Abeking & Rasmussen (A&R) was founded in 1907 by Georg Abeking and Henry Rasmussen in Lemwerder, near Bremen. The shipyard initially built boats for collecting practice torpedoes, minesweepers and other naval vessels for the Imperial Navy. Minesweepers are still part of the portfolio today – along with pilot boats and other SWATH vessels, which are less susceptible to wave motion, especially in rough seas, thanks to their special design. However, A&R is best known for building large sailing and motor yachts and so-called megayachts, which can be up to 125 meters long. The company, which is now in its fourth generation of family ownership, has launched more than 6,500 ships since it was founded.
In recent years and despite the pandemic, A&R has enjoyed the benefit of well-filled order books, which has resulted in an increasing number of engineering jobs being outsourced. It became apparent that collaboration with suppliers was not functioning as well as it could have. The existing IT infrastructure was soon stretched to its limits in terms of capacity. In addition, ensuring the requisite level of process reliability was becoming increasingly complicated. The company therefore turned to PROSTEP's shipbuilding PLM experts with the aim of developing a sustainable PDM/PLM strategy for efficient, process-oriented and technical partner collaboration.
Information flow analysis as the starting point
With the support of our consultants, the shipyard's partner environment and information flows were analyzed, i.e. what types of partners the shipyard has, what volume of work it takes on, what information they need in order to carry out this work, and how they exchange data and with whom. The issue of what form a process-oriented technical solution that provides support to the different partners might take was also investigated. Discussions with the specialist and IT departments revealed that the way in which internal PDM/PLM processes and data management practices had been designed did not provide the partners with the best possible support. The joint project team from A&R and PROSTEP therefore made a recommendation to the executive board that the internal prerequisites for collaboration first of all be improved.
A&R manages articles and BOMs in its ERP system and also makes use of a PDM/PLM system. The latter, however, has up until now tended to be used as an extended document management system and therefore has no dedicated configuration and change management facility for CAD and engineering data. Nor does it have a roles and rights concept with enough different levels to control access to the information. CAD and engineering data reside on shared network drives, there is no version control, and the data is replicated to partners as needed. Communication takes place via a portal solution, which is also used to store projects, a function for which it was not designed. This has a negative impact on performance and thus also on user acceptance.