For many job shops, the RFQ (request for quote) is a crucial building block in winning new clients and building long-term customer partnerships as Frank Russo, CEO of fabricating.com rightfully states. Amongst other factors, price and time are obviously the two prevailing criteria that determine the success of a RFQ submission in terms of winning the deal. This blog post deals with the time dimension "time", and provides job shops with strategies of how to achieve a faster RFQ - with "faster" pointing in two directions: (a) how to complete a RFQ faster and (b) how to make more confident commitments for a faster shipment of the requested scope of delivery.
We all have heard the saying "time is money". For a couple of reasons, this saying should be more than a mantra for job shops (honestly, it should be the mantra).
Overall, a fast and reliable response to an RFQ helps you build the perception of running an effective shop.
So, now that it is clear that a faster RFQ fulfillment will be truly beneficial for you (a must!), you might wonder how to actually get this done. Well, my answer to this is: with a proper job shop scheduling software.
Here is why: One of the crucial tasks of getting the RFQ together is to determine the delivery time that you can commit to for the requested scope of supply. This calculation has to take into account your resource availability, your capacity utilization through other jobs, priorities, time-related restrictions such as delivery dates of your suppliers as well as the impacts that squeezing this job in will have on other jobs (i.e. giving it a comparably high priority). Solving this puzzle can become quite difficult and cumbersome, especially doing it in your head, on a whiteboard or even with a homegrown Excel-based scheduling system.
Guess what: Determining the expected delivery time of a new order, while taking into account all of the above considerations is exactly what a proper scheduling system should do.
As job shop, you typically contribute to a much broader supply chain. The fact that a large manufacturing or engineering company tasked you with providing a piece for this supply chain tells you that you have a certain skillset that they don't. Instead of building this expertise by themselves (I assume they would have the money and means to do so) they rely on you to provide the requested piece in time, quality and budget.
Hence, you become a crucial element in that larger supply chain; one that your customer can control less easy than its own resources. In addition, the leverage you have on that entire supply chain is much higher than the value of your delivery. You have become the critical cog in the customer's wheel of revenue. From your customers' standpoint, the (financial) risk of having you as a part of their supply chain will become smaller the earlier they receive your delivery (because from then on they will have everything under their own control again). This means, the faster you are able to deliver, and the more reliable and firm your delivery time commitment is, the higher the chancesare that you will get the order.
What do you think you can do to potentially decrease your delivery times and to commit to a tight deliver timeframe with higher confidence? My answer should not surprise you.
Utilize a proper job shop scheduling software.
A scheduling system which is tailored towards the characteristics of a job shop, when used correctly, should prove to be very useful when it comes to improving the factor "time" in your request-for-quote submissions. This is especially true if this system is explicitly built to facilitate the use case of keeping delivery times under control.
My offer for you: Find out for yourself by trying out our just plan it software and seeing how it copes with the above ideas. You are cordially welcome to sign up for a free 30 days trial and give it a try. We do not ask you for your credit card when you test the software. But we are happy to give you free-of-charge support and consulting during the trial if you reach out and ask. Let's go!