Grow Your Subscribers With Our Audio Narrations

The Play Audio Player is a tool that instantly converts articles to audio narrations and enables writers to repurpose their content in a completely new way. Readers visiting the articles now have the…

Smartphone

独家优惠奖金 100% 高达 1 BTC + 180 免费旋转




How to scale 3D printing adoption with a winning change management strategy

by Alexander Bours

Whenever I talk with a company’s leadership, I try to get a good understanding of their strategy and whether their company culture supports it. This will impact how fast they can scale AM internally. Does the company’s “mindset” support innovation and the adoption of new technologies? Who are the key stakeholders and how can they help to drive innovation forward? Are people open to change? How can you inspire action and translate your strategy into a cultural message?

These are important questions to address with your team. You should consider the risks involved in changing your company’s workflow and have an open conversation about your team’s concerns. You should also bear in mind that there will be a learning curve along the way.

In some cases, project leaders have leeway to make mistakes. Others prefer to avoid risks and spend more time evaluating each step in the process. In both of these situations, major issues can be avoided by picking the right use cases from the start and working with a partner or vendors that will support you along the way.

Their mentality is not “we are looking for a 3D printed part.” Instead it’s “how can new manufacturing technologies help us solve an existing problem?” This mindset makes a world of difference to facilitate adoption. It also makes it easier to identify the metrics you want to improve and understand the foundation you need to build in order to scale.

Speaking of metrics, if you want to scale AM internally, you need to have the workflow and internal processes to support it. The people involved (usually engineers, quality control and purchasing) have different interests. Aligning these interests can be difficult, but data can play a powerful role in facilitating this.

Purchasing is, in most cases, looking to acquire a part at the lowest possible price with the shortest lead time, while engineering wants flexibility and freedom of design. With AM, the price for an individual part may be higher but you should take Total Cost of Ownership into account. Is it cheaper to print the part on demand instead of ordering a large quantity you’ll end up holding in stock for several years and eventually scrapping?

We’ve noticed that being able to analyze thousands or even millions of data points to select the parts that are most suited for AM helps teams get much-needed alignment. Discussing these data points and extracting insights becomes a helpful exercise and results in a transversal approach. Colleagues who previously did not interact suddenly speak to each other and collaborate more closely. A company we work with was able to identify that it only makes sense to invest in molds when their demand forecast exceeds 1,000 parts. 3D printing was a viable and cheaper alternative as their expected demand was much lower. All of this was possible by simply facilitating conversations around data. Transversal thinking between departments is key to energize your AM project (as well as others) and will make scalability much easier.

Although there is a better understanding of AM on the whole and expectations are much better aligned with the industry’s reality nowadays, education is extremely important. Project leaders often have to deal with IP-related issues, quality control and choosing the right AM materials. Training your team on the possibilities will help this process go smoothly.

Intellectual property is always a concern. Make sure your team understands what’s legal and what’s not. Work with vendors that have end-to-end encryption so your data and designs are secure.

On the quality front, there are also challenges. AM production lacks the standards than most traditional manufacturing technologies have. So quality approval often needs to happen at the material level or individual part level. The best way to address this is to work with partners who can coach your team on the type of materials and technologies to use, and offer them a way to perform quality control tests (such as fire resistance tests, coloring tests, or stress tests).

Raising difficult questions is a good thing but this should not withhold you from trying AM. The question is no longer if AM will be part of industrial supply chains, it’s rather when this will happen. To poise your project for success and ensure scalability, make sure your team is aligned, on board with your strategy and has access to training and resources. Learning by doing is how most companies succeed at implementing and scaling 3D printing. It helps to work with a partner you can rely on during your journey.

Alexander Bours is Co-Founder at DiManEx, a cloud-based, end-to-end service for distributed 3D manufacturing through a network of certified Additive Manufacturing partners.

Add a comment

Related posts:

The Best Hashtags To Use For Your Business in 2019

How many times have you thrown a few hashtags on your Instagram post because you had no idea what to put on there? And it barely moved the needle with your engagement, followers and you sit there…

How to Successfully Become an SEO Specialist

Maybe you already know what you want to do with your life. Maybe you found your true passion early. Or maybe your parents decided your future for you. Choosing a career path is one of the hardest…

Dragon Queen Woman

There are those who will tell you to doubt yourself and you will heed them because you love them (or is it fear them?) and take in their guidance to your core. You will turn all you know to be true…