Background

 

 

 

Rhodia Consumer Specialties' (previously Albright and Wilson) chemical phosphates

plant at Widnes produces additives used in food, meat and beverages.

 

They introduced an annualised hours system in 1996.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Case Study: Rhodia - Annualised Hours 

 

The Annualised Hours Scheme has revolutionised working practices and productivity at the Widnes plant.

 

The company had set itself a three-year growth target rising 10% p.a., and was aiming for unit cost reductions. Backing this was an £8.5 million investment programme.

 

Ambitious, certainly, though the background looked anything but promising.

 

Dogged by restrictive practices, the traditional labour structure was further handicapped by a severe overtime culture: nearly a fifth of working hours were overtime. Management was prepared to bite the bullet on major change.

 

Process

A rigorous examination of work practices revealed obvious flaws, and out of this review new high productivity standards were developed. These, aimed at optimising time and skills, made cross-skilling and job-sharing vital, though it meant cutting across traditional lines. But this they did and supported by extensive training designed new job and team structures, plus a salary package angled on skills acquisition and performance improvement. The four-crew system changed to five-crew and shifts - by shop floor choice - were lengthened to twelve hours.

 

Benefits for the Company

 

All the objectives were met; unit costs tumbled, productivity rose and so did output. Customer complaints fell 25% and service standards improved substantially. Accidents were also down.

Overtime, targeted at a maximum of 5%, was eliminated altogether.  The culture changed totally. Without doubt this new get-ahead attitude played a key part in the upswing.  The plant is now regarded as an example of best practice by its sister companies and external organisations too.

 

Benefits for the Employee

 

Staff welcomed the improved job security and the new, more rewarding, ways of working: job flexibility/skill acquisition is the norm, and a healthy team spirit pervades. They also enjoyed the improved training opportunities- with 90% of the workforce working towards NVQs and one day every 5 weeks given over to training.  After initial employee reservations, the new flexible working regime is now extremely popular. Staff work a less stressful 40-hour week, with changing shift patterns planned-out well in advance and one week in eight given as leisure time or holiday.

 

The consultancy work referred to in this case study was carried out by Philip Lynch Associates in 1995-96 

 

 

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