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ShopFloor

The shop floor is the physical area of a manufacturing facility where production activities take place. It encompasses machines, tooling, workstations, assembly lines, storage for work-in-progress, and the personnel who operate and maintain equipment. The term contrasts with offices, design labs, and administrative spaces where planning and analysis occur. The shop floor is characterized by a high degree of variability, real-time decision making, and safety considerations.

Work on the shop floor is organized around processes, cells, or lines, with tasks such as setup,

Shop floor management involves planning, scheduling, supervision, and continuous improvement directly where value is created. Common

Technology and trends are expanding the capabilities of the shop floor. Sensors, programmable logic controllers (PLCs),

operation,
maintenance,
quality
inspection,
packaging,
and
material
handling.
Work
is
typically
governed
by
standard
operating
procedures
and
visual
controls,
and
disruptions
from
equipment
failure
or
material
shortages
can
affect
schedules
and
throughput.
Safety
compliance
and
ergonomic
considerations
are
integral
parts
of
daily
activity.
methods
include
5S
for
organization,
visual
management
to
display
status
at
a
glance,
standard
work,
Kanban,
line
balancing,
and
continuous
improvement
programs.
Data
collection
on
the
floor,
through
tools
such
as
manufacturing
execution
systems
(MES)
and
real-time
dashboards,
supports
performance
monitoring
and
decision
making.
SCADA
systems,
and
IoT
devices
feed
data
to
MES
and
enterprise
systems,
enabling
metrics
such
as
overall
equipment
effectiveness
(OEE),
cycle
times,
throughput,
scrap
rates,
and
downtime
analysis.
Effective
shop
floor
practices
aim
to
improve
productivity,
quality,
safety,
and
on-time
delivery
while
reducing
waste.