Interesting insights from the inside of the company.
> December 9, 1998 > > Today, I and approximately 64 other guests had breakfast with Harry > Stonecipher. We were able to spend two hours in a question answer format > with him. He was cordial and humorous. Harry answered each question in the > fashion some have come to hate, head on and at times brutally frank. > > Harry started by telling us he was given instruction to tell us what his > job is and what he is trying to do and that he does not follow directions > very well. > > When Phil and Harry met to discuss merging, Phil drew one box (used > fingers in air to define a box) and placed both our names in it. Raising > the left hand as a fist, 'this will not be a Harry, then raising the right > hand as as fist, 'and a Phil show'. One show one box one task. > > Evolution has separated our job responsibilities. Phil is looking to the > future and goes west to deal with customers e.g. Asia. I work much of the > daily activities and go east to deal with customers, e.g. Europe. > > We are trying to change the Company. I get lots of e-mail asking me, > 'what are you doing. Don't you know you are changing the company'. This > makes me want to jump up and scream yes (Harry said yes very loudly and > created some crackle in the speakers). That is right we are trying to > change the company. > > We hear people say I am part of the Boeing Family or the McDonnell-Douglas > Family or the North American Rockwell Family. Well we do not want a > family we want a team. A family embraces, supports, and says its OK to > you, no matter what the circumstances are. Good and bad make little > difference. With a team, performance of every member is important. 'I do > not think very many Chicago Bulls players consider Dennis Rodman part of > the family'. Phil Jackson said the team needs a re-bounder. So the team > went out a got the best re-bounder in the league. The team put > requirements ahead of personality. As long as Dennis performs he will be > on the team. Harry asked us if we thought Dennis would be around long if > his performance fell off. As we responded Harry made a fist with his > thumb sticking out and brought his arm back in a throw him out gesture. > > If a family is created by the team and performance is high, great. > > We want Boeing to be in the top quartile as measured against 30 companies. > To get there we need 7% return on sales. Harry has looked at the books > from 1959 through 1997. We have never had a 7% return. To get there > every segment of the company must perform with double digit returns. > Commercial Airplane needs 13 to 15 % and Space and Communication needs 10 > to 13 %. We have a lot of work to do. As you all know we have changed > the team. > > At 7:22 we moved to the question and Answer section. > > Yes TWA has agreed to buy 50 and take 50 options on the 717. However, > they have also agreed to buy A318's. > > The sine wave, the cyclical nature of our business. After the mergers we > are 60 percent commercial and 40 percent other. The commercial down turn > is looking deep and should be short. > > The question was about the leveling of the sine wave through the merger > and the ability to move people and equipment. When we increase production > from 18 to 51 planes per month we need lots of people. When we decrease > production from 51 we need to let people go. We do not want the cost of > moving equipment. We do need to move people. We have customers in 140 > countries. > > The revenues for our business appear to be flat for the foreseeable > future. We need productivity improvement of 4 to 6 percent. The closer > to 6 the better. Flat revenues and increased productivity means a need > for fewer people. Our attrition rate is pretty close to the productivity > improvement rate. > > Airbus assembles planes with a lot fewer people. We have a huge > propulsion staff. Airbus has a very small staff. We use the same engine > suppliers. > > We have ridden the government subsidy horse to death. Our customers are > telling us something different. > > People ask me why I am down on Boeing. 'If I were down on Boeing I would > not be here'. 'I can work anywhere'. > > Harry used the word appalled when describing his opinion of the financial > system. He went on to describe the process of hiring the new CFO, Deborah > Hopkins, and her back ground and why she will fit with Boeing. We have > good financial reporting. That is because the government requires it. > The other side is management of information systems. We have made good > progress on sensitivity to finance. > > It is ridiculous that we do not know how much profit we make on each plane > as we deliver it to the customer. > > A question about Harry's typical work week was next. After a short > chuckle he said there is no typical work week. He quickly described the > past 9 days of his schedule. He started with Sunday and ended with > December 9. He did point out some specifics. A meeting with the single > largest share holder, an analyst meeting in New York, flights to Germany, > back to Seattle then on to Washington DC. December 9, started with this > breakfast and ended with 6 PM interview with a reporter. I got the > feeling the easiest and best part of his 10-day schedule was meeting with > us. > > The share holders and analysts are not too kind right now. Many people > have lost lots of money. The meeting with 200 analysts in New York was > brief and intense. I was stopped in the hall and lectured by one analyst. > He used quite a bit of foul language. One thing we tell the analysts is > that we are engaged with