Manufacturer of Honor: Lam Research
by Mark Bernstein
May 1, 2008
When, half a dozen years
ago, Lam Research Corporation began outsourcing, it realized there was a core
competency the company lacked.
The Fremont, California-based enterprise is a major maker of wafer fabrication
equipment, used by the semiconductor industry to shape the form and function of
computer chips. At the time, the company—which today boasts 2,250 employees and
annual sales of about $2.5 billion—saw three capabilities as key to its
success: upfront customer touch; the result on the wafer; and post-sales
customer support.
But, says Ballan Campeau—Lam’s managing director for global logistics—when the
company started outsourcing its assembly, accounting, and other functions, that
“precipitated the recognition that we need a fourth core competency—supplier
management.”
That recognition, in turn, prompted Lam to reassess the general role supply
chain played within its organization, progressively expanding and integrating
that role.
First, Lam took a new approach to its suppliers, creating a group that works
with them to improve manufacturing and assembly processes, quality and yield.
Taking it a step further, the Lam team works to build its suppliers’ own
relationships with their suppliers. What drove this, Campeau said, was the cost
competitive nature of the semiconductor industry and “a general flow-down of
‘we don’t want to pay this much.’”
Second, Lam tied supply chain concerns into the company’s product development,
with director level representatives that provide liaison between the product
and supply chain groups. Campeau explains: “Each product line has a supply
chain executive who is responsible for sourcing and communicating requirements
relative to new products, so that the transition from development supplier to
production supplier is made easier.” That work, he adds, continues from the
purchasing side of the supply chain equation to the after-market side, with
customers, ensuring Lam will be able to support those products, particularly in
the beta-testing phase.
Commonly, when companies focus attention on supply chain improvement, they find
themselves moving toward fewer suppliers, with stronger ties to each. This, Lam
did with its transportation provider. According to Campeau, “We focus on a few
and we focus on our own agility.” He adds, “Freight, in one sense, is very much
a commodity; in another sense, it’s very much a relationship. Lots of things
can happen between points A and B; ensuring you have a provider who can manage
those anomalies is very important.”
A key player in the transportation piece of Lam’s supply chain consolidation
was Menlo Worldwide Logistics. “Through a collaborative approach to supply
chain innovation, Menlo Worldwide Logistics has helped us streamline our
logistics operations and better manage our business,” said Ballan Campeau. “Menlo
has seamlessly integrated into our organization to support our logistics
operations and continues to provide the flexibility we need to improve
continuously.” We needed to develop a better understanding of how things move
worldwide,” with the ultimate goal of having well-documented
processes.
Looking down the road, Lam has an additional supply chain goal: in three to
five years, the company wants to be able to move goods point-to-point,
worldwide. This presents several challenges, one of which is cultural. Campeau
offers an anecdote: “When I was a soccer coach, we took our team on a tour of
Europe in the late ‘80s; we quickly learned that every country plays the game
differently. It’s absolutely true of business as well. There are certain common
themes—the customer is always the customer. But, how that customer interacts
tends to vary a bit from country to country.” The challenge, he says, is that
the customs regulations in each country have unique qualities; export controls
vary from place to place.
In China, for example, different localities have different translations of
regulation. Campeau comments: “Having systems and processes in place to manage
that, is something that must be done very deliberately.” wt
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