Implementation must be fast, with quantitative measures of performance.

Acquisition integration is a challenge for any company. The EMS industry poses specific challenges because customers aren't buying an end-product; they are buying the capabilities, systems, processes and internal culture used to manufacture their product.

In pursuing its acquisition strategy, EMS provider EPIC Technologies has tried to maintain a balance between achieving business growth goals and customer satisfaction. This focus has included:

EPIC began expanding beyond its first manufacturing facility in Norwalk, OH, in early 2002 with the establishment of a greenfield site in Juarez, Mexico. The company completed the facility launch within 60 days, after completely renovating a vacant 70,000 sq. ft. facility, installing more than 80 machines, hiring and training more than 120 employees and providing first-article submissions on approximately 25 products. In December 2004, the company expanded its Juarez manufacturing capability, while adding a significant customer by acquiring an OEM's 125,000 sq. ft. electronics assembly operation in Juarez. In January 2005, EPIC also acquired the assets and business of Siemens Energy and Automation's EMC division. This acquisition added new capacity in two locations: South Lebanon, OH, and Johnson City, TN.

Due diligence. When an EMS acquisition fails to add to the bottom line, the problem is typically either failure to achieve the operational improvements projected in initial valuation assumptions or customer attrition.

How can this be countered? EPIC Technologies' model relies on operational standardization and a tightly focused value proposition tied to the company's Synchronous Flow Manufacturing (SFM) process. In evaluating potential acquisition candidates, the focus includes some core strategic questions:

In the two acquisitions described, the answer was yes. The Juarez acquisition added a customer that valued Lean principles and a facility in a region that had strong demand. The Siemens EMC acquisition added new customers as well as additional projects from an existing customer. The facility had already had some focus on implementation of Lean principles and also added new capabilities in engineering and failure analysis.

Operational analysis. Fully implemented, the company's SFM philosophy incorporates the following basic concepts:

Figure 1

Standardization is key in both operating strategy and fast acquisition integration. EPIC has a standard facility layout that uses the same equipment and processes in every factory. As facilities are acquired, layout is evaluated against the standard formula, and excess equipment is either redeployed to other facilities or liquidated. Equipment not found in the facility, such as vapor phase reflow ovens and custom wave solder machines that have been optimized to support broader process windows, are added. For example, in the Johnson City facility, the analysis process determined that the current facility output could be handled on two SMT lines. Four other lines were redeployed to other facilities and the remaining lines modified to support the standard process flow.

Early in operational strategy formulation, management developed a methodology for measuring and sharing performance information known as the Plant Operating Review (POR) system. The original version monitored approximately 60 metrics company-wide down to the floor level. These metrics were formally reviewed daily and weekly by project personnel, monthly by the plant managers, and quarterly by senior management. This system formed the foundation for continuing operational analysis. Following the Siemens EMC acquisition, the POR system was modified based on suggestions from the acquired team. The revised system uses the original metrics list and measurement frequency and now also considers external benchmarks and longer-term performance trends. The current review process starts with a summary of overall company financial performance metrics, and then focuses on specific productivity and operational performance in the following functional areas: human resources, quality, manufacturing, sales, purchasing and finance. The functional managers responsible for performance to measured metrics are also responsible for defining the external benchmarks relevant to their areas. Review frequency is consistent with the timing established in the original system.

Corporate culture integration. Vision sharing starts the day the deal closes. There is open communication between company management and the acquired team. While there is a clear direction for change established, existing processes and new ideas from the acquired team are evaluated. If a new concept represents an improvement, it is incorporated in the model companywide.

The best driver of integration of corporate cultures is a formula of centralized training combined with standardized job descriptions. Just as the operational strategy focuses on increased flexibility through equipment standardization, the strategy for operator cross-training focuses on creating a flexible workforce that could be deployed to areas of the factory in rapid response to customer demand. There is organizational consistency in job descriptions, training topics and processes, and workforce deployment strategies in all facilities; this information is easily accessible through a company intranet system. For the most part, employees who are industry certified or "EPIC-Certified" through train-the-trainer processes conduct training.

Customer satisfaction measurement. Customer satisfaction measurement primarily exists in two forms. At least one key contact at each customer fills out a monthly scorecard via the Internet measuring standard metrics such as quality, on-time delivery and pricing/cost reduction performance. A more detailed annual survey conducted via email measures:

This annual survey is sent to multiple contacts at each customer and includes areas for detailed comments and suggestions for improvement. Survey data are reviewed at the plant and corporate level. Program managers are charged with developing corrective action plans related to customer improvement comments or areas that rate low in any survey.

Maintaining the highest levels of customer satisfaction during acquisition does not occur without a learning curve. For example, customers that haven't embraced Lean manufacturing like the added scheduling flexibility, but may be slow to adopt recommended changes related to forecasting methodologies or approved vendor list. Program managers often must drive this conversion a step at a time.

Quantitative improvements. To understand the overall effectiveness of the strategy, it is helpful to look at some of the measured metrics. Quantitative improvements at the company's most recent acquisition have included:

It is also significant to note that during its period of greatest growth in 2005, it also achieved record levels of third-party recognition. Awards measuring customer satisfaction presented in 2006 for performance measured during the prior year include:

Customer affinity for the new business model will always play a role. This necessitates a focus on customer base expectations during due diligence. The EMS provider will likely have to "sell" its expectations for forecasting and preferred supply base to its customers as changes are implemented.

The rewards of both sides taking the time to assess expectations and team to achieve critical goals are improved operational performance, increased schedule flexibility, and both visible and hidden cost-reduction.

 

Todd Baggett is vice president of business development at EPIC Technologies (epictech.com); todd.baggett@epictech.com.

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