Let’s train young people for our industry
The machine shop industry needs a renewed emphasis on vocational
training for young people.
One reason: the skills required for modern
manufacturing are greater in today’s high tech industry that at
any previous time. While the need for increased technical knowledge
is evident, so too is the inability of the manufacturing industry to
attract the best talent to learn these skills.
Unfortunately, training in our industry is
still badly neglected. Due to my experience in the machine shop
industry, I believe there is a strong need for better and more
effective machine shop training, especially in computer controlled
machine tools.
I have observed that:
companies will invest hundreds of thousands of dollars in machine
tools and invest the minimum in training operators to use this
equipment. Often, they will only use the free training that is
supplied by the machine tool vendor. This can be less than a one
week session. This session will often be the only training over the
entire life of the machine tool, approximately ten years.
Additionally, the initial training period
is being reduced due to lack of qualified staff at the machine tool
distributor level. The machine tool installation engineer often
trains the employees, and available time for this is often minimal
due to strained resources.
Shop floor managers
Many
managers are wary of trained employees. Their perception is that the
trained operator may undermine the role of the foreman or leadman.
This perception is false - shared responsibility builds the team.
The company management should insist that
foreman and leadman are fully trained along with the operators. If
these personnel have not yet been trained, it’s important that the
supervisory people be brought up to date. After all, any new machine
purchased today will have some form of CNC controller. Supervisors
must be fully involved with this program and demonstrate their
ability to assimilate CNC technology.
Trained employees will
leave for another job.
Comment:- Train your employees and they might leave for another job,
or worse, don’t train them and they might stay at your company.
There is a perception that if a company
trains the individual, that this employee is likely to leave. This
is an untrue assumption. Trained employees have a better self image
and contribute more to the growth of a company.
These skilled employees are the real
resource of any company.
Each company needs quality machine tools to
produce the parts. The greater need is for quality people who are
able to program, trouble shoot and run the machine tools.
It is management’s challenge to provide
scope and vision to the employees. This will make employees want to
stay and contribute to company growth.
The challenge for the smaller growing shop
is to provide an environment that people want to remain involved
with. This area of involvement is where the employees loyalty is
gained for a long term commitment.
In the environment where machine tools are
more important than employees, the management will have to be
concerned with the “if we train them they will leave” problem.
The company must demonstrate it’s vision to it’s employees, or
skilled personnel will move to other, more visionary companies.
Companies with vision are not afraid to
train their people. This type of company provides a clear defined
leadership and is aware of the benefits of fully trained employees.
This type of company will attract good
people, not lose them. |
Labor
Force
The
quantity of experienced workers is diminishing. Everywhere I visit
the question is: “Do you know any good machinists?”
I always answer “I know lots of good
machinists, but they are all working somewhere.”
Look at the Help Wanted section in the
average newspaper and see the requirements:
CNC Experience a must.
(5) Years experience required.
Must be able to program and set up.
Must be able to read blueprints.
Where and how do people get this (5) years
experience? We don’t need to train our people, after all we can
hire them on the street. The facts prove otherwise.
Well-trained people are at a premium, they
are not wandering the streets out of work. The solution: train your
own employees, don’t hope that you will find them.
College Trained Engineers
We
have many excellent college programs producing very clever
engineers. My question is, how can you be a graduate engineer and
receive no practical training whatsoever? I have observed 30 year
old college graduate engineers who do not have any concept of
machining practices. These well educated people do not know how a
part should be made, or even how to relate with the people on the
manufacturing floor.
The standard degree engineering program
should include a mandatory time period at the manufacturing level.
We need the engineers to be fully involved
“in the trenches” and not just generating product designs that
prove to be difficult to manufacture.
World wide competition
Since the 1950s we have seen the steady
growth of Germany and Japan in the world market. Both countries now
have very strong manufacturing industries combined with high wage
employees.
These countries have recognized the
advantage of a combination of strong manufacturing and high wage
employment. These countries are utilizing a highly skilled workforce
to produce technically advanced, high-priced, quality products. We
are all aware of this as the USA is dependant on these imported
products.
Without technical leadership and a highly
trained work force, all we can do is make standard products cheaper-
in essence selling labor. Germany and Japan are selling not labor,
they are selling knowledge.
Potential Solutions
* We must
project the new image of the manufacturing environment. This
environment uses the most advanced computerized machine tools, and
is worthy of the services of a talented workforce.
* We must develop a team approach between engineers and
machinists, based on mutual respect.
* We must retrain our existing workforce to be fully
skilled and productive, thoroughly utilizing the new technology now
available to our manufacturing industries.
* Engineering degree courses should require strong
intern shop programs that work in conjunction with industry.
* Manufacturing engineers need to gain practical
experience in the programming and application of machine tools. This
broadening of experience will aid communication and provide positive
leadership.
Considering the above, I feel that the
manufacturing industry can develop a fully skilled team of producers
and engineers at both the shop floor and office level. This team
effort will enable us to meet the competitive challenges of the new
century.
We, in the USA, are facing more and more
competition from low wage countries (China and Mexico). We cannot be
the cheapest, but we must be the best by being the most skilled. |