"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
I would like my employee to keep track of setups/ breakdowns/ and printing times.The reason for this is I schedule jobs in a way knowing I would get those done if I was printing. Well we are never finishing the jobs each day that are scheduled and I'm rearranging every day to accomondate.. I know I am much faster at all these then the employee, but I do not overschedule because I know this.I tried this before, but they seem to forget all the time. Is there an easy way to do this? If anyone has their employees do this how do you do it? Do they just look at a clock? do they have a timer they start for each part and fill in a clipboard? Online?Any ideas would be appreciated....
Quote from: whitewater on October 30, 2018, 12:57:09 PMI would like my employee to keep track of setups/ breakdowns/ and printing times.The reason for this is I schedule jobs in a way knowing I would get those done if I was printing. Well we are never finishing the jobs each day that are scheduled and I'm rearranging every day to accomondate.. I know I am much faster at all these then the employee, but I do not overschedule because I know this.I tried this before, but they seem to forget all the time. Is there an easy way to do this? If anyone has their employees do this how do you do it? Do they just look at a clock? do they have a timer they start for each part and fill in a clipboard? Online?I do have a diamondback.. 5 years.Ill take a lookAny ideas would be appreciated.... don’t know what type of presses you have but if you have any M&R presses within the last 7 years punch in Production and all of the KPI info is at hand including breaks,etc.
I would like my employee to keep track of setups/ breakdowns/ and printing times.The reason for this is I schedule jobs in a way knowing I would get those done if I was printing. Well we are never finishing the jobs each day that are scheduled and I'm rearranging every day to accomondate.. I know I am much faster at all these then the employee, but I do not overschedule because I know this.I tried this before, but they seem to forget all the time. Is there an easy way to do this? If anyone has their employees do this how do you do it? Do they just look at a clock? do they have a timer they start for each part and fill in a clipboard? Online?I do have a diamondback.. 5 years.Ill take a lookAny ideas would be appreciated....
Again, so many variables. Do you have 20 employees, 2 or none. Pre-press support? Staging for next jobs in either case is critical no matter what. Interruptive downtime is what is most over looked as been stated.Either way 3 minutes per screen to tear down is fairly predictable and easily achieved when managed correctly