French print shop Montligeon, based in Saint-Hilaire-le-Châtel
near Mortagne-au-Perche in Normandy, recently inaugurated its new
building. It now boasts one of the most cutting-edge operations for
folding carton production and commercial printing in Europe. The
Business Consulting section of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG
(Heidelberg) gave Montligeon a great deal of help with both factory
planning and process optimization. This has enabled it to achieve a
big increase in throughput and boost productivity by 10 to 15
percent, even though the new building is smaller than the old one.
Quality assurance costs have also fallen dramatically.
Montligeon's plans for change were already beginning to
take shape back in October 2006. "Our former production
facility was located next to the famous shrine and basilica of
Montligeon. We had grown steadily over the years but were unable to
achieve streamlined production on an industrial scale at this
location," explains Raymond Leiris, CEO of the Montligeon
Group. The print shop was founded by the curate of Montligeon in
1888. The Group currently has production facilities at two
locations in France and generates total sales of 28.7 million Euro
with a workforce of 220. The new facility has 128 employees and
generates annual sales of more than 18.2 million Euro. The product
portfolio consists of folding cartons for pharmaceutical companies,
drugstores and frozen food manu-facturers, while the commercial
section produces advertising brochures for Citroen, Volkswagen, and
Audi, together with various other publications.
Heidelberg held a four-day workshop with the top two levels
of management at the company. This was used to collect data,
analyze problems, discuss the company's future, and define
measures to boost performance.
Following a little over two years' planning, construction
and relocation work, production was able to continue without
interruption at the beginning of this year. The new building has
everything a state-of-the-art media company needs:
- Clearly structured production lines for folding cartons and
commercial printing
- Extremely flexible use of premises for both products
- A closed-loop material flow incorporating warehouse,
production, and intermediate buffers
- Joint high-bay store with narrow-aisle stacker for raw
materials and finished products
- Joint incoming and outgoing goods sections
- Compact buffers for an instant overview and simpler
production control
- Options for expanding production capacities and finishing
operations
- Warehouse expansion options
- High ceiling for a good printing climate and water cooling of
peripherals on two presses
- Smaller floor area
- Fewer unnecessary activities
The specifications for the ideal plan were implemented to the
letter and further enhanced. Compliance with all the new
environmental directives and ISO 14000 was ensured. The facility
has also been prepared for ISO 12647-2 color calibration.
Heidelberg Supports its customers with Business Consulting
The print media industry is changing. As a result, there
is a growing demand among print shops for consultancy services.
Heidelberg has a long tradition of providing print shops with such
services, and it has further strengthened its Business Consulting
section. Heidelberg offers management consultancy services to print
shops all over the world. One of its key focal points lies in
optimizing its clients' business processes. Experience has
shown that there is still considerable room for improvement in
print shop processes in particular. Taking the example of companies
producing folding cartons, the capital tied up in warehouses and
intermediate buffers can be reduced, liquidity increased, and batch
sizes optimized.
Heidelberg consultants also help print shops realign sales
and marketing strategies, provide personnel with training, make
safer investment decisions, and improve their controlling and
financing structures. With its consultancy operations, Heidelberg
is pursuing its objective of enhancing its service offering.
The Business Consulting section currently employs just under
30 people worldwide. Its aim is to achieve lasting improvements in
customers' competitiveness.
Image:
Making plans for the new print shop at a joint workshop:
Raymond Leiris, CEO of the Montligeon Group (third from the left)
with his team and the two Heidelberg consultants, Erich Zahn
(standing on the far left) and Olav Spielmann (standing on the far
right). Data was collected, problems analyzed, the company's
future discussed and performance-boosting measures defined.
For further information, please contact:
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG
Corporate Public Relations
Hilde Weisser
Tel.: +49 (0)6221 92 50 66
Fax: +49 (0)6221 92 99 50 66
E-mail:
hilde.weisser@heidelberg.com