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Vendor Qualification? 3

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Carlsberg73

Mechanical
Apr 8, 2011
6
Hi All.

Am new at this and would like to ask a question with regards to what to look for when qualifying a vendor for a job.Currently am trying to assess the capabilities of a vendor to fabricate for us a metal part by turning. So far i have looked at the machines/facilities that they have and have requested for their tolerance capabilities. What other factors or aspects should i be looking at.

Regards

Jeffrey (Mechanical Engineering)
 
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aside from financials, existing judgements/citations, and references; manpower loading, % of output capacity, Quality Program(s), safety record, access to lines of transportation. . .
 
Talk to your purchasing and the accounting folks etc. if you have some, they should have some idea. Now from an Engineering point of view the relative priorities you put on things may be a bit different but still, worth getting their input in what - in theory at least - is their area of specialization.

What are their inspection capabilities & can they understand the symbology on your drawings such as GD&T etc.

Ease of communication.

Do they have compatible software etc. if required - or do you have a work around if necessary.

Recommendations/References from their customers are almost worthless - they'll only ask people they've impressed to provide reference. The guy they screwed over will not be volunteered as a reference. However, it can provide a nice warm feeling, and if you carefully ask questions you may get useful info.

Similarly, just because they can show your their certs that they are ISO 9001 accredited, or 'an approved Boeing supplier' or similar doesn't guarantee they'll be a good vendor. However, that doesn't mean it has no worth.

Try and get some assessment of their customer service, do they supply first article inspection reports, what are their typical lead times, how do they package parts...

Then there's the risk management element, especially if they are going to be a 'major' or 'strategic' supplier.

There's financial risk - are they going to go bankrupt with a bunch of your parts that you need urgently in process. Even worse if they hold some kind of tooling or raw stock etc. that you paid for. While I don't know what is reasonable to ask for, and depending on location what's legal etc. this is where your purchasing/accounting folks may be able to help.

There's also physical risk, you don't want the place burning down, or similar with your parts or tooling on their shelves. One place I looked at as a vendor made 90% of the 'widgets' that go in Guinness and similar beers. Due to this Guinness did a big risk review looking at things like their location relative to local airfields in case of plane crashes, as well as more mundane things like flood risk, earthquake, fire prevention practices etc.

The physical risk aspect probably isn't widely assessed in most cases but maybe it should be.

Posting guidelines faq731-376 (probably not aimed specifically at you)
What is Engineering anyway: faq1088-1484
 
Dunn and Bradstreet (a D&B) reports are good indicators of the vendors financial health and if there are ongoing legal actions. Good vendors tend to have good D&B reports.

This of course assumes the vendor capabilites meets your vendors requirements. Meaning if your looking for a custom vessel fabricators getting a B&D report for a cookie cutter tank shop bidding the work won't do you much good, as they may be great fabricating standardized equipents but may be the wrong shop for a custom design.
 
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