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Fomo tracks many happy returns

A tracking system better controls Fomo Products' fleet of returnable containers holding foam insulation chemicals. That helps the company save up to $60ꯠ/yr.

Users spray foam from the returnable containers onto everything from buildings (shown) to refrigerated trucks.
Users spray foam from the returnable containers onto everything from buildings (shown) to refrigerated trucks.

Success doesn't always breed success. Just ask Fomo Products, Inc., a Norton, OH-based maker of liquid polyurethane insulation products used by residential and commercial building companies. Until the early '90s, Fomo packed these chemicals only in disposable steel containers. It still offers these containers, but by 1992 the company introduced the products in refillable steel containers, purchasing 50 containers initially.

As sales of its Handi-Foam® grew, Fomo had to purchase a more substantial inventory of containers. That overtaxed the company's manual tracking system, causing Fomo to "lose" some containers. The company sought three round trips for each container but determined that while some met or exceeded that number, most fell short. On average, each container made 1.8 round trips.

By last year, Fomo Products righted the situation. It now maintains constant control of some 2ꯠ steel containers, each now averaging three round trips. Fomo credits its successful turnaround to a returnable container fleet management system developed and coordinated with Sherkin & Associates (Toronto, Ontario, Canada), a consulting firm that specializes in cost-effective solutions to industrial problems. Greater control over its steel containers has also allowed Fomo to:

* Reduce the average number of days to fill an order from five to one,

* Decrease "short-shipping" by 75%,

* Comply with hazardous materials shipping regulations in eight months, and

* Respond better to customer needs.

The advantages delivered by using returnable containers have helped Fomo reduce costs while increasing sales. Fomo general manager Stefan Gantenbein tells Packaging World that this combination of factors, plus not having to buy more new containers, yields annual total annual savings of $40ꯠ to $60ꯠ.

Realizing limitations

Fomo sells 17- and 27-gal quantities of Handi-Foam in a 27-gal container, 60- and 100-gal offerings in a 100-gal container, and a 250-gal size in a container that resembles a large propane tank. Customers purchase containers in sets of two, with one container holding chemical A, the other chemical B. Tubes connected to both containers lead to a spray hose that a worker uses to spray the hazardous chemicals. The two chemicals mix at the point they're sprayed. As the user pulls the trigger, the chemicals are dispensed in a spray foam that expands and adheres to virtually any material, curing in about 30 sec. The chemicals provide thermal insulation for houses, airports, schools and various buildings--even in refrigerated trucks. The tanks or containers that hold the chemicals are supplied by Worthington Cylinders (Columbus, OH).

"We've been in business since 1975, selling disposable containers of our product," explains Gantenbein. "In 1992, we introduced a line of refillable steel containers. We started off with 50 containers, then went to 100. Every time a tank or container went out, we logged it out. When a container came in, we logged it in. We kept manual log sheets because we felt we could handle these smaller quantities," he recalls. "Based on our own monitoring, we determined we were getting an average of less than two return trips per container."

Gantenbein notes, "About two years into the program we discovered we no longer had full control of our tanks. We finally realized that when we would ship a tank to one company, and it was returned by a different customer." That situation occurred in some cases when Fomo shipped to a distributor who in turn sold the container to one of its customers, who then returned the empty container to Fomo. Fomo didn't know the distributor's customer. That process has now changed. When a distributor receives an order, it conveys that information along to Fomo so that it knows who the end user is and can follow up with that user when the container is ready to be returned.

But previously, some "lost" tanks were literally "written off" by Fomo as missing in the field. This was costly for Fomo. Gantenbein says the tanks "are our assets, with each container costing about $500."

Aware of the poor container return averages of the costly containers, he says, "we did some brainstorming and began working with Sherkin. We identified different reasons why we weren't getting containers back, and we developed a program to eliminate those problems and regain control."

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