Welcome to โAsk Deb from QA,โ a new column from MxD.
Every week, Deb from QA โ with decades of experience on the factory floor โ will answer your questions to demystify and explain the digital manufacturing industry.
Please submit your questions to debfromqa@mxdusa.org
Dear Deb from QA: One of the critical parts we need is made in a factory recently shut down because theyโre in a coronavirus hotspot. We canโt produce our circuit boards until they re-open. What are my options?
Olโ Deb isnโt afraid to roar from time to time, and hereโs one such case.
If youโre in charge of supply chain at your factory and you somehow, improbably, for inconceivable reasons unbeknownst to me, DONโT have dual sourcing options (and ideally more), then frankly, you get what you deserve.ย
You canโt just snap your fingers and source a new component. At minimum, if itโs a fairly standard component and you do a mini-qualification run, you might be able to be up and running in three months.
But if itโs a custom component that involves, say, tooling, it could be a year to 18 months. Bottom line, have a backup plan now. Your supply chain is only as strong as its weakest link.
To be honest, the purpose of this column isnโt to shame those who already find themselves in a bind. Itโs to scare straight manufacturers who donโt have a supply chain contingency plan in place.
When the pandemic started, we all found out the hard way about the flaws in the U.S. supply chain, You can read all about it in this excellent article: 5 Supply Chain Lessons Learned from COVID-19.
But allow me to offer three more things you should understand about each and every one of your components:
- You have to understand how each component fits into your product and how difficult it is to obtain that component. What weโre really talking about is product substitution: Take a simple resistor. Not all resistors are created equal. A resistor with +/-5% tolerance might be easier to find than one with a +/-1% tolerance.
- Is this a standard component that adheres to an industry-recognized standard, one thatโs manufacture- and qualification-checked? Would you be able to buy the same component from another supplier and be confident itโll be the same product?
- Based on your understanding of one and two, come up with an appropriate sourcing strategy and an emergency plan. At its most basic it means having at least two sources in two locations.
So there you have it. Understand your component, and always have back-up plans in place.
Assuring quality,
Deb
Check out last week’s Ask Deb here:
Where do I hire for cybersecurity?
Deb from QA wants to hear your questions. Send โem to debfromqa@mxdusa.org and sheโll answer as soon sheโs done with her shift.