(Download)
This is the first segment in the ongoing Orchid series… “I know the regulations, now what?”
Executive Considerations
The firearms industry has been active with acquisitions, divestitures, plant moves and growth into new markets. If you follow the industry wires, you’ve likely heard about Beretta’s move south, Ruger’s new facility in North Carolina and other manufacturing considerations for vertical integration. In any industry, corporate events, facility startups and plant moves come with executive-level risk considerations. So, you ask, what should I consider when launching a new FFL, buying an FFL, implementing a new ERP system, consolidating my FFLs (from many to one) or even expanding into new markets? The following are but a few key considerations:
- Regulatory compliance implications;
- Effectiveness and efficiency of the pre- and post-event activities;
- Financial return and pay-back period;
- Impact to your operational effectiveness and supply chain planning;
- Market dynamics and customer satisfaction;
- The impact to and needs of human capital;
- A determination whether all risks have been appropriated identified, planned for and mitigated.
- Machines have been moved……check.
- Designated employees have been relocated…..check.
- New hires have been hired and are ready to work…..check.
- Inventory (relatively) in the right place…check.
- These procedures don’t look like our procedures.
- Wait, that’s now how we did it.
- Well, they are a well known implementation firm!
- Where’s the report that I need to manage inventory, or demand forecasts?
- Ohhhh, I’ve never seen one of those products…we make that now?
- How do I access master customer data? Wait a minute, that’s not our SKU.
- Geeesh, I have to get an import license or variance? We start production next month. Why didn’t someone tell me?
- What do you mean we have received-not-acquired? We installed software.
- I thought that was the right transaction…the system let me use that one!
- Risk
- Execution
- People
- Operations
- Regulations
- Technology
- Do we have a contingency plan if we experience an issue with supplier material flow? Will existing ATF variances be transferable to the new location?
- What if our technology integration strategy comes to a screeching halt because of data issues?
- What if the event has a material affect on our ability to “Close the Books” in a timely fashion? How will we respond?
- Have we considered the impact on theft and collusion that too often accompanies corporate events (in any industry)? And, do we need increased or different controls over retail assets, scrap and corporate IP?
- Have we made adequate allowance and created contingency plans for the other things that will inevitably go wrong, recognizing that internal project teams often lack the objectivity to plan properly for this?
- Did the project plan properly consider the time-sensitivity of dependent tasks that are reliant on internal and external resources? For example, will our suppliers actually be able to generate package labels that meet the technical requirements of our new scanners?
- Did we consider the impact on consumer firearm repairs from a both a regulatory perspective and from a customer relationship perspective? “I used to be able to send my gun back to address XYZ, why are you telling me that’s no longer possible?”
- What metrics have we established to measure a successful implementation? And, do we have someone independent to monitor this performance? It’s very easy to mark a project plan task as “done” when you’re the one listing the requirements. What would an independent expert say? Done is not always done!
- Do our employees understand the full scope of this event, why it is occurring and what the expected outcome is?
- How will future users of the plant, system or process define success? Does it resemble any of the success factors defined by the implementation project manager?
- Do we have training plans to ‘on-board’ new employees and temporary labor on Day One, do we have role specific training, or even recurring refresher training?
- Does our training include “what happens when things break”? Ordinary project plans make sure that employees in the new facility are trained at their jobs, but really well managed projects plan for the unexpected.Things will go wrong…..Did we plan for them?
- How will we get raw or finished goods to and from our various suppliers and distributors? Has the logistics model changed significantly, introducing unforeseen freight costs?
- What do you mean we need to change all of our roll mark heads to indicate a new city of manufacture on the firearm? Ooops. Didn’t plan for that! And, what will our loyalist customer base think?
- Designing a new firearm with low-cost overseas components? Well, sharing engineering drawings during the bid and proposal process may very well require an export license…Yes, just the drawing themselves. Think you’re going to import them into the U.S. overnight? Well, don’t forget about the ATF’s application to import on a Form 6.
- Moving into an international market that you haven’t served before? That’s great, but the introduction of a new third party sales agent peddling your product to quasi government officials could spell FCPA risk. Are you prepared?
- Does my project team remember the disastrous OSHA inspection six years ago and the many changes implemented as a result or will they make the same mistakes again in setting up the new facility?
- Did my team know that we now need a variance to mark guns the same way at the new facility that they did last week—without a variance— at the old facility?
- Why didn’t someone realize before Day One that Customer X would need to re-certify before we would be authorized to ship product from the new facility?Now we’re going to be late!
- Did someone tell the ATF that we have a new offsite storage facility? Did we register it with the Federal Firearms Licensing Center (FFLC)?
- Did we consider our ERP implementation to be an IT project? A “systems” implementation is a misnomer. There is an unmistaken belief that system implementations are IT projects. Perhaps that is true in some cases, but understanding the true nature (and defined owner) of the project requires a real discussion about why it’s being implemented. Was the project conceived to modify operations and improve productivity? Was it to enhance control and achieve ATF compliance? In these scenarios Operations and Compliance become the key stakeholders and, more so, the drivers and owners of the project. Failure to critically define ownership of a project from the very beginning can produce undesirable results.
- Was the business involved in every step of the project or did they disappear after the blue printing process? Not good. Decisions can get made in a vacuum, lacking contextual understanding behind what is written on a piece of parchment otherwise known as the spec. System implementations require full integration, at all points of the project, between the business and the development team.
- Project management. Data Management. Change Management. Did we include change management? Much like a plant move, a system implementation can have a very negative effect on your business if change management isn’t an integral part of the project team from day one. Changing the manner in which people work, or have worked, every day for 15 years, as of the go-live date single training class is not a recipe for success.
- Data, data and more data. You’ve gone through all this work to (hopefully) scrub, realign and redefine your data for future use. In the event that the data conversion is successful, have you considered how it will stay that way after go-live? Control over master data (much like security) needs to be well thought through long before go-live. Absent bar-none controls in these areas, you’ll wind up with a fancy new $10m system with the same problems that you had last year.
0 Comments