Status

Owner
StakeholdersThe persons consulted or otherwise involved in making this decision. Type @ to mention people by name

Issue

This KDD document is intended to identify if all QM Inspection types to be deployed at Syensqo. The issue is that we believe not all inspection types that can be deployed, have been deployed.

These are the processes currently running in Syensqo WP1 and PF1 systems, as identified in the AS-IS analysis:

  • Inspection at Purchasing Goods Receipt (01)
  • Source Inspection per Purchase Order Item/Schedule LIne (0101)
  • In Process Production Inspection (03)
  • Inspection at Production Goods Receipt (04)
  • Inspection at Other Goods Receipt (05)
  • Inspection at Customer Returns (06)
  • Inspection at Stock Transfer (08)
  • Recurring Inspection (09)
  • Outbound Inspection (10-11-12)
  • Manual non-stock-based inspection (89)

All these inspection types are used in combination with inspection plans.

We identify the opportunity to introduce:

  • Inspection for Asset maintenance and calibration (14)
  • Sample Inspection (15)
  • Usage of Material Specification instead of / in combination with Inspection Plans


Recommendation

Option A is the recommended one: introduce in scope of the project inspection types 14 (Inspection for Asset Maintenance and Calibration) and 15 (Inspection of Samples) and allow the usage of Material Specification.


Background & Context

The two systems PF1 and WP1 have a very similar QM model, based on custom inspection types which are copies of the original standard types. 

Material inspection is largely used in SAP ECC, in some cases in combination with Labware and WEBLIMS, in other cases with a full E2E process in SAP.

The QM Material Inspection is a crucial part of the traceability and Quality Assurance process in Syensqo and involves all steps of the process: Inbound, Production, Outbound, Stock Management, hence, it must be fully part of the proposed SAP QM solution.



Assumptions

  • the new ERP system will be S4 HANA version 2023 or higher
  • one single instance will exist, instead of the current WP1, PF1 and WPX
  • current Labware and WEBLIMS systems remain: they are currently used by several Labs across the company and part
  • the ongoing QMS project with Vendor EQT will proceed only for Composite GBU. Specialty Polymers and the other GBUs will investigate the corresponding SAP functionalities in the Detailed Design phase.


Constraints

  • We must guarantee the ability of each GBU and each single plant to maintain their own inspection plans where required

Impacts

  • the simultaneous usage of Inspection Plans and Material Specification needs a centralized coordination between QM department across the plants and GBU for the common materials


Business Rules

A decision tree will be designed in Detail Design to identify the inspection types to be activated for each material.

A decision tree will be designed in Detail Design to define whether a material specifiation or an insection plan should be created to host the tests required for a new material.

Options considered

Option A: Add Inspection Types 14 and 15 to the scope and allow Material Specification

This option adds to the current model some further functionalities:

  • Inspection Type 15 allows the creation of an Inspection Lot for a Sample, to analyse a small quantity of a product without blocking the whole batch
  • Inspection Type 14 allows the creation of an Inspection Lot to check the calibration of a Tool and to perform a new calibration if required
  • The Material Specification is a Master Data in S4 that lists all the tests required for the acceptance of a certain product. It is a cross plant object: once defined, it is valid for all plants and applies to all inspection lots created on that material. Introducing Material Specification has the following advantages:
    • the inspection can be standardized across the plants
    • the list of test is created only once and maintained in a single centralized object, no need to replicate it on multiple plants
    • the local specificity can still be managed using Material Specification in combination with Inspection Plans: in this case, the tests in the Material Specification appear at the beginning of the  Inspection Lot, then the test identified in the plant specific Inspection Plan follow.

Option A introduce further functionalities and facilitate the harmonization and standardization, as Material Specification is a useful tool to adopt a common set of tests for a material across the organization.

Option B: Keep only currently used Inspection Types and do not allow Material Specification

This option is a replica of the current AS-IS solution. It would not be possible to create Inspection Lots for Samples and for Tool Calibration. It would be mandatory to use Inspection Plan for each material/plant to inspect. Different inspection plans for the same material on different plants imply more work to maintain the master data and make harmonization more difficult.


Evaluation

The simple decision matrix lists all considered criteria and the estimated weights and scores for each of the 2 options. The total is the sum of each score multiplied by the weight of the criteria and gives a global evaluation of the options across the different points of view.

Criteria

Weight 

Option A

Add Inspection Types 14 and 15 to the scope and allow Material Specification

Option B

Keep only currently used Inspection Types and do not allow Material Specification

Functionalities VHVery HighHigh
StandardizationVHVery HighMedium
Reduce Master Data MaintenanceHVery HighMedium
Reduce Training needMMediumVery High
Reduce Change Management MMediumVery High

Total 


High

Medium


 Option A stands out as the preferred one. 



Change log

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