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IndustryWeek February 17, 2010 Joachim Ebert |
Driving Growth Through Ultra-Low-Cost Product Development For both emerging and developed markets, ultra-low-cost products are here to stay and offer rich rewards for companies that can follow these 10 imperatives for success. |
Food Engineering October 1, 2005 Kevin T. Higgins |
State of Food Manufacturing: Period of Polarization Emerges The middle ground is shrinking as processors gravitate to one extreme or another in their approach to food and beverage manufacturing. |
IndustryWeek April 1, 2008 Nick Zubko |
Sources of Strength With globalization forces transforming their businesses, manufacturers are creating more powerful sourcing strategies to control costs throughout the supply chain. |
Food Engineering May 2, 2007 Kevin T. Higgins |
Elements of Successful Integration The rules of engagement remain a bit fuzzy, but food manufacturers and their technology partners are getting better at reducing the risk in automation projects. |
Food Engineering September 1, 2008 John Blanchard |
Packaging Automation as a Centerpiece for Sustainability Packaging is one of the most important facets in new product innovations, increasing speed-to-market and achieving sustainability goals. |
Commercial Investment Real Estate Sep/Oct 2003 James Stukel |
Cost-Conscious Construction New materials and design trends can cut time and money from project budgets. |
Food Engineering October 4, 2007 John Blanchard |
Packaging Operations: The Good, the Bad, the Ugly Why did more than 80% of the respondents to a recent survey say they are less than satisfied with the ability of their packaging operations to help meet business objectives and customer requirements? |
Food Engineering May 1, 2006 Kevin T. Higgins |
Will you integrate me? Systems integrators are waiting for food and beverage manufacturers to make a proposal: let's become automation partners and stop being strangers in the night. |
IndustryWeek March 1, 2007 David Blanchard |
Managing Expectations -- IndustryWeek's 2007 Salary Survey Comments Given the chance to weigh in on the state of the industry, their companies and their employees, manufacturing managers reveal what you always suspected: Things are tough out there, and they're likely to only get tougher. |
Food Engineering February 1, 2007 Kevin T. Higgins |
Outsourcing Engineering Refining Priorities for New Age Engineers The balancing act that engineering teams must master is outsourcing nonessential jobs while retaining the personnel and talent necessary for innovation. |
Food Processing August 2009 Bob Sperber |
New Lines for Lean Times Adding a new line? The production room can be the highest-value piece of the company to boost efficiency and stretch the dollar. |
Food Processing June 2012 David Phillips |
Food Manufacturing Facilities Design for Flexibility Smaller, more nimble food processing plants offer something different. |
IndustryWeek June 1, 2008 Ralph Keller |
Continuous Improvement -- A Better Way of Developing New Products Involve your suppliers and operations people in the product development process at the very earliest stages. |
Job Journal March 18, 2007 |
Career Snapshot: Mechanical Engineer Mechanical engineers have a blueprint for durable careers. |
Food Engineering June 4, 2007 Kevin T. Higgins |
Food Automation & Manufacturing 2007 Conference and Expo Challenges abound for food and beverage processors, but creative solutions were the order of the day at this annual conference. |
IndustryWeek March 1, 2008 David Blanchard |
Manufacturing Is Not For the Faint at Heart -- IndustryWeek's 2008 Salary Survey Comments When asked to comment on the state of the industry, manufacturing managers throughout the United States share a common concern that the odds seem to be stacked against them. |
Home Toys December 2003 |
Selecting an Electrical Contractor What to do when it is time for the "wire to meet the walls" |
Food Processing January 2005 Mike Pehanich |
Where has the engineering talent gone? A decade of downsizing -- and outsourcing -- has sent former food industry innovators to engineering firms -- where anybody can hire them. In the meantime, small entrepreneurial firms have been filling in the design and fabrication gaps for food processing companies. |
Food Engineering February 1, 2005 Jim Getchell |
Engineering Brain Drain? New Strategies for Coping Does the food industry still have the engineering competencies to deliver innovation and great bottom line results? It's business challenges are as intense as ever, and the winners will be the ones who can uncover the keys to successfully converting the opportunities to real business results. |
IndustryWeek March 1, 2007 David Blanchard |
Manufacturing's Biggest Challenges -- IndustryWeek's 2007 Salary Survey Responses If you come to work everyday worrying about global competition, finding and keeping skilled labor, raw material shortages, and the quality of your product, you're not alone. |
Food Engineering May 1, 2006 Sal Spada |
Control Management: Extending supply chain visibility Smarter use of information can help optimize everything from line changeovers to quality control. |
Food Processing October 2010 |
MRO Q&A: Why Do Good Plants Go Down? From a macro perspective the top three major shutdown threats for a food plant could be summarized as: a catastrophic event, a facility's internal operational failure or a facility's external operational failure. |
IndustryWeek March 16, 2011 Tim Dumond |
Time for a Supplier Health Check Make sure your suppliers are up to the challenge of increased responsibilities. |
Commercial Investment Real Estate May/Jun 2008 Barry B. LePatner |
Construction Chaos In this age of economic uncertainty, when the stakes are higher, it's time to re-evaluate accepted concepts of how construction projects are carried out. |
IndustryWeek February 1, 2006 John Teresko |