our customers, unions, employees and share > holders. Several high level executives went with me to Europe. I took > these people so they could hear first hand from the customers. We had > meetings with customers and analysts in Germany. The 757-300 was on hand > to show the customers. > > Other than the financial issues customer service is something to work on. > I have not met with one satisfied customer since I got here. > > No sense of urgency. > > Customer concerns: > 1. Quality > 2. Lack of responsiveness > 3. Lack of engagement. > 4. Employees with no answers or authority. > > Example. Niki Lauda of Lauda Air. The subject is Paint. What is it that > says I cannot get any closer than 10 feet to look at a paint job. > > My wife and I were invited to ILFC 25th anniversary celebration. They > have purchased or leased 1000 Boeing airplanes. They were are largest > customer last year. They are not happy. We were invited to the > President's home for dinner and everything was fine until we sat down. > Then I heard 1.5 hours of what is wrong with Boeing. Not just delivering > late but poor communication about it; the airlines have scheduled crews > and even sold tickets. Then we tell them three weeks before delivery the > plane won't be ready, which puts them in a bind. We've not been very > smart. > > Life Long Learning > Over 50 percent of Boeing employees have a post high school degree. We > have increased spending on education from 30 to 52 million dollars. We > are emulating the GE processes for a learning center, which is outside of > St. Louis and for an employee selection process to specific levels of > management. We have hired the number two person from the GE Learning > Center to run our program. > > 2016 is not here, but we are taking steps to get there. > > The next question asked about the defense customer satisfaction. DoD and > NASA are not very happy customers. NASA is upset because we will not > build the high speed civil transport, HSCT. The HSCT is not cost > effective. Some CEO's have asked us about building the plane. I ask a > few simple questions > How many of you let employees fly first class? > How many of you let employees fly on the Concord? > These CEO's say, "well, it is supposed to cost the same". Let's not kid > ourselves. We are in the business of defying gravity. A balloon is the > cheapest way and the HCST is the most expensive way. > > The C-17 is delivering 60-75 days ahead of schedule. The customer is very > happy. This program may even be the favorite of the DoD. C-17 is truly a > well run program. One thing we did different was to put our foot down. > We picked a plane and said this plane will not move until all scheduled > work is complete. Prior to this we were as much as one year behind > schedule for delivery. > > How to effectively make a cultural change > I make the assumption that everyone is in their position because they > contribute but I try to move them in the way I want them to go. I work > hard at changing people. If that doesn't work, I change the people. Not > chop off people's heads, but ultimately you have to decide where you're > going. I'll change the people. > > Here is another example of e-mail. Many people think my e-mail is > screened. Well it is not. I see and read it all. One went like this, "I > thought we were going to be one company. If we are one company why can't > we all park in the garage" (There is an underground parking garage at > Plant 2). > > Unions > We have a better than ever relationship with the IAM and UAW. I think we > have met with the national leaders four times since the merger. The > biggest issue in Puget Sound is flexible and non-standard work schedules. > We have processes that run around the clock, much like a steel mill or > chemical plant. > > The next question talked about computers used to design products and will > we have one system in the company. Yes, we will have one computing design > system. Unigraphics and CATIA are good. They each have their strengths > and weaknesses. Neither does everything we want it too. Lets be real > when we are talking about who's OX will be gored here. Once again > everything around here takes the gestation period of an elephant. > > We use outside economists too. Each economist has his own interpretation > of where things are going and how fast. We do our best to get the best > people to help us build the best plans. > > Tolerating mediocrity does not work. > > Airbus builds planes with a lot fewer people. Why do we have this > standing army. We must learn to do things differently. Everybody thinks > we have a production problem. We have an engineering problem. We average > 8 engineers in the factory for each plane being assembled. We need to get > this to one engineer per shift per plane. Customers are complaining that > we are not letting them make changes. In reality most changes are caused > by us. The changes are to fix things we did not do right the first time. > We have done a good job on the computer aided design. We Flunked the > course on computer aided manufacturing. We have 12,000 people in Renton. > How many work in final assembly? 