BAnderson
Industrial
- Sep 14, 2006
- 17
I have recently taken over as the manager of the Manufacturing Engineering department of the company I work for. Our current project management does not seam effective. I have not had the opportunity to work for any other Manufacturing Engineering departments and was hoping some one may give me in sites or ideas on a process that may work better.
Background:
I work for a medium sized manufacturing company that makes a wide range of very different products. Seven devisions spread across five sites (16 plants in total). Are company as a whole has been around sine the mid 60's but in the last few years we have double in size with plans to have large expansions over the next two years. Some of our original lines are still in production. Most of our lines that date back earlier then 1990 have little to no documentation.
Projects:
Our projects can very from new plant, adding a line to an existing plant, refurbishing a line, updating a line, or automation of a line. With the growth of our company we can be in the middle of a project and have to make large changes to accommodate for added lines, new products, etc. This can mean changes in our control design, electrical design, and mechanical design.
We currently use a water fall methodology with Microsoft Project to track hours. When there is a change to the project every involved needs to sign off and the project needs to have all the documentation updated in order to continue.
If any one knows of any knows of any web sites that talk about how other people deal with this or books that deal with manufacturing engineering projects please let me know. Or if any one has tips on how they acomplis this please let me know.
Background:
I work for a medium sized manufacturing company that makes a wide range of very different products. Seven devisions spread across five sites (16 plants in total). Are company as a whole has been around sine the mid 60's but in the last few years we have double in size with plans to have large expansions over the next two years. Some of our original lines are still in production. Most of our lines that date back earlier then 1990 have little to no documentation.
Projects:
Our projects can very from new plant, adding a line to an existing plant, refurbishing a line, updating a line, or automation of a line. With the growth of our company we can be in the middle of a project and have to make large changes to accommodate for added lines, new products, etc. This can mean changes in our control design, electrical design, and mechanical design.
We currently use a water fall methodology with Microsoft Project to track hours. When there is a change to the project every involved needs to sign off and the project needs to have all the documentation updated in order to continue.
If any one knows of any knows of any web sites that talk about how other people deal with this or books that deal with manufacturing engineering projects please let me know. Or if any one has tips on how they acomplis this please let me know.