Global manufacturing firms without multi-facility support face communication challenges crucial to efficient and effective lean operations. Some centralization of corporate functions such as purchasing and accounting may work well, but other functions can be very location specific. These may include materials inventories, production planning and scheduling, sales, product distribution, financial and operational analysis, and, in the case of foreign sites, currencies and conversions.
Information Empowers
Vital to keeping a manufacturing strategy lean – i.e., obtaining the highest level of productivity with a minimum of on-hand inventory and waste – is empowering workers up and down the line with the information necessary for robust decision-making. When multiple manufacturing plants are involved, the integrated data flow and how it is handled becomes even more important, particularly if one site is feeding another with partially manufactured parts. In effect, one plant becomes part of the supply chain for another.
Planning and Scheduling Together
In addition to accurate data input and securely controlling access so that one location does not affect another's data, visibility of pertinent data will yield optimal lean results. Making real-time information available to all sites simultaneously is a boon to keeping the manufacturing process as waste free as possible. For example, an order entered centrally that requires product from all sites should automatically be generated across locations so that planning and scheduling in the various plants can be coordinated simultaneously. Up-to-date schedules visible to all plants allow for more efficient scheduling of resources in any given plant.
Shared information may also provide insight to all plant managers on when to produce, when to import, which machines work well for the current objectives and which have drawbacks, etc. Taking advantage of the opportunity to learn a process from another, related plant can be invaluable to the overall organization.
Identifying Best Practices
If each manufacturing plant contributes complete data to a central database, overall reports and analysis on the health of the company and its processes are simple to construct. A robust overview for upper management can provide the feedback to individual plant managers that will allow for fine-tuning of production, identification of constraints for optimal production, and can indicate new areas of insight to build even more lean oriented manufacturing practices into the processes. If done properly, one plant can learn from another in real-time so that all are up-to-date with best practices.
Video: Multi-Plant Scheduling 101 – Coordinating Global Facilities in PlanetTogether APS
As soon as you have more than one plant, planning and scheduling get exponentially more complex. Each facility has its own inventories, calendars, constraints, and priorities—but customers still expect one reliable promise date. PlanetTogether APS gives you a single view of demand and capacity across all locations so you can plan and schedule like one integrated network, not a collection of silos.
In this video, you’ll learn how PlanetTogether APS helps you:
– Model multiple plants, each with its own machines, labor, calendars, and constraints
– See schedule impact when moving work from one site to another
– Use inter-plant transfer times and lead times to keep promise dates realistic
– Balance load across facilities to protect bottlenecks and improve on-time delivery
– Give planners and managers a shared, real-time view of all plant schedules for better decisions and leaner operations
Key takeaways from this video:
- How PlanetTogether APS models multiple plants with separate resources, calendars, and constraints
- How to see the network-wide impact of shifting orders between facilities
- How transfer times and inter-plant lead times factor into realistic, lean schedules
- How multi-plant APS scheduling improves on-time delivery, capacity utilization, and responsiveness
- How a single, integrated scheduling view supports lean, information-empowered decisions across your global network
Turn Multi-Facility Complexity into a Lean, Coordinated Plan
Running multiple plants without integrated planning turns every site into its own island. Data is scattered, schedules are out of sync, and one plant can easily become a bottleneck in another’s supply chain. When production plans and schedules are truly connected, information empowers every facility to act lean—producing only what’s needed, when it’s needed, with minimal waste.
Download our one-page “The Money Is in the Planning” infographic to see how better planning and scheduling help you:
- Coordinate production and capacity across multiple plants
- Reduce waste from misaligned production, transfers, and inventory
- Improve on-time delivery while protecting bottleneck resources
- Turn global, multi-facility data into a single, lean, profit-focused plan
Use it as a quick checklist with your leadership and plant teams to identify where Advanced Planning & Scheduling (APS) can transform your multi-facility network from fragile and siloed into integrated and lean.