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Infor LX Tips, Infor LN Tips, BPCS Tips, Baan Tips, Infor M3 Tips & Infor ERP News

Crossroads Connections

Infor ERP Tips & News from the Experts

Infor LX | Infor LN | BPCS | Baan | Infor M3

Anthony Etzel- Featured Speaker at inPower 2019

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Infor IDF is replacing green screens for inquiries and release LX 8.4 for file maintenance. This session will show you how to use IDF over your non-LX file. 
 

Many Companies have IDF and are not effectively using it. This session will cover:

  • Building a business object (Intergrator) 
    • How to create a logical expression
    • How to make a field a maintainable field with IDF
  • Views 
    • How to create custom views
    • How to navigate in IDF and create search subsets

Pushing Forward In the Face of Adversity. Soundview recently suffered a major loss when fire struck on January 30, 2019.

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Soundview Paper lost their main building when disaster struck. This building housed offices, their computer center and part of their manufacturing facility. The loss including hardware, networks, system data backups, etc. Crossroads RMC was contacted immediately to assist in the recovery of their BPCS V6 system. With limited backups and a full team effort, Crossroads RMC assisted in the acquisition of new hardware and are currently in the midst of helping to bring their system back to life. Soundview has secured support from various partners to make all this happen, and we are privileged to be part of the team. A lot of work has been done so far, but we have a long road ahead. Users will soon regain access by the end of this week,  and as required, Crossroads RMC will provide the necessary consulting support from our LX team to get Soundview back up and running. We are communicating with them daily, as we work thru this process.

BPCS/LX Tip of the Week: Facility Period Close

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The Facility Period Close process, as introduced in Infor LX 8.3.4, was designed to function interactively. 

The expectation was that clients with a continuous or 24-hour worldwide operation in multiple facilities would submit the Period End Close jobs for each facility as daily operations ceased or shifts ended for each facility. This process was designed to function interactively so that validations of users performing transactions that conflicted with period end processing, and resulting messages, were immediately sent to the period end user. 

This enhancement provides a batch mode for the Facility Period Close (INV930) process and allows the Update IIM Inventory from IWI (INV931) process to be submitted from the INV930B program. The enhancement also provides a batch mode for the INV931 process. For example, a user has a 24-hour operation in facilities around the world, but a centralized IT operation. With this enhancement the user can submit the individual facilities to be closed to a batch process that can be managed by a scheduler, automatically releasing each facility to be closed at a predetermined time.

Flexfab Expands Their Use of Crossroads RMC Data Collection for All LN Installations Globally

Data Collection News

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Flexfab Horizons International, Inc, a global leader in the manufacture of high performance silicone and other advanced polimer products, has made the decision to expand their use of Crossroads RMC’s Data Collection Solution, RMC3, to their China location. The initial implementations in Nottinghamshire, UK and the United States took place in 2018, and the China implementation is expected to be completed by Q2 of 2019. All installations focus on improvements in warehouse management in Infor LN. Applications implemented include Receiving, Inspections/Approvals, Putaway, Stock Transfers and Stock Inquiry.

Crossroads RMC partnered with Electrolux Corporation to Connect Baan IVc4 to Vertex 8.0 (O Series)

Vertex Q to Vertex O… the ABC’s of tying this to Baan IV

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Crossroads RMC partnered with Electrolux Corporation to Connect Baan IVc4 to Vertex 8.0 (O Series), and was able to successfully complete this project in under 3 months. This project was completed using Crossroads RMCconnector as a web service to read the Vertex tax data and pass the information back into Baan for further processing. Triggers were created to handle the following processes:

  • Sales Order Lines
  • Print/Reprint Order Acknowledgement
  • Print Sales Invoice (Both compose and final)
  • Purchase Order Lines
  • Purchase order Acknowledgement
  • Purchase Order invoice
  • Manual Finance Invoice (Compose, print and post)
  • Post Integration transactions
  • Finalize batch

Nazdaq has released Version 3.0 of B2Win Suite

Partner News

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New Release of B2Win Suite: Format customer reports, email documents to your suppliers and customers, and more! 

