Schwan
Foods Automation Story
I joined
Schwan Foods in 1975 as Personnel Mgr. for their manufacturing plants. I
reported to Al Schwan who was the Manufacturing Mgr. We headquartered in Salina
Kansas at the Tony’s Pizza plant. The pizza plant needed to be refrigerated to
control bacteria and automated. I joined the team to make this happen. I worked
with the employees on the refrigeration part, with new product development on
new pizzas and with Schwan’s equipment consultant on the automation. In
addition, I managed 30 employees and several contractors in Personnel and
Administration support for 1600 manufacturing employees and 200 semi-drivers.
We had a “no layoff” policy.
We found
ideas for equipment at trade shows. We needed equipment to apply sauce, cheese
and toppings. All of our equipment needed to be stainless steel. We made
several rotating drum sauce applicators, used a shaker table to apply cheese
and developed a series of gang slicers and pneumatic guns as meat applicators.
We used hydraulics, pneumatics and electronic controls. Employees were fully
involved in the comedy as we tested our prototypes.
Our
production line employees shifted to the end of the line to clean up the pizzas
appearance until the equipment was calibrated. Maintenance Techs helped train
employees on the equipment. These
production employees bid on Machine Operator jobs and other jobs as the
equipment was perfected. I wrote the Charter for the Equipment Engineering
Group and recruited the Manager to manage the group. We also added a spice
plant to the complex.
While
this was going on, I automated administration. I added a computer in Salina to
interface with the main computer in Marshall MN and hired the manager. I
replaced the timecards with a magnetic strip card to automate payroll. I used
these cards to replace keys. I had a PC built to monitor the ammonia
refrigeration system and the doors and added cameras. I had one security guard
inside at the PC and another outside in a police car. We started to sell scrap
crust, meat and cheese to farmers for feed. We sold tomato paste barrels to
another company.
We added
the Red Baron and many other pizzas to the mix and went from 24 labels to 124
labels in the first year. When we started this project in 1975, sales were $150
million a year. By 1979, sales were $650 million. But our manufacturing
headcount remained at 1600.
That
added volume enabled us to increase wages to reflect the increase in
productivity. These wage increases also reflected the added skills employees
were learning as they became experts on our equipment. The added volume also
enabled us to fund capital improvements to drive further productivity
increases.
Wage
increases that are given without proportionate increases in productivity are
inflationary. It just adds cost without paying for itself. This adds future
disruption as plants eventually close.
The
Schwan pizza plant is still operating in Salina Kansas. There are massive
stainless steel holding tanks that receive bulk wheat flour and tomato paste. I
visited the plant a few years ago and spoke with some of the employees. They
were quite happy and very impressive.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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