Bharata Manufacturing Make-Buy Fall 2023
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Dec 6, 2023
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Bharata Manufacturing Inc. – Make or Buy Decision
Bharata Manufacturing Solutions (BMS) is a producer of high-pressure valves for use in a many industrial settings. BMS
has been in business for five years and has been manufacturing only one type of valve. The company started with sales of
60,000 valves a year but has grown steadily and now sells 145,000 valves a year. Over that time, the company has built a
reputation as a key supplier to oil and gas companies. These companies need very high-quality valves to manage the
extreme pressure build-up that occurs during extraction processes.
To date, the company has been buying raw materials from a variety of suppliers, while manufacturing all valves in-house.
But now that they have established themselves in the market, the company is planning to expand and diversify their
product offerings. The main manufacturing facility is located in Kolkata, India. The total area of the plant is 75,000 square
feet and can accommodate a maximum capacity of 200,000 units annually using the current process.
Jaidep Mohan is the head of production at BMS. He has been with the company since its founding. In fact, he designed
the original process the company still uses to produce its current line of valves. Recently though, Mohan has been
concerned with quality problems. Customer complaints have gone up and rejects from customers have increased from
an average of 0.2% two years ago to 0.5% this year. These trends are very troubling, as a malfunctioning valve could
potentially damage customer equipment and even lead to worker injuries. At the same time, Mohan is finding that there
is a high level of dissatisfaction among BMS employees regarding workload and salary levels. Because of the tight labor
market in Kolkata, qualified line workers and staff are hard to find. And although Mohan has found that employees spend
a lot of time on tea breaks, lunch breaks, and even talking to each other between production runs – they still complain
about being overworked and forced to work overtime.
All this makes Mohan worried about the new plans for expansion. He wonders where the necessary space and
employees will be found to support the expansion. He has requested management not approve the expansion
immediately – but to look at improving and consolidating the production process at the existing plant. In fact, Mohan has
developed a blueprint for a new process that he thinks will be able to produce valves more profitably than the current
process. The new process could accommodate up to 250,000 units annually, with greater quality assurance. However, the
new process would have higher fixed costs relative to the current process because the new process would require a
substantial investment in equipment and technology.
Mohan is not the only person at BMS worried about the planned expansion. The company’s supply manager, Sunil
Kumar, has been feeling pressure from BMS’s suppliers. The company’s supply base in Kolkata is comprised mainly of
small, local companies. These companies have been able to supply BMS with raw materials and component parts over
the last five years. But now suppliers are telling Kumar that they are reaching their capacity limits and will not be able
keep up with BMS’s increasing needs. Already, BMS has faced shipping delays and canceled orders from suppliers who
are under strain. In fact, two of BMS’s most important suppliers recently told Kumar that they will be unable to meet
BMS’s needs beyond 200,000 units per year.
Kumar worries that unless new suppliers can be found, the lack of adequate
material resources will constrain BMS’s growth. From his perspective, Kumar thinks the easiest way to overcome this
constraint is to outsource production of BMS valves altogether. Thus, on his own initiative, Kumar has gone out and
found three potential companies that could act as third-party outsourced suppliers.
On Tuesday, Mohan and Kumar found themselves walking down the same hall to the CEO’s office. As it turns out, the
CEO had organized a meeting of top executives to talk over the very issues that have been troubling both Mohan and
Kumar. At the meeting, the head of marketing presented very bullish trends. She thinks that starting with a baseline of
145,000 units this year, BMS can achieve an annual growth rate of 15% each year over the next five years. From her
perspective, BMS is perfectly positioned to take advantage of the company’s established brand image and India’s growing
economy. She thinks the market will bear a price of $35 per valve for the company’s current offering and is strongly in
favor of doing whatever it takes to capture the current market opportunity.
Bharata Manufacturing Inc. – Make or Buy Decision
The finance manager, while not quite as enthusiastic about the growth potential, also favors expansion as increased rates
of production would result in economies of scale and therefore greater profitability. Mohan again expressed his concerns
regarding availability of qualified employees as well as the need for production control to maintain quality. He then
presented his plans for the new process. At that point, however, the conversation became a bit muddle because the
finance manager began questioning the fixed cost investments needed to support the new process. Finally, Kumar
presented his three options in terms of vendors to whom BMS could potentially outsource production of its valve. While
not necessarily opposed to the idea outsourcing, Mohan and the marketing director once more raised the issue of
quality. Ultimately, the CEO ask everyone to submit their information to his office and he would have his son, Raynesh,
analyze the data and make a recommendation. Raynesh is doing his MBA at the Indian Institute of Management and is
looking forward to entering the family business.
Put yourself in the place of Raynesh. Prepare an analysis of the data below.
1.
Determine which manufacturing option - Current Process, New Process, Supplier 1, Supplier 2, or Supplier 3 – is
most profitable over the coming five-year period.
In-house new process would be the most profitable over a 5-year period.
2.
Discuss how these options may be combined to maximize profitability over the coming five-year period.
3.
Work through the make-buy decision framework discussed in class. Make a recommendation on which
manufacturing option and/or supplier(s) BMS should use in the future.
Be sure to specifically address points
raised in the case by the various players involved.
4.
Copy your excel analysis for question #3 into another sheet in excel (name it Question 4). Complete the analysis
with an expected growth rate of 10% per year instead of 15% per year.
Would this change your recommendation
in question #3?
No, it would not change my recommendation in question 3.
5.
Copy your excel analysis for question #3 into another sheet in excel (name it Question 5). Complete the analysis
with an expected growth rate of 20% per year instead of 15% per year.
Would this change your recommendation
in question #3?
6.
BMS has a Continuous Improvement (CI) team.
Mohan and Kumar have not spoken with the CI team yet,
however, if the CI team believes that they could reduce waste in the new process to increase capacity to 400,000
units and also work with suppliers to increase their capacities, would this change your recommendation in
question #3?
XExpected Annual Sales
145,000
Expected Growth Rate
15%
Revenue/Unit
$35
In-House Costs
Current Process
New Process
Variable Cost Per Unit
$18
$15
Annual Fixed Cost
$
275,000
$
400,000
Outsource Costs (dependent on number of units outsourced)
Variable Cost
< 150,000
150-200,000
200-250,000
Over 250,000
Supplier 1
$25
$23
$20
$17
Supplier 2
$20
$20
$20
$20
Supplier 3
$30
$25
$20
$15
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