boeing could
adopt to be cost effective and provide quality products at the same time?
Source:
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