Learning From Toyota -- Again While U.S. manufacturers in many sectors have used practices from the Toyota Production System to boost performance substantially since the mid-'80s, they have used it improperly, experts say. |
Food Processing September 2007 Mike Pehanich |
The changing fortunes of food manufacturing The food industry may not be ready for lights-out automation, but some next-generation manufacturing models are taking hold. |
Food Engineering June 1, 2008 Kevin T. Higgins |
Tech Update: Post-Production Solutions The integrated-plant concept works great, up until the finished product is filled. Machines may do the repetitive tasks, but coordinated activity remains elusive. |
IndustryWeek April 21, 2010 Peter Alpern |
Quality Gains Through a Virtual World Ford designs and assembles its entire fleet using virtual manufacturing, bridging the gap between product engineering and mass production. |
Food Engineering July 18, 2006 Kevin T. Higgins |
Standardization: The next frontier Standardized parts could lower costs and inventory requirements, but food-plant maintenance teams aren't interested in just rock-bottom options. |
Food Engineering August 1, 2008 Kevin T. Higgins |
Training: The Ultimate Plant Optimization Tool Degreed engineers certainly are needed, but the need for technically savvy operators and maintenance professionals is even greater. |
IndustryWeek January 19, 2011 |
Rockwell Collins Accelerates With Lean Engineering Streamlined product-development processes cut cycle times, reduce time-to-market. |
Commercial Investment Real Estate Mar/Apr 2007 Korda & Chan |
Construction Plans Sponsors and owners considering financing the construction of commercial real estate projects need to know how lenders evaluate a project's overall risk. Such understanding increases the likelihood that a developer's application for financing will be approved. |
IndustryWeek January 1, 2007 Traci Purdum |
Supplier Collaboration Lowers Costs Manufacturers tap suppliers' expertise to lower packaging and raw materials costs. |
HBS Working Knowledge July 5, 2004 Jonathan Byrnes |
Manage Your Suppliers as a Resource Your suppliers can be your most valuable hidden resource. If your supplier management function sets its sights on innovation and value creation, you can find a clear pathway to success. |
Food Engineering April 1, 2005 Kevin T. Higgins |
Package Pizzazz Meets Real-Life Processing New-look containers and packages with enhanced functionality are pouring out of R&D labs, but turning them into production-friendly containers is where the rubber meets the road. |
IndustryWeek November 17, 2010 |
Bringing Digital Sense to a Global Enterprise While the world has grown smaller thanks to technology and globalization, it's also challenged companies to tighten their alignment on departments separated by oceans and cultures. |
IndustryWeek June 1, 2002 Tim Stevens |
Factories Of The Future -- Integrated Product Development Leading-edge manufacturers such as DaimlerChrysler, Johnson Controls and General Motors have united the islands of product development and production through carefully crafted systems that connect core functions with one another and with the supply chain... |
Job Journal March 28, 2004 Rich Heintz |
Demand for Engineers Building Demand remains firm for many engineering specialties. Includes a list of websites that are useful to job seekers. |
IndustryWeek August 1, 2008 Nick Zubko |
The Do-It-Yourself Guide Is it always cheaper to farm it out, or should some things stay in-house? Here are six ways to help crack the "make or buy" mystery. |
IndustryWeek November 1, 2001 Tim Stevens |
View From On High IndustryWeek's survey of upper-level manufacturing executives shows what makes top-performing companies tick... |
IndustryWeek December 16, 2009 Peter Alpern |
Getting Leaner at the Design Stage Software can help reduce inefficiencies by optimizing processes at the earliest stages, when revisions are least expensive. |
IndustryWeek May 1, 2004 John Teresko |
Lean, Green & Smart What's in store for tomorrow's factories? Process intelligence tools, outmaneuvering costly regulations and machine tools that learn their lessons well. |
IndustryWeek April 1, 2002 Doug Bartholomew |
The Big Squeeze Small and midsize manufacturers say price-cut mandates and online reverse auctions compromise quality and endanger their businesses. Supporters of the practices say the strongest suppliers will survive, making supply chains more efficient... |
Job Journal May 13, 2007 |
Career Snapshot: Civil & Structural Engineers California's crumbling infrastructure adds to a growing demand for civil and structural engineers. |
Pharmaceutical Executive September 1, 2008 |
How Do You Solve a Problem Like Manufacturing? Outsourcing saves pharmaceutical companies money -- except when it doesn't. Here's how to decide what to do. |
IndustryWeek March 1, 2009 David Blanchard |
IndustryWeek's 2009 Salary Survey Comments on Manufacturing at the Crossroads One thing all manufacturing managers seem to agree on is that things are tough out there, and getting tougher. |
National Defense August 2004 Zylstra & Thompson |
`Virtual Supply Chains' Could Help Bridge Manufacturing Gaps The Defense Department has immediate needs for thousands of products for which no domestic supplier can be found. |
IndustryWeek April 1, 2002 Jill Jusko |
Procurement -- Not All Dollars And Cents Despite the downswing in the economy, manufacturers continue to strive for collaborative procurement partnerships... |
Food Engineering October 1, 2008 Kevin T. Higgins |
Packaging Trends Study With customers demanding less material waste and manufacturing looking for ways to trim transportation costs, the trend toward sustainable packaging is gathering momentum. |
IndustryWeek December 16, 2010 |
Balancing Product Cost and Innovation How manufacturing leaders are making cost management part of the fabric of a company's operations and innovation efforts. |