Big Heart wins with big-picture approach to OEM partnerships

Big Heart Pet Brands is moving towards company standardization. That means that when looking at buying equipment, they're trying to look at a bigger picture, including TCO, OEE, reliability, uptime and more.

Ingenious Pack
Ingenious Pack

When Del Monte’s consumer products operations were sold to Del Monte Pacific Ltd. and Del Monte’s former pet products division emerged as Big Heart Pet Brands, Randy Cotton found himself in a whole new set of circumstances.

“Overnight,” recalls Cotton, now the Senior Project Engineer of San Francisco-based Big Heart Pet Brands, “I became the sole corporate engineer as opposed to being a member of a corporate engineering group serving a very large pet food and consumer products company.”

It’s not that he’s flying solo when it comes to things like specifying packaging equipment. Pitching in are colleagues like Paul Baker, Senior Manager of Packaging R&D, who played a key role in getting OEMs to build precisely the kind of equipment that was needed to bring Milk-Bone Brushing Chews to store shelves. The line on which the chews are packaged was named 2014 PMMI Packaging Line of the Year. video: pp-oem.com/006

But even with Baker’s able assistance, it’s safe to say that where the acquisition of packaging machinery is concerned, Big Heart Pet Brands does not have an enormous internal team available to do the research and vetting. So it’s little wonder that the firm seeks to establish strategic partnerships with packaging machinery OEMs wherever possible. That means in most machinery-buying scenarios, they’re sitting down with people they know, people who, because they’ve brought good solutions in the past, are likely to do the same in the future.

“We’re always looking for that next thing that will make us more competitive,” says Cotton. “For the most part we’ve zeroed in on a core set of equipment makers who provide equipment and services that set them apart. As we establish this strategic relationship, one goal is to standardize across our plants, both in processing and packaging. This also lets us leverage additional benefits, whether it’s extra value-added services or pricing advantages or enhanced service levels. It’s important to point out that we aren’t looking at price alone. Best value for the dollars spent is a better way.”

Cotton is the first to acknowledge that ‘best value” can be a difficult thing to define. He reiterates that one thing it doesn’t involve is “looking for the lowest bidder.” It might be finding a provider with the best track record when it comes to after-sales support, or one that has the most robust infrastructure in terms of design and build. But given his company’s background, Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) is often found near the top of the list. 

“One thing we wrestle with is that the numerous plants we operate were all originally established and equipped by separate entities that became parts of a whole through acquisition,” says Cotton. “Each facility still has its own culture to one extent or another. But we’re moving more and more in the direction of company standardization. That means that when we look at buying equipment, we’re trying to look at a bigger picture. What suits the whole company becomes the question. That’s why we’re looking so much more closely at things like TCO, reliability, uptime, and OEE. These are things that can be leveraged across multiple facilities if some kind of coordinated, integrated approach is in place.”

What about controls?
Because the firm is defining and implementing standards more than ever before, there’s a predictable preference to want to have pretty tight rein over the controls components and controls architecture governing the machines they buy.

“Legacy systems have to be taken into account,” says Cotton. “In our case, Rockwell is the predominant controls supplier. But others are in the mix, and these things need to be balanced out. Regardless of who the vendor is, factory network security is becoming increasingly important, and standards are central to that. So how does that play with the OEMs and the way they design their controls systems? That’s why we find ourselves beginning to dictate what components we want them to use a little more than in the past.”

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