1600 mechanics. The question is not how > can we build 620 airplanes next year with fewer people? It is how come we > have so many people to build 550 this year? > > Harry says people in BCA do not care about cost. Does that make you mad? > It makes people mad and I don't care. We are building the 747 today the > same way we did 30 years ago. To get cost down we need to manufacture > differently. Radios and appliances are not made the same way today that > they were 10 years ago. It will change again. Has anyone been to Tulsa? > Well, I have and we are hand drilling for nut plate installations there. > This is not cost effective. > > The mechanics want to fix the problems but they are suffering from fatigue > and from not being listened too. Overtime of 8-9% is built in. They > expect it. A plan for the next several years was presented to me and it > included 8% overtime. I was told that the 8% is what we typically work. > Not a good plan. We need to wean them of overtime. > > The Turks have a saying. Pull on the rope as hard as you can, but don't > break it. > Of course I am frank, brutal, etc. Phil and I are trying to excite > people, to energize you to change. Be a change agent. We should be > raising 49 kinds of hell about that. Somebody said, "It's too tough"! We > need tough people who are ready to beard the line. I'm doing it from the > top. There is nobody sitting on top of the cow that isn't having a tough > time. It's a "Harry" problem! We'll have problems until we get the place > together. > > To put the 747 together, we'll have to start back farther with pieces that > go together. It's a patchwork quilt. The people building it are good but > no one will listen to them and they're getting frustrated. Bureaucracy is > grinding us to death. > > Our people are good but nobody will listen. You won't find a better > intellectual group of people. Our arrogance and denial will not help us > be the best. > > Price is not the problem, cost is. We will loose money on the first 800 > NG 737's. > > GE made engineering responsible for cost. Today we have manufacturing > saying, "you design the part, don't bug me". Then the engineer says, "I > designed the part, you build it, don't bug me". With engineering > responsible for cost there will be interest in building the cheapest way > that meets the requirements. Our engineering organization is anxious to > try this. It is working well at GE. > > Today I am pushing castings. We have improved manufacturing and > inspection processes to the point where castings may save us money over a > machined part. Materials are better and we can inspect to find the > impurities in the casting. Intellectual power in the Boeing company is in > fine stripes. We need to broaden the view > > Our people are efficient. Why do we have too many? Walk the production > line in Renton. It's not the most active place I've ever seen. You need > to draw stripes on the floor to see if people are moving. Renton has > 12,000 people, 1600 are touching the airplane. > > Harry was asked if he felt overwhelmed. The overwhelming part is getting > 2000 people to stop arguing and go make the change. > > Many St. Louis people came out to look at the Lean Manufacturing > activities. When Mike Sears returned to St. Louis he pulled 'Norma > Clayton' off of her assignment and set her up to provide the tools for > Lean in St. Louis. We have pockets working all over the place. We need > more pockets. We need standardized ways to measure ourselves. > > The operating plan has been reviewed. The measurement tools are changing. > Measures for incentive have been soft. David Swain of Phantom Works has > the assignment to spread best practices across the company. Fifty percent > of his score is in making this happen. > > A brief discussion was had on measurements to drive the company. We are > on the way to using earned value and measuring processes. There will be > five finance measures plus employee satisfaction, customer satisfaction, > process counsels, and safety. Each of these will be multiplied by a > factor between .8 and 1.2. The factor is determined based on performance. > The person being measured does not pick which factor to use. > > The balance of our time with Harry was spent on future business. Every > time we have failed, it was because we did not know the customer. We can > probably build the best wind mills in the world, but we do not understand > utilities. We can build rail cars but we don't understand railroads. We > do not want to get into the consumer side of communication. Instead we > want only to build the satellites and launch systems. Companies dealing > with the consumer side make money by knowing when to get out. Cable > companies have been working this way for years. Look at the McCaws. > > There will be some transatlantic mergers and yes our competitors will be > involved in these. It is a world economy. Things are different today. > > Look! What do you think the St. Louis reaction would be if we said we > will build F-18's in Turkey? Most said they would like it. What do you > think the reaction in Renton would be if we said we are going to build > 737's in Turkey. Consensus was, no way. Harry went on to say St. Louis > would be happy to build F-18's in Turkey. He also agreed with us on the > Renton response. We sold 64 F-18's to Finland. All but 7 will be build > in Finland. However, all the kits for the planes come from St. Louis. We > also build Apaches in Britain and a couple other countries. > > One last note. Airbus partners delivery fully stuffed sections, > structures, systems, and interiors, to be connected at final assembly. We > build the 737 NG almost identically to the first 707's. > > I left the meeting with the feeling that we have a long way to go toward > making this company the best it can be and that we are on the right path. > Not all decisions will be to our liking. It is difficult to step back and > look at the big picture. The picture is much bigger today and this > requires stepping further back to see it all. > > Thank you for your time. |