New features – B2Win Suite - You are no longer limited to the data that comes from your canned reports! You can now add new columns to your already existing reports in Excel, based on SQL commands that bring additional data from any database (ERP or other), based on values from the report.

Existing Nazdaq customers should contact us to learn how we can convert your software to the latest and greatest Nazdaq product suite!

For more information: watch our webinar:

Webinar Recording: 48:18

Crossroads is proud to work with Johnson Crushers International on their LN re-implementation to 10.6

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Johnson Crushers International (JCI), a global leader in engineering and manufacturing full lines of cone crushers, horizontal and incline vibrating screens and track-mounted, portable and stationary crushing and screening plants, has selected Crossroads RMC to help them re-implement Infor LN on 10.6.  JCI’s main objectives with this project are to support their continued growth, align and standardize their business processes, and enable a continuous improvement effort to drive additional value to the business. Go live is expected to occur in early Q1 of 2020.

Baan/LN Tip of the Week: Warehouse Material Movement / Problems With the Inventory Structure Table (whinr150)

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This has come up as an issue during various stages of warehouse material movements – transfers, outbounds, shipments. We have seen it right up to 10.4. The inventory structure table (whinr150) becomes a problem. The error points to that table, but users are lost as to how to fix it.

In the session Units by Unit Set many companies let the field Storage default to Yes. If the UOM is not intended to be used in inventory then that setting should be No. 

If an item is purchased in UOM different from the inventory unit and the setting is Yes then LN adds a record in that UOM to the inventory structure table. It is that record that causes problem later.

The session has an option to change the value of the storage field. Specific > Convert Use for Storage. This option works both ways and will correct all inventory in the UOM range. 

Should a user receive an error that references inventory structure table then the solution is to check that session to see if an odd UOM exists in it. If so use the Convert Use for Storage to correct the problem.

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Tips:  LX | BPCS | M3

Tips: LN | Baan

Anthony Etzel
/ Categories: Tales from the Road

New Definition of Insanity: Collect data the same old way

Just because you've always done it this way doesn't mean it's the best way. The old way of doing things may get the job done, but is the job being performed efficiently, accurately, and on a timely basis?

Are you stuck in manual?

People resist change. There is an element of fear behind change: having to learn something new. Sometimes it’s just that you’re comfortable with how things are done, and you don’t see the need to make any changes. Think about this: as time goes on, different methods have been established to improve how things are done. Let’s take for example drilling a hole into a piece of wood. The old way would have been with a manual hand ratchet and drill bit. The new way is with a power drill. Because the new way required less effort than the old way, the new way was adopted and the old way was done away with. The goal was to drill a hole. With the manual method, the hole may not have been drilled straight and the number of holes drilled in one hour would have been significantly less than the number of the holes drilled with the power drill. So, then, are you stuck in manual?


Time-Saving Tools do help – everything

In manufacturing today, changes are always being made. New computer systems are installed, new software applications are implemented.  CAD systems are used, and a variety of other time-saving tools have been adopted into the design engineering arena. On the production floor, the new equipment has been installed that is more efficient and allows products to be produced faster. Technology is rapidly changing. Manufacturing equipment often times are controlled with computer-assisted programs. This would eliminate the need for someone to manually set up the equipment. Think of the many ways your business could benefit by reducing the time it takes to perform critical tasks.

The Problem with: “We’ve-always-done-it-this-way” kind of thinking

In the warehouse, the use of barcodes and handheld laser scanners has been adopted, eliminating the need to handwrite and record inventory transactions. But what about what goes on with regard to how information is collected and communicated to the shop floor?

