Carl O. Hilgarth's Commentary on "The Information Due to the Customer"
After reading about the casual manner Christine Carsten
proposed a material substitution in a part ABC was to begin
manufacturing for XYZ, my first inclination is to take
Christine to the engineering reference bookshelf, reach for the
engineering standard practices and have her read them.
Especially the section on preparing engineering change
proposals. She should have prepared a value engineering change
proposal (VECP) for the proposed material substitution. The
VECP would describe the proposed substitution of the less
expensive metal alloy to make the part, the projected impact on
the performance and life of the part, and the projected
manufacturing cost savings. After review and approval of the
VECP by engineering, it would be forwarded to Vernon Waller to
review with XYZ. If XYZ accepts the VECP, Vernon would
negotiate a revised pricing agreement. The VECP is critical
since the price per part the XYZ is paying to ABC is based in
part on the cost of materials.
Vernon's acceptance of Christine's casual presentation and
his decision not to tell XYZ is as irresponsible as Christine's
engineering. Further, by signing the report, John Richards
knowingly falsified product information compounding the
problem. What if the material change is discovered by XYZ's
receiving inspection? (A simple Rockwell hardness test may be
all that is needed to tell the difference.) What if the parts
fail under warranty, and XYZ is forced to absorb the cost of
repair or replacement? Don't Vernon, Christine, or John foresee
that if some of the parts fail earlier than anticipated, XYZ
might decide to investigate the cause of failure, do some
testing on their own, and find out about the material
substitution? What are they going to say or do when XYZ calls
regarding the counterfeit parts supplied by ABC? Pull out the
report signed by John Richards and claim that XYZ is doesn't
know what they are talking about? Is the $90,000 that Vernon
will make for ABC enough to pay for the lawyers or make up for
the business ABC is going to lose? Ethically, Vernon has not
just done "good business." He has proposed to steal $18 per
part from XYZ by delivering counterfeit parts. Since Christine
is responsible for proposing the material substitution, she
must continue to press Vernon further on the issue.
Well, Christine backs off deciding there is nothing further
she can do and the counterfeit part is produced. At this point,
I'd like to know who authorized production of the counterfeit
part? Did engineering? Did Vernon? Who prepared the report
verifying that the specifications for the part have been met?
Was it engineering or was it Vernon? Noticing the original
alloy composition is listed in the specification causes me to
think that Vernon made the alloy change unilaterally, and
didn't bother to change the original part specification because
Christine told him that no one would notice the substitution
"unless they were looking for a difference and did a fair
amount of testing."
Were I Christine, I would insist that the report be
corrected to list the cheaper alloy. If this couldn't be done,
she should correct the report so it states the proper alloy
used in the part, and sign it. She should be responsible for
her engineering. In refusing to sign the report, Christine
probably thinks she is doing the ethical thing. However, by
backing off the issue when she felt there was nothing more that
she could do and not insisting on maintaining the integrity of
the product specification either as originally written or by a
VECP, she abrogated her responsibility as an engineer to
participate in none but honest enterprises (Order of the
Engineer). Her proposal was instrumental in Vernon's decision
to substitute the lower quality alloy in the part. The
counterfeit part is as much her responsibility as it is
Vernon's even though she didn't sign the report. Vernon's lack
of business ethics and concern for the quality of the product,
and Christine's undocumented engineering contribute equally to
this situation.
Assuming XYZ relies on supplier quality certification to
minimize receiving inspection costs, transmitting the report
misrepresenting the part opens ABC disqualification as a
supplier when they find out about the cheaper alloy. They may
also demand a retroactive price adjustment. When this happens,
how will Vernon's doing "good business" stand up? Since
Vernon's ethics are situational, will he say that he didn't
know anything about the change and that engineering made the
substitution and then covered it up by signed a report
specifying the original alloy? Will Christine and John be the
scapegoats since there is no documentation to the contrary?
Aviation is inherently safe, but it is totally unforgiving
of any carelessness. What if the part manufactured by ABC goes
into an aircraft manufactured by XYZ and in one case its
performance is not virtually the same, causing an accident?
There will be a public investigation. Imagine the consequences
to Vernon, Christine, John, and ABC.
Vernon, Christine, John, and probably ABC better clean up
their operation. Contracts needs to get out of engineering
decision making, and engineering needs to get more disciplined
and documented in its interface with contracts, especially
since ABC as a custom part manufacturing firm relies on
engineering to design the parts they contract to manufacture.
They must recognize that in the long run it is better to do
what is right rather than what is expedient, be honest and
trustworthy in their relationships, and truthful and accurate
in what they say and write.
Cite this page:
"Carl O. Hilgarth's Commentary on "The Information Due to the Customer""
Online Ethics Center for Engineering
8/17/2006
National Academy of Engineering
Accessed: Tuesday, May 22, 2012
<www.onlineethics.org/Resources/Cases/Customer/CustomerHilgarth.aspx>