Bouwdeck deploys vPlan for planning, production and quality controls

Bouwdeck produces prefabricated roofing elements. They plan the production process with vPlan and use forms to ensure quality. Want to know more? Then read on quickly!

Planner Patrick kijkt naar zijn schermen naar de planning in vPlan
  • Location

    De Meern, Netherlands
  • Branche

    Construction
  • ERP

    Standalone
  • Opgericht in

    2016

Results
Forms
Fewer errors, less paper, more time saved and better quality control thanks to convenient digital forms.

Dependencies
By using dependencies, they can flexibly shift the schedule. Other process steps are shifted automatically if required.

Communication
Internal communication has been improved: stakeholders receive automatic notifications, keeping everyone informed. Contact with vPlan itself was also considered very pleasant.


Bouwdeck deploys vPlan for quality control

On a chilly morning in February, vPlan's marketing team decided to take a drive to the historic town of De Meern. Apart from the town's rich history, here we also find the company Bouwdeck, which produces prefabricated roofing elements.

In addition, Bouwdeck uses vPlan in combination with Tabletforms. Naturally, we are incredibly curious to know exactly how they use vPlan and the forms. Time for a customer story!

Photo of Bouwdeck precast roof element in scaffolding

Bouwdeck: innovative prefabricated roof systems

Once we arrived on site, Patrick Poelwijk was already waiting for us. He has been with Bouwdeck for four years and fulfils the role of work planner as well as drawing room planner. He starts enthusiastically: "At Bouwdeck we produce innovative, prefabricated roofing elements for extending houses. Our elements are mainly used in new buildings. The prefabricated elements offer a great advantage for contractors, because the contractor can quickly erect the scaffolding and can therefore get on with the work."

Photos of prefabricated roof elements from Bouwdeck being installed by a technician

What did Bouwdeck run into?

Over a delicious cup of coffee, we continued the conversation. What were they missing when scheduling projects that made them look for a new planning tool? Patrick says: "Together with my colleague work planner Mitchel, we divide the projects that come in and put them in the planning. I used Monday myself and my colleague Dick Smidts (technical director) even used Excel. I filled my planning, he filled his and then we checked whether it matched each other a bit."

The Bouwdeck manager at his desk planning with vPlan

He continues, smiling: "Now you probably guessed: if a project was postponed for a few weeks, Dick had to adjust his Excel schedule, but I also had to adjust my schedule in Monday. Big projects you sometimes have to reschedule up to 20 times. In Excel, that's a lot of manual work and in Monday, shifting projects doesn't work very well either. Besides, I don't find Excel very clear at all, you're scrolling endlessly. So we went looking for another solution."

The choice of vPlan

What features did the new planning tool need to have? Patrick: "Shifting in the planning was a tricky issue, so we looked at that carefully. I also wanted a visually attractive planning and wanted to integrate checklists, lists and other forms. My colleague Dick wanted the Excel look back. He wants to see at a glance how many elements are produced and when the delivery is. This is all possible in vPlan. The endless scrolling was also solved: in vPlan, you just use the search bar and there you are."

How does Bouwdeck deploy vPlan?

Bouwdeck's order process goes through 3 steps:
1. Work preparation;
2. Production;
3. Delivery.

Views in vPlan
Patrick says: "In vPlan, we use the timeline view and the list view. We don't plan by resources (people or machines), but more by weeks and elements. We can produce about six elements per production line in a day, which is x number of hours per day. So if they need to make eight elements, they are about a day and a half. So we know immediately our capacity per week."

Photo of 3 screens showing the schedule of Bouwdeck

Automatic notifications
He continues, "Although we do not plan based on employees, we have linked our employees to orders. This way, those involved get automatic notifications when something shifts in the schedule. The work planners also get a notification of this - we set this up using an automation."

Dependencies
For Patrick, it is important that he can easily shift orders in the planning. For this, they use dependencies. Patrick: "Thanks to dependencies in vPlan, we can very flexibly shift orders in the planning. This automatically takes into account any other steps in the process that must then also be postponed. However, postponing one process step does not mean that the next step is always postponed: sometimes there is enough space in between, vPlan also takes this into account."

Schedules in vPlan

So scheduling with vPlan is going well. But what about those checklists, lists and other forms that Patrick wanted to add to orders?

"We digitised our checklists. Earlier, we printed out the checklists, then they were filled in by hand by the production workers and then scanned again. But sometimes the handwriting was not legible, they put a cursive instead of a signature or they did not fill in the checklist completely. Moreover, printing out, filling in and scanning in was a lot of hassle. We wanted to see who produced an element and make certain parts of the checklist mandatory to fill in, so that everything is filled in carefully," Patrick says.

Configurable to your liking
Thanks to the collaboration between vPlan and Tabletforms, it is possible to configure forms entirely to your liking. How did Bouwdeck approach the design of their checklists? Patrick explains: "During the process with Tabletforms, we involved our production staff. Which fields did they want to see in the form? Together we thus created a very complete form."

Engineer from Bouwdeck with tablet in hands

Experience on the shop floor
"The production workers find it quite an improvement - they now only have to enter the construction number. The rest of the information is automatically entered into the form."

Easy material registration
He continues, "Furthermore, we use mandatory fields. I automatically receive an e-mail when a checklist is completed. Once the form 'packing' is completed, the roof element goes across for transport. And then we have completed another order! On the checklist, we also have a section for material registration. We register our rubber mats and roof drainage so we always know how much we still have in stock. Always handy."

Future plans with vPlan

Bouwdeck recently started working with vPlan and still has big plans for the future. Patrick: "We also want to start using the Wkb form next year. We also want to develop new forms for the shop floor; for production and for assembly and service workers. They can then easily use forms on site via the app on a tablet."

What positive results is Bouwdeck achieving with vPlan?

Despite the short time Bouwdeck has been working with vPlan, Patrick is so far particularly pleased with the digitisation of their checklists. "There are no more printouts hanging in the production hall. Well, almost no more printouts," he winks. "The checklists, drawings and other forms will soon all be accessible via iPad. We are still working on that. I think a lot of time will be saved once everything is in one app and everything is completely digital."

Papieren formulier vs. digitale formulieren op een tablet

He continues: "What I have particularly enjoyed is the contact with both vPlan and Tabletforms. If we have any questions I can always contact them and get a response within no time. Yes, the contact is really very nice."

Patrick, thanks for the pleasant conversation and your time!