It appears as though the old methods of making copies of drawings, copies of shop packets, and manual labor tickets continue to be the norm. The reason is that we’ve always done it this way. Perhaps supervisors and managers feel as though they have better control of managing the paper trail. However, with any paper-based system, you are subject to errors. You rely upon your employee properly following the paperwork and filling out what activities have been completed along with the duration of time it took to complete those activities. How accurate is the time that is recorded? The time recorded is usually the employee’s best guess, or what they believe the standard amount of time should be. Labor tickets are subject to error first through the legibility of the handwriting. Second, the labor tickets would be keyed in to the system and errors can happen with data entry. Have you thought about the cost to your organization to fix errors?  

…One time a manufacturer thought they had their labor costs under control until one day the labor activity for a routine job almost tripled. By the time they discovered this, it was too late, and the entire job ran with significant labor overages. The problem could have been addressed with a simple task to watch and record the production activity in a real-time mode. They needed an automated way to monitor activity before a small problem turned into a big cost and a loss for the job.
 

Poor performance indicators make for poor outcomes

Companies today continue to tolerate and accept how labor and production information is recorded. The reliability of that information is questionable. In addition to collecting labor and production information, there are many other pieces of information manually recorded from the shop floor. A critical element of information for productivity throughput would be to examine how much time the work center or machine was actually up and running. Downtime is another critical element of data that is usually manually recorded along with a reason identifying what caused production to stop. If this information is not provided on a timely and accurate basis, then what good is it anyway? Forms are filled out, data may or may not be keyed to a spreadsheet, the forms are sorted and filed, but is anybody really looking at the information that was recorded? Think about the amount of time it takes to manage the manual collection of information from your shop floor. What would real-time access to data mean to your organization?

Benefits:

1.  Real-Time Production Visibility

2.  Reduced Paperwork Load

3.  Downtime and Scrap Visibility

4.  WIP Inventory Visibility

5.  Improve Efficiency, Capacity Utilization


How to get technology that will preserve your sanity

There are easier and more efficient ways to manage shop floor information. One of the best ways to communicate and report information from the shop floor is by utilizing a Manufacturing Execution System (MES). Manufacturing Execution Systems provide a paperless approach to the information required on the shop floor. Factory workers can check a screen for instructions, review drawings, and perhaps even watch a video. The factory worker just touches the screen to indicate the job that is being worked on. It is easy to report what was produced, what was scrapped, and how much downtime may have occurred.

Back to “we have always done it this way”…

I know of many manufacturing companies where the employees maintain a logbook of all of their activities in the event they are challenged on any of the time that they have submitted. With an MES solution, the logbooks can be done away with, and employees can maintain and see an electronic log showing their transactions. Transaction history can be made available showing activities as far back as you want to show. Once a factory worker fully understands how easy it is to use an MES solution, they will never want to go back to the old way of using paper and pencil again. Your organization can now take advantage of the “new way” and become more efficient as a result.
 

6 powerful steps to win with automation:

1. Eliminate paper shop packet and distribution of the paperwork to the shop floor.     

2. Eliminate manual (paper-based) recording activities and the need to key in the transactions.

3. Easy electronic scheduling by sequence and changing job priorities.

4. Evaluate differences using actual times compared to standards.

5. Improve data accuracy and eliminate the need to chase and fix errors.

6. Practice Real-Time data reporting to monitor efficiencies and identify problems as they occur.


Think about just the cost of paper, ink, and the man-hours to distribute, collect, and key in data. Often times this alone is sufficient justification for an MES solution.

What could these changes mean to your business? Still not sure? Contact expert “Smart People” to help you put real numbers to this to find out just how big of an impact this could have on your business.  Find “Smart People” here.
 

About the author:

Anthony is a recognized industry expert in manufacturing processes and operational improvements. His thirty-plus years of experience encompass a broad spectrum of industry sectors: Automotive, Pharmaceutical, Medical Equipment Manufacturing, Aerospace Manufacturing, Food and Beverage, and General Manufacturing. He is uniquely qualified to quickly and accurately identify the potential improvements in efficiency in both discrete and process manufacturing operations, and identify those specific areas that could most benefit from process improvement.

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