Product details

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Published by: Harvard Business Publishing
Originally published in: 1993
Version: 13 January 1994

Abstract

Cummins Engine Co. is starting up production of diesel engine crankshafts in its plant in central Mexico. This operation requires much tighter tolerances than any product previously produced at the plant, and the young (recent MBA) manager who is in charge of the start-up is faced with several difficult decisions regarding the equipment to be used for crankshaft machining in Mexico. On the one hand, some of the equipment used for this purpose in Cummins'' U.S. plant is inappropriate in the Mexican context. On the other, he has to operate under severe budgetary and supplier constraints. A subsidiary issue has to do with the long-term strategy for the Mexican plant, which has developed into one of the best in Cummins'' worldwide network but risks being fragmented by the many opportunities for adding products that are available to it.; To illustrate problems of transferring production of a highly sophisticated machined product from a developed country (the U.S.) to a developing country (Mexico).
Location:
Size:
Fortune 500, USD100 million revenues
Other setting(s):
1992

About

Abstract

Cummins Engine Co. is starting up production of diesel engine crankshafts in its plant in central Mexico. This operation requires much tighter tolerances than any product previously produced at the plant, and the young (recent MBA) manager who is in charge of the start-up is faced with several difficult decisions regarding the equipment to be used for crankshaft machining in Mexico. On the one hand, some of the equipment used for this purpose in Cummins'' U.S. plant is inappropriate in the Mexican context. On the other, he has to operate under severe budgetary and supplier constraints. A subsidiary issue has to do with the long-term strategy for the Mexican plant, which has developed into one of the best in Cummins'' worldwide network but risks being fragmented by the many opportunities for adding products that are available to it.; To illustrate problems of transferring production of a highly sophisticated machined product from a developed country (the U.S.) to a developing country (Mexico).

Settings

Location:
Size:
Fortune 500, USD100 million revenues
Other setting(s):
1992

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