There are many well-documented benefits of digital factory and paperless quality initiatives for manufacturing plants. A paperless quality system reduces costs, facilitates faster implementation of changes, provides tighter change management control, and makes quality data available for reporting and analytics systems. Ultimately, paperless quality is already a large part of the Industry 4.0 value proposition. As technology costs continue to drop, companies are prioritizing paperless quality initiatives. However, many organizations struggle to migrate from their existing system to paperless quality in manufacturing.
With so many benefits, why do manufacturers struggle to migrate to a digital system? More importantly, how can a company put paperless quality in place successfully?
When starting your digital quality journey, the critical first step is to optimize quality processes and procedures before you digitize them. The more optimized the procedures become the less time and money required to create the digital versions.
Let’s explore what we mean when we use the word optimize:
If the organization can optimize processes with standard sections, many paperless quality tools can capture them for teams to reuse. This approach reduces system setup time and makes it easier to manage change to these standard sections across all the quality processes that use them.
One example is a standard header with SKU, product name, operation number, inspection location, and inspection team member information. The organization can use a standard header for all quality procedures.
Another example is a standard inspection or measurement that yields a single quality value. This inspection component could be used just once in a procedure or multiple times, with just the product variable changing with each inspection.
Now that you have optimized your processes, is there an opportunity to standardize as well? Are there multiple plants producing the same or similar products that can use the same process? Often with paper-based processes, small incremental changes happen over time, resulting in processes that are slightly different from plant to plant (and sometimes between different areas in the same plant). Standardizing reduces the time to implement a paperless quality system.
Some team members may resist process changes. If you expect resistance, it might be beneficial to standardize the manual process first to give team members time to acclimate to the change before implementing the digital system. This approach reduces the risk that team members blame the process change on the electronic system. Instead, teams have time to acclimate to the modified quality process, and the transition to a digital system only means a change of interface and documentation experience, not of the process itself. While this method increases the time and effort required for the transition to a paperless quality system, it supports adoption and reduces initiative risk.
It’s unrealistic to think that a company can migrate every manual quality process to a paperless system in one project. Often the list of processes is long, and the value diminishes some less-used processes. Instead of trying to convert every process, focus on quick wins. Prioritize quality processes based on how often teams use them, how optimized they are, and how standardized they are across the enterprise.
By focusing on a subset of quality processes, the organization can achieve results quickly, and the results will have a quicker impact on the cost of goods sold (COGS). This focus also reduces the training and change management requirements, increasing adoption and overall program success.
A purposeful approach to migrate from manual quality processes to paperless quality in manufacturing can lead to program success. Digitalization is not the goal, however. Manufacturing organizations should be driving toward corporate goals which may include accelerating performance improvement, reducing costs, and other strategic objectives.
These early steps can have a powerful impact on your company’s ability to execute paperless quality quickly and effectively: