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Geoff Beckman

Boeing Learns Supply Chain Only as Strong as Weakest Link

Written by Geoff Beckman
2/20/2013 47 comments
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When Boeing announced the 787 luxury jet in January 2003, the company christened it "The Dreamliner." Ten years later, it’s become a nightmare. The litany of problems with the 787 makes an SAP project look like a Swiss watch.

Among them:

  • The 787’s scheduled completion date was August 2007. The first commercial flight didn’t happen until October 2011 -- 50 months late.

  • The first three models completed required so many design alterations and part changes that Boeing finally scrapped them.

  • To improve fuel economy, the 787 was supposed to weigh several tons less than existing models. The redesigned model makes Acrobat Reader look svelte -- the 787 is seven and a half tons heavier than planned.

  • In January 2013, the Federal Aviation Administration grounded the 787 after five different airlines reported problems:
    • A Japan Airlines plane caught fire after the batteries (yes, lithium-ion ones) overheated. JAL also reported a fuel leak.
    • United found faulty wiring in one plane, as well as a fuel leak in a different spot.
    • A 787 for Qatar Airways developed a generator problem during its delivery flight. A plane’s cooling system failed on one Air India plane.
    • All-Nippon Air made an emergency landing when its onboard computer reported battery problems and smoke in the engine compartment.

Grounded in a Nightmare
Boeing's 787 Dreamliner turned out to be a supply chain nightmare, as problems quickly transformed into canceled orders. (Source: Wikipedia)
Boeing's 787 Dreamliner turned out to be a supply chain nightmare, as problems
quickly transformed into canceled orders.
(Source: Wikipedia)

How did Boeing produce the aerospace industry's Jurassic Park? By ignoring every development best-practice in the book.

Too many unknowns: Since Boeing hadn't built a new model since 1993, the company re-engineered every component. The body was reshaped to reduce friction; its metal skin was replaced with a carbon-fiber composite. The high-efficiency engines were prototype designs; the mechanical and hydraulic controls were replaced by software-controlled electronics.

Every new design has bugs, which need to be fixed over time. By making every component of the 787 a new development project, Boeing basically ensured that everything could be expected to go wrong.

Changing methodologies: Boeing had always manufactured 60 percent to 70 percent of its plane parts and done all its own assembly. The company managed every supplier directly and used fixed-price contracts (with penalties for late delivery or failed inspections) to drive quality.

For the 787, Boeing decided to outsource 70 percent of the parts and 90 percent of the labor by using a three-tiered production system developed by Toyota. In this model, suppliers (in tier 3) build parts; partners (in tier 2) assemble them into components; and integrators (in tier 1) build the vehicle sections from the components. All Toyota does is the final assembly.

Boeing believed that adding two inspections by different vendors would improve quality. It thought it could trim the 30 days it previously needed to assemble a plane from nuts and bolts down to three. By working with only 50 Tier 1 vendors (not thousands of suppliers), Boeing planned to cut costs by eliminating middle managers and inspectors.

What Boeing overlooked (or, to be blunt, decided to ignore) is that Toyota implemented its process over time, changing steps or suppliers if problems occurred. Since automakers release new cars every year, their suppliers already know how to build many of the components.

Boeing also disregarded this minor detail: Toyota’s recalls and repair rates skyrocketed under the new process. End result? The sticking accelerator in 2009-11 models that caused fatal accidents.

Oh, and planes pass more stringent tests than cars. Because if Toyota screws up, its users can usually get out and walk.

By quadrupling the layers of management, Boeing built a process that compounded failure. Late shipments with defective pieces got slipshod inspections and hurried assembly.

Inept vendor management: As anyone who outsources learns, clear statements, defined requirements, and tough penalties produce better results. Call center agreements must include call volume, time on hold, abandonment rate, and customer satisfaction. Development projects should specify performance levels (speed, volume, and errors), tests required for passage, and bug count. Instead, Boeing replaced its airtight contracts and penalties with partnership agreements and incentives for on-time delivery.

In the past, suppliers worked with Boeing directly, leaving no middleman to blame. The tiered system let each tier point fingers both below (at defective materials) and above (for demands to meet deadlines, not enforce quality).

To dilute accountability further, the 21 vehicle sections in the 787 are built in nine different countries. Each has its own laws -- and courts inclined to take its side.

At one point, Boeing became so exasperated by a partner's repeated failures that it spent $1 billion to buy the plant, just so it could stop making suggestions and begin issuing orders.

Selective listening: Who could have predicted this could happen? Boeing. At the 2001 annual quality seminar, a Boeing engineer analyzed the impact of outsourcing on the aerospace industry. Looking at seven planes built by different companies dating back to the 60s, he showed that quality failures (which led to rework and delays) dwarfed cost savings. "Subcontractors," he summarized, "made all of the profits... [Manufacturers] absorbed all of the over-runs."

In 2009, with the 787 already two years late, professors at UCLA’s business school did a case study on why the project failed. Their paper cited research dating back to 1993.

Boeing has already taken a $2.5 billion write-down on the 787. But unless the company can perform an exorcism on the plane’s issues, it might be the tip of the iceberg.

In an effort to steal market share from Airbus, Boeing priced the 787 at $120 million, far below market rate. The strategy worked; between 2003 and 2007, Boeing booked 817 orders.

But after four years of changes and redesigns, the 787 now costs $145 million to $200 million. Over the last four years, buyers have canceled more orders than they’ve placed.

With investigations just beginning, there’s no way to know what else will surface or when the 787 will fly again. Air India has already thrown in the towel and put its 787 fleet up for sale. Boeing could correct the flaws and 787 will rise from the flames like the legendary Phoenix. But based on the way the plane was built, the smart money says Boeing and its 787 will continue to make ashes out of themselves.

— Geoff Beckman is a marketing, communications, strategy, and technology consultant based in Cleveland, Ohio.

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jabailo
IQ Crew
Thursday February 21, 2013 1:28:29 PM
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I wonder to what extent Boeing employed supply chain management software.   I know that given the history, these products are perhaps newer and possibly not around when the project was launched many years ago, but still.  

MAPICS was the old IBM standard for manufacturing, but I think that was more inventory, accounting rather than the newer stuff from companies like ModusLink (Note:I am an investor in Moduslink) that manage everything in the supply chain in businesses from high tech to retail.

Another factor, as far as changing too many horses midstream was the transfer of the final assemblies from Seattle down to Charleston, SC.   Not casting blame down South, but again when you have a 50 year or more history of labor and supplier relationships, that's hard to replicate in a few years...

 

shehzadi
IQ Crew
Thursday February 21, 2013 1:23:06 PM
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Aviation Industry is a very subtle business. It calls for scalpel analysis before launching anything over ambitious. I think Dreamliner turned into a fiasco due to the same bloated and ambitious ideas on the part of management. Some technical snags have really hit project very hard before I could have come to fruition. Qatar, Air Indian and Japan Airways did experiment with the aircraft but the results were disappointing. Boeing industry have yet to address the basic anomalies to make it flawless in the air. Battery problems and smoke in the engine have something to do with the safety of the flight. The passengers would not like to risk their lives with an aircraft which have doubtful safety credentials. The company is still experimenting with the basic systems which should have been tested and tried out before setting its wheel rolling on the runways around the world. Boeing industry should show a bigger heart and accept the mistakes before thier reputation gets damaged. 

Alison Diana
Thinkernetter
Thursday February 21, 2013 9:58:45 AM
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There are definitely parallels in other industries, @Usman. We've seen it with car makers, within the computer industry, the integration community, and others. I only hope businesses across the entire spectrum of industries learn from Boeing's highly public errors before they make the same costly (both financially and reputation-wise) mistakes themselves. 

Alison Diana
Thinkernetter
Thursday February 21, 2013 9:56:18 AM
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As Geoff's editor for this piece, I'd like to echo @magneticnorth's kudos -- especially as this story was such a moving target. As everyone can see from the comments and news coverage, this story continues to evolve as Boeing investigates and reacts, as airlines and Airbus respond, and as governments look into this whole fiasco. The story is far, far from over, that's for sure. 

WaqasAltaf
IQ Crew
Thursday February 21, 2013 9:40:18 AM
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@ geoff

$ 22.96 million !! Surely union deserves to go on the strike for even the slightest of problems as everyone deserves a good life at the company if CEO is paid that much.

However, I won't criticize Boeing's board of directors for choosing another person instead of Alan Mullaly as it is board's right to choose the best person around and it is not necessary that the person is an existing employee. Secondly competancy is not always the factor for the CEO. Owners need the CEO who also thinks the way they think for the future of the company and one who can gel in nicely without causing much problem.

Usman Ejaz
IQ Crew
Thursday February 21, 2013 7:16:39 AM
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This whole scenario with 787 reminds of the time when Mercedes' cars came at the bottom of Top Gear's reliability survey. They did the same thing, tried to increases profit margins at the cost of quality. 

It makes me sad that the company who made 747, 777 got into this mess.

magneticnorth
IQ Crew
Wednesday February 20, 2013 11:04:08 PM
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"A titanium or steel box would be put around the battery cells, and high-pressure tubes [would] be installed to vent gases outside the aircraft in case of a fire."

Nice way to make those light batteries heavier. Are they too proud to switch to nickle-cadmium?

magneticnorth
IQ Crew
Wednesday February 20, 2013 10:55:46 PM
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Geoff: A great, well-researched article!

Your point re Alan Mullaly goes to show that losing executive chops can mean losing out big time. Boeing should be an engineering organization similar to Google, but it seems to want to be more like a Yahoo (and we know how THAT story went).

Geoff Beckman
Thinkernetter
Wednesday February 20, 2013 5:27:22 PM
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@Alison: According to Boeing's hometown paper, The Seattle Times, this is Boeing's secret plan for fixing the battery: "A titanium or steel box would be put around the battery cells, and high-pressure tubes [would] be installed to vent gases outside the aircraft in case of a fire."

Forbes took this 'plan' to a professor at MIT who commented. "Weird. This story must be incomplete. Otherwise, Boeing is evading the real issue which is how to prevent a fire from starting in the first place."

Japan's Transport Safety Board believes the batteries are improperly wired. US investigators disagree because they haven't found the same problem in the domestic planes that caught fire. 

Airbus, who has become the world leader in aviation technology thanks partly to this fiasco, has canceled their plans to use lithium-ion batteries. The nickel-cadmium batteries they're using are 50% heavier than Boeing's... but they don't catch fire.

Seems like the right tradeoff to me.

 

 

Alison Diana
Thinkernetter
Wednesday February 20, 2013 4:42:55 PM
no ratings

Today, "Boeing developed a plan that it intends to propose to federal regulators to temporarily fix problems with the 787 Dreamliner's batteries that have kept the planes on the ground for more than a month, a congressional official told The Associated Press." A meeting about the battery is supposed to occur on Friday, the AP article said

This is definitely a moving target to write about, Geoff!

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