Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - (Page 16) Talking Heads Celestica Gets Personal hen one thinks of Celestica, hands-on prototyping and lab research with oneman startups doesn’t leap to mind. But according to Dave Ellison, business development manager of the EMS company’s new Performance Innovation group, that’s precisely the type of service the $8 billion firm now provides. During SMTA International in August, he and director, technology department Peter Tomaiuolo laid out to editor-in-chief Mike Buetow how a company with 30 sites around the globe is individualizing its services. CA: Is manufacturing managed globally or locally? PT: Manufacturing sites are managed at a regional level. Some are more focused on one sector than others. A senior manager is in charge of a market segment, with customer-focused staff under them. CA: How is loading handled? DE: A given customer will be slotted into a site based on product type and where that customer needs to be to meet its cost objectives for each market. We’re not seeing any programs moved because of the logistics costs on the board side. Where is the buildto-order done? That’s the bigger thing due to the size and weight of the final product and the order to ship requirements to the end-customer. CA: Are capital equipment decisions driven by customers, or internally? PT: We start with a roadmap, then fill the gaps. We have one for North America, Asia (Thailand and China), and Europe. We get input from customer and corporate teams. There is a vertical and horizontal component to roadmap and customer teams. We have a centralized equipment buying list. If vendor is customer-specified, Celestica will skip AVL and characterization. CA: What measures is Celestica taking to ensure its customers’ IP protection? DE: We sell the assembly process development piece as a service, and customers pay to be able to take it to another EMS provider so they don’t have to pay twice to have it developed. Also, we ask, What is IP to you, the customer? Usually it’s design or component related. Test engineers would be kept to a certain customer set because Circuits Assembly NOVEMBER 2008 W Peter Tomaiuolo Dave Ellison of the deep functional knowledge they gain on the customer’s product. From an assembly process standpoint, an engineer would typically shift from customer to customer with no issue. PT: One exception is emerging technologies, optics for instance, where customers don’t want their technology used on competitive programs. We put locked walls around those programs. CA: Are your program managers tied to a market, a customer, or a combination? DE: Some PMs are hired out to a particular customer or service. Technical PMs are completely dynamic. They are not tied to a site, customer or segment. Global PMs are tied to customer accounts and they stick to the same customers. Some program managers are dedicated program transfer PMs. Site program managers are dedicated to specific customer(s). CA: Celestica has turned the corner under CEO Craig Muhlhauser, and now appears to believe size doesn’t matter most. PT: What Muhlhauser has indicated is that we will grow incremental revenue profitably. We’re not going to be the biggest EMS company, but we’re striving to be the best. One emerging area for Celestica is aerospace, defense and industrial. We have established centers of excellence in each region to meet the unique requirements of customers in these sectors – services and capabilities that focus on high-mix, low-volume products. [Ed: Aerospace, defense and industrial now account for 8% of total revenue.] It’s driven by COTS. Celestica is also involved in NASA-JGPP program from a technology standpoint. CA: Lots of EMS companies have the same selling points. Given that, how is your marketing approach attempting to differentiate Celestica? DE: We ask ourselves, What do we have to offer that could benefit existing customers or customers that we don’t have yet? How do we capitalize on former Celestica employees now working elsewhere who know and appreciate our unique capabilities? How can we help companies overcome challenges and identify opportunities to accelerate their success? That’s what the Performance Innovation, or PI, team was created to do: promote Celestica’s efforts to smaller OEMs. We have about 100 customers total. Many based in the Toronto area and that do not use EMS services, but do use Celestica’s PI lab, failure analysis and test development services. PT: We’re trying to show we offer end-to-end solutions. n circuitsassembly.com 16 http://www.circuitsassembly.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Circuits Assembly - November 2008 Circuits Assembly - November 2008 Contents Caveat Lector Industry News Market Watch Talking Heads Focus on Business On the Forefront Screen Printing Better Manufacturing RoHS Conversion for Medical Devices Supporting Full-Service Customer Requirements at the Regional EMS Level Speed Thrills Tech Tips Wave Soldering Process Doctor Pb-Free Lessons Learned The Defects Database Getting Lean Materials World Product Spotlight Ad Index Assembly Insider Technical Abstracts Circuits Assembly - November 2008 Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Circuits Assembly - November 2008 (Page Cover1) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Circuits Assembly - November 2008 (Page Cover2) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Circuits Assembly - November 2008 (Page 1) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Circuits Assembly - November 2008 (Page 2) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Caveat Lector (Page 6) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Caveat Lector (Page 7) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Industry News (Page 8) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Industry News (Page 9) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Industry News (Page 10) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Industry News (Page 11) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Industry News (Page 12) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Industry News (Page 13) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Market Watch (Page 14) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Market Watch (Page 15) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Talking Heads (Page 16) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Talking Heads (Page 17) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Focus on Business (Page 18) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Focus on Business (Page 19) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - On the Forefront (Page 20) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - On the Forefront (Page 21) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Screen Printing (Page 22) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Screen Printing (Page 23) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Screen Printing (Page 24) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Better Manufacturing (Page 25) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - RoHS Conversion for Medical Devices (Page 26) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - RoHS Conversion for Medical Devices (Page 27) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - RoHS Conversion for Medical Devices (Page 28) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - RoHS Conversion for Medical Devices (Page 29) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - RoHS Conversion for Medical Devices (Page 30) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - RoHS Conversion for Medical Devices (Page 31) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - RoHS Conversion for Medical Devices (Page 32) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - RoHS Conversion for Medical Devices (Page 33) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Supporting Full-Service Customer Requirements at the Regional EMS Level (Page 34) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Supporting Full-Service Customer Requirements at the Regional EMS Level (Page 35) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Speed Thrills (Page 36) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Speed Thrills (Page 37) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Tech Tips (Page 38) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Wave Soldering (Page 39) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Process Doctor (Page 40) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Process Doctor (Page 41) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Pb-Free Lessons Learned (Page 42) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - The Defects Database (Page 43) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Getting Lean (Page 44) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Materials World (Page 45) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Ad Index (Page 46) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Assembly Insider (Page 47) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Technical Abstracts (Page 48) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Technical Abstracts (Page Cover3) Circuits Assembly - November 2008 - Technical Abstracts (Page Cover4)
For optimal viewing of this digital publication, please enable JavaScript and then refresh the page. If you would like to try to load the digital publication without using Flash Player detection, please click here.