In 1950, Ed Levin began hand-crafting
jewelry in his apartment in New York City. He traveled
to college campuses and sold his creations out of a suitcase.
It wasn’t long, however, before he opened a retail shop
in Bennington, Vermont.
In 1975, the business relocated to
Cambridge, New York, and became a wholesale-only operation.
Today, Ed Levin, Inc. is considered to be the largest
and oldest hand-crafted designer jewelry manufacturer
in the country, serving more than 400 jewelry retailers
around the United States.
“We typically have some 250 designs
in the line at all times,” says Leslie Resio, President
and General Manager of Ed Levin, Inc. “We add about 50
new items each year and drop about 50 that aren’t selling
well.”
She adds, “Most designs are available
in 4-5 different metals and many with 12 different stones.
The result is several combinations and permutations that
might be ordered.”
“We try to act as the inventory drawer
for the shops we sell to,” Resio says, “so our promise
to the stores is ‘we can deliver your hand-crafted order
within 5 days.’ So, even though our products are hand-crafted,
we still have a very sophisticated business that requires
technology to deal with all the information we have.”
As the year 2000 approached, Resio
contacted Ebeling Associates about a new information
management system to meet their needs because their existing
system was almost entirely customized and upgrading it
would have been prohibitively expensive.
Resio says, “Allan Robison came over
and gave us a demonstration of EXEControl and showed
how you can start with one piece of information and,
with just a few keystrokes, drill down and get almost
any other piece of information that you need. With our
old system, production reports were downloaded to Excel.
It was expensive, cumbersome, and it didn’t work very
well.”
With the EXEControl system, when an
order comes in to Ed Levin for a piece of jewelry, a
request is automatically routed to the stock room where
the material is cut, the stones selected, and everything
is ready within minutes for the craftsperson to work
on it. As a result, the time available for the craftsperson
to make a piece of jewelry so that it can be shipped
within the company’s standard lead times has been extended
from four hours to four days!
Resio says, “With four days available
for crafting a piece of jewelry, that has given us more
efficiency. For example, now a craftsperson can take
one item and group it with like items to create a more
efficient process. It’s less stressful for everyone involved.”
Thanks to the EXEControl system, now
anyone in the company can know instantly what items are
being made, where they are in the process, who is working
on them, and when they are expected to be ready for shipping.
The system takes care of all the inventory, including
gold, silver, and stones, and produces reports of what
materials are running low, based on usage. The system
also handles billing and invoicing.
“In the past,” Resio says, “the sales
department would never get involved with the old system,
other than to review hardcopy reports. Now they can get
on the computer to find out what customers have ordered,
when they paid, which designs are selling and to what
shops, as well as everything they need to know about
a shop and its payment history.”
One capability that the company never
had before is to track returned goods. About 20% of merchandise
comes back to the company. When an item comes in, it
is now logged in on a particular tray where it can be
tracked throughout the building. Eventually, it goes
to the repolishing department, where it is made ready
for sale again.
“When an order comes in,” Resio says, “we
know if the desired item is in repolish. That keeps us
from making things we don’t need to make, and it has
helped us organize a part of our business that no one
wanted to deal with.”
She adds, “Some time ago, we had a
dream of bar-coded work orders, bar-coded inventory,
and bar-coded finished inventory. EXEControl has made
our dream a reality.”
“Working with the folks at Ebeling
has been very much a partnership,” Resio says. “When
I first met with them, I said we would need a lot of
handholding, and they’ve given us exactly what we need.
They behave like they expect to be working together for
a very long time. They’ve been wonderful.”
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