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Containment Theory
Containment Theory
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This page discusses containment theory. It is broken down between external
containment (at your customer location) and internal containment (at your
facility). In addition, I cover warranty issues and containment.
External Containment
When your customers experience problems with your parts, they expect you to
quickly address the issues. When dealing with these external issues, you need
to deal with both your customer's external containment and your internal
containment issues. You may find external containment difficult, costly and
time consuming. As soon as your customer finds an issue, he immediately
thinks more defects will appear. How many parts have this problem? What is
the defect rate? Do similar parts have the same problem? How prevalent is this
issue?
During your external containment theory analysis, help your customer as much
as possible. Provide information without being asked upon. If the customer
needs to push you, then you are not taking appropriate action.
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f you have excellent traceability, provide the suspect lot numbers to the
customer. With these lot numbers your customer can easily segregate the poor
parts.
You may have to immediately replace the parts. Issue an RMA (Return Material
Authorization) for the suspect parts. Leave the RMA open for other suspect
parts. Don’t be cheap and make the customer angrier, pay for the return of the
parts. Have the parts Fed Ex to your attention.
If necessary, visit the customer and fix the problem. Do not wait on this
decision. The quicker you take action the more satisfied your customer.
External defects are costly and you must be willing to spend the money to
address the issue.
You may decide to take a part back and repair it at your facility. Once the part
arrives then repair it immediately. Remember your customer depends on your
parts. Without that unit, your customer’s production could be affected and it
could cost them business with their customer.
Or you may visit the customer to help sort the good ones from the bad ones.
Why? because you were responsible for shipping the defective product. You are
responsible for assuring your customer doesn't use the defective parts. By
making them sort the suspect parts, you are angering the customer.
If this is a safety issue, then bare no expense. If not handle swiftly, these
issues quickly lead to lawsuits. Ugly lawsuits can put you out of business.
Don’t forget other customers that received the same material. If Customer X
complains then you know customer Y will also complain.
Internal containment actions start at the end of the process. Then move
backwards to the root cause area.
Evaluate similar products. They may have the same problem. Apply the same
internal containment theory.
Warranty Issues
What happens when your customer finds a defect after your written warranty
period? If it doesn’t involve a safety issue, then you most likely you are not
liable. However, you need to sympathize with your customer. Don’t throw the
warranty clause in your customer face and ignore their issue.
Explain the issue to your customer so they better understand the reason behind
the warranty. Also let your customer know that their defect information helps
you improve your product. Further, let them know you understand the issue
and you are working on reducing the defect.
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Finally, follow the internal containment theory to assure you are not shipping
new product with the same issue.