Rapid innovation yields 30 percent market share gain
Autocar, LLC
Siemens PLM Software technology helps a small company
deliver custom refuse trucks within six to eight weeks of receiving an
order, a feat its larger competitors can’t match
Every day is trash day
A t Autocar, every day is trash day,
because the company’s sole focus is building refuse trucks – the best
Class 8 low cab forward (LCF) trucks in the business. This singularity
of purpose is a claim none of its competitors can make. Autocar trucks
feature industry leading innovations such as improved ergonomic cabs,
integrated controls and an unsurpassed body-chassis interface. The
company has exclusive agreements to use Cummins engines and Allison
transmissions, as well as a rapidly expanding nationwide service
network that now includes Cummins distributorships.
Autocar is a
small operation that competes against much larger companies.
Management’s goal is to remain lean and responsive while capturing
market share from their bigger competitors. “What Autocar tries to do
is maintain a small organization that can be dynamic and respond faster
than our competition to the end users,” says Bill Dolesh, vice
president of engineering at Autocar. The company has been remarkably
successful at this, having doubled the sales of its Xpeditor trucks in
the past two years and increased its market share from about 12 percent
when current management took over three years ago to more than 40
percent today. The company’s ranking in the LCF truck market has gone
from third to second in three years, and it’s looking like Autocar will
capture the number-one position soon.
Autocar credits product
lifecycle management (PLM) technology from Siemens PLM Software, a
global division of Siemens Automation and Drives (A&D), for much of
this success. The company relies on the NX® design automation system
and the Teamcenter® digital lifecycle management solution for the
ability to develop innovative solutions to customers’ needs in a time
frame its competitors can’t match.
“We came in against major
players, companies that are much larger than we are,” explains Stephen
Rhodes, Autocar’s manager of engineering services. “Technology from
Siemens PLM Software has provided us with the tools and the open
architecture to integrate our business systems so that we can win
market share from these larger manufacturers. Autocar is known in the
industry for meeting customer requirements in extremely short lead
times. I have to give most of the credit for this to the Siemens PLM
Software technology that enables us to do this.”
Escaping the Bermuda Triangle

The
Siemens PLM Software solution replaced a previous product information
management process that was so ineffective that some referred to it as
the Bermuda
Triangle. It was a combination of three computer
applications that didn’t talk to each other or share data. Users had to
jump from a program that managed sales orders to another that managed
engineering data, to a third that handled the manufacturing aspect of
the business. Autocar personnel weren’t the only ones frustrated by
this system. Suppliers were on occasion frustrated as well, because
they may have gotten the wrong information and delivered the wrong
parts. “Those systems and their inability to communicate were going to
destroy our company before it even got started,” says Jim Johnston,
Autocar’s president.
Build documents were another problem. These
were thick stacks of paper (200 to 300 pages/truck) that followed the
trucks down t
he assembly line. Supervisors literally came in to work an
hour early to print the build documents needed for the day. This
process became too cumbersome when the company began selling more
trucks. “As our volume increased, we realized that this approach wasn’t
going to work any longer,” recalls Bill Swartz, plant manager.
Autocar
replaced the Bermuda Triangle with a tightly integrated system
consisting of NX software, Teamcenter software, an ERP system and an
order configuration program. “Unlike our previous process where the
applications functioned separately, these systems talk to each other on
an almost real-time basis,” explains Autocar IT manager, Pieter Smith.
“For example, Teamcenter gets requests and orders from the order
configuration system. It sends bills of materials back to the ERP
system. Engineering changes are continuously monitored and sent to all
the different functions.”
All design and engineering work,
including conceptual design, takes place in NX. Autocar has taken
advantage of many advanced features of NX, as well as its integration
with Teamcenter, to create a highly automated design process. “One of
the biggest concerns of our industry is the high degree of
customization of each truck,” says Rhodes. “There are many possible
combinations of features, and we must be able to ensure that the
options we combine are going to work together. NX Knowledge Fusion has
allowed us to build that information into our bill of materials, which
ensures that we don’t have collisions between components. This takes a
lot of the guesswork out of juggling the huge number of options for any
given truck. It makes it almost simple. With NX, all that knowledge is
built into the system. This also allows me to move different people in
and out of design positions without having to worry about losing design
expertise.”
Another example of the automation Autocar has
achieved is how customer requirements are used to drive the design
process. The order configuration system gathers the customer’s
requirements at the dealers. This sales information is sent to the
Teamcenter database, which looks at how the combination of options has
been handled in the past. “At least ninety percent of the time, this
information flows the design straight through our engineering data
management system to our NX CAD system and on into our ERP system with
very little human intervention at all, leaving no room for error,”
Rhodes says. “When we do have a unique circumstance where the customer
has requested a unique option, for example, the systems allow us to
notify the right people about what’s needed. This allows us to respond
to that request in a timely manner. It’s a seamless integration of
customer requirements through to final delivery of the product.”
Paperless build documents
Autocar
has achieved something other automakers have been dreaming about for
years – paperless build documents. “On the shop floor, paper work is
minimal, because we now have a system where operators can log in to
Teamcenter and view, in real time, drawings and bills of material,”
explains Mike Goodpaster, production supervisor at Autocar.
“If
an employee doesn’t know what a part looks like, they can click on a
part number,” Goodpaster continues. “The system has instant access to
our inventory, so we know where all the parts are. With information
being so immediately available, there is almost no down time.
Teamcenter is a big part of the reason we now build 10 trucks a day.
It’s not that we’ve just sped up the line. Quality has gone up too,
because any questions the operators have are quickly answered.”
Autocar’s
plant manager, Bill Swartz, sees an additional reason for the quality
improvement – the improved access to information that Teamcenter
provides for management. “The big thing with this system is that our
managers in materials and production can all instantly track a truck,”
Swartz says. “They know what parts we don’t have and need to order, for
instance, and they know the status of the truck at all times. This
system enables us to build a better quality vehicle.”
Johnston,
Autocar’s president, particularly values the way this new system
supports innovation. “Being small, it is crucial to us that we
innovate, and we must have tools that allow us to do that quickly,” he
says. “Using Siemens PLM Software technology, we completely redesigned
the entire truck in only three years. We went from two engine
configurations to seven. We have new axles, new transmissions, new
suspensions and a complete new back of the cab, along with a whole new
process. The interior is new, as is the electrical system. Everything
on the truck except the external sheet metal is new. This is the kind
of innovation you can do quickly using technology from Siemens PLM
Software.”
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