2018年6月24日星期日

product inspection service

Sunchine Inspection, a professional one-stop international inspection provider, focus on providing more flexible and humanized inspection serviceto clients from all over the world.
Sunchine Inspection, Thinking for you and doing for you!
China Office
Room 2203, 22/F, Building 03, Zhongtai
International Plaza, 311, Middle Jiangdong
Road, 210019 - Nanjing - R.P.China
Tel: 0086-25-6809 3658
Fax: 0086-25- 8609 3678
Contact: Mr. Francois SHI
Managing Director in China Office
Mob: 0086-18951633559
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BY RENAUD ANJORAN
Sometimes I visit a buying office with a dozen people, and most of them have “manager” somewhere in their title.
The heads of functions (purchasing, QC, accounting…) are “managers”, even though their teams are quite small. Then there are “project managers”, and a “general manager”.
The truth is, one manager is enough in that case.

The importance of the title in China and in Hong Kong

When I started working in Hong Kong, I noticed that any salesperson was an “executive”, and that many people had “general manager” somewhere near the end of their title.
My assistant at the time told me “this is Hong Kong… titles don’t mean anything”.
Actually they do mean quite a lot to those employees. A grand title looks nice on a resume, so it helps attract lots of candidates for a job opening. (Similarly, it means you are attracting those already thinking of their next job — not necessarily the right crowd).
Pompous titles also give face. And that’s another danger right here… These so-called managers think their job is simply to do emails, attend meetings, and tell their staff what to do. A manager doesn’t do any work by himself, or so they think.

What is a good manager supposed to do?

A good manager achieves more with fewer resources. Doing email, running meetings, and having tea with the boss is not, in itself, real work.
A good manager focuses on these tasks:
  • Standardize the work, to free up some of his employees’ time;
  • Stabilize internal processes;
  • Make management more visual, for better communication and coordination;
  • Train the staff, coach the staff, lead by example, maintain discipline;
  • Spend time where work is performed (not always in an air-conditioned office), observe processes, notice problems;
  • Get to the root cause of problems, and solve them once and for all.
(If you need more details on how to implement these objectives, get yourself a copy of Lean Office and Service Simplified.)
And let’s not forget, a real manager is ready to take a lot of pressure from his boss when something goes wrong. It is part of the job.

How to reward good employees?

Unfortunately, good individual contributors don’t necessarily make for good managers. A good purchaser might not be a good purchasing manager. The job content is not the same (I described the manager’s job content above).
So, how to recognize the achievements of a good individual contributor? Offer her a career path where she remains an individual contributor, but makes more money and gets more respect.
For example, Google has “distinguished engineers”, “Google fellows”, and so on. These titles mean a lot inside the company.
Rand Fishkin proposes two separate tracks for good employees (in the context of a high-tech company):
Multiple tracks
Naturally, salaries need to progress as well. Giving a rise or a promotion (alternatively?) at least once a year is good practice in China.
Do you agree with this? Do you think it is applicable here?
PS: if you want Inspection Servic. Just click here. Thanks!
Article Source: qualityinspection

qc job

Sunchine Inspection, a professional one-stop international inspection provider, focus on providing more flexible and humanized inspection serviceto clients from all over the world.
Sunchine Inspection, Thinking for you and doing for you!
China Office
Room 2203, 22/F, Building 03, Zhongtai
International Plaza, 311, Middle Jiangdong
Road, 210019 - Nanjing - R.P.China
Tel: 0086-25-6809 3658
Fax: 0086-25- 8609 3678
Contact: Mr. Francois SHI
Managing Director in China Office
Mob: 0086-18951633559
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BY RENAUD ANJORAN
Many importers negotiate a shipment date (ETD) with their Chinese suppliers before orders are issued, and then fail to follow up on the production schedule.
I think they would avoid a lot of bad surprises if they asked for regular updates.

The danger of flying blind

Chinese suppliers know that asking for 3 weeks of delay is usually rejected. The purchaser might respond “if you ship that late, you’ll have to pay air freight”, or “in that case, the letter of credit won’t be valid anymore; the order is canceled”.
So what do savvy exporters do? They don’t reveal the situation clearly and in advance. They wait until 1 or 2 weeks before original ETD, and they announce a one-week delay “because the materials arrived late”. Then another 5 days “because of power shortages”. Then another 5 days “because we don’t have enough workers”. And so on, until production is three weeks behind schedule.
This process can be devastating for an importer who promised a delivery date to his domestic customers, and who has to postpone it again and again.

How to avoid discovering delays at the last minute?

Before issuing an order, you should ask for a few milestones. Here is a list that is probably too long:
  • Arrival of all materials/components (and, if relevant, inspection of these inputs)
  • Start of bulk production
  • Sending of production samples
  • 20% of order is finished (and, if relevant, in-process inspection)
  • 50% of order is finished
  • 100% of order is packed (and, if relevant, final inspection)
  • Ex-factory date (at least 2 days after final inspection)
  • Shipment date (ETD)
Then, when you reach each milestone, you can ask your supplier whether it was achieved. If not, they should update all remaining dates.
Sending someone in the factory (e.g. your purchaser, an inspector…) is a good solution to check the production status. At the same time, you can verify product quality.

Can you afford to do this?

If you really need to stay on top of production, you should do as described above.
But you need to find the right balance.
If you place orders with many suppliers, you might not have time to follow all these dates. And if your orders are not very large, you might not want to bother your suppliers with so many updates.
In such cases, you can reduce the number of milestones.
For example, you can track these dates: start of production, 20% of order completed, 100% of order packed, and shipment date.
The most important is to keep some visibility over the production schedule.
Maybe some readers can share their experiences?
Article Source: qualityinspection