When Couches Fly
When Couches Fly
When Couches Fly
Rowe Furniture Inc. vows not to fall to imports. All it needs is a faster way to make sofas and chairs.
From: Issue 84 | July 2004 | Page 80 | By: Chuck Salter
For Bruce Birnbach, the dining room may be the scariest part of the house. Its not that hes insecure about his table manners. Its just that for Birnbach, the president and COO of Rowe Furniture Inc., the dining room represents a vision of a future hes struggling desperately to avoid. Since January 2001, at least 49 U.S. plants specializing in wood furniture — think dining tables and bedroom sets — have closed. Imports have seized 52% of the market.
Fortunately, Rowe makes upholstered furniture — sofas, ottomans, and such. Because these can come in so many styles and fabrics, theyve proven tougher for exporters like China to reproduce in bulk. Still, trouble is looming: Imports have snagged about 16% of this market, compared with 9% five years ago. Birnbach is determined not to cede the living room to foreign producers. Hes determined not to close 58-year-old Rowes factories, and hes determined to keep its 1,464 production jobs here in the United States. The only way to do that, Birnbach believes, is to offer more styles and fabrics, and better quality. But above all, Rowe desperately needs a 10-day sofa.
If youve ever ordered furniture, you know that interplanetary missions have been planned and launched in less time than it takes to produce a made-to-order armchair or sofa. Before 1983, Rowe could take up to six weeks to produce and deliver a sofa. By 1987, Rowe had trimmed that to 30 days, increasing revenue from $60 million to $90 million. Now Rowe, which generates $176 million in annual sales, aims to slash turnaround by two-thirds over the next year, becoming as efficient at making furniture as Toyota is at making cars. “I want to show American manufacturers that there are other ways to compete than letting manufacturing go,” Birnbach says.
For a manufacturing operation as antediluvian as Rowes, the 10-day sofa is an audacious goal. The Virginia-based company supplies midlevel furniture in more than 600 fabrics to about 1,500 retailers across the country, including Storehouse, a chain owned by its parent, the Rowe Companies. It specializes in batch manufacturing: Cutting, sewing, framing, and upholstering are dispersed throughout a plant with minimal interaction among departments. The goal is to have the maximum amount of work in progress, with batches of inventory for other departments. That keeps everyone busy and creates impressive-looking mountains of arm coverings and frames, but it also causes a host of problems. Overdue orders are held back to create a batch, then mixed with new orders, increasing the likelihood that theyll be even later. Materials are easily lost amid the messy stacks of inventory. Fred Stanley, who once oversaw six upholstery lines at Rowes Elliston, Virginia, plant, would spend hours crisscrossing the enormous factory looking for missing supplies. “When youre searching,” he says, “youre not making furniture.” Mistakes would be put aside to be repaired later, littering the factory floor with incomplete furniture. It would take 27.5 hours for a cushion that required just 10 minutes to stitch to make it to stuffing, the next spot on the production line.
Despite all the inefficiency, management demands high productivity, and that means Rowe is a tough place to work. Notwithstanding its spacious new factory, gym, video store, and staff concierge, Rowe “was a sweatshop,” says Stanley, 45, one of many second-generation employees.
Rowes transformation began last year after Birnbach concluded that 10-day delivery would give the company a big edge. Mike Boggins, the vice president of engineering, and his staff researched lean manufacturing and came across a step-by-step guide called Fast Track to Waste-Free Manufacturing: Straight Talk From a Plant Manager (Productivity Press, 1999). The author, John W. Davis, had rescued a factory he managed by making the sort of radical changes that Rowe needed. Rowe began putting his ideas into practice with two new production lines, one in Elliston and another in its plant in Poplar Bluff, Missouri.
The new lines, dubbed “focus factories” because theyre meant to be self-contained within the larger plant, eliminate wasted floor space and greatly reduce unnecessary walking and material handling. Cutters, sewers, framers, and upholsterers sit together, roughly in production sequence, close enough to hand some pieces to one another. Most are cross-trained so they can help each other out when needed.
The line is designed for continuous work flow within each department