The IBM-SAS quality-warning package combines SAS applications for analyzing structured data such as warranty-claim statistics with software and services from IBM, including data-integration tools and a rules-engine application for analyzing unstructured data such as handwritten reports.
The software will help automakers and parts manufacturers comb through terabytes of data for accurate analysis and reporting to the safety administration, says Larry Stolle, IBM's global business-development executive for the automotive industry. One early user of the product is pulling data from nearly 60 databases. The package, sold by IBM and SAS, is priced according to the implementation.
Stolle expects the auto industry will ultimately use these tools for more than Tread reporting. "If automakers stop there, they'll fail to exploit the investment made to meet a legislative requirement." Automakers can use the system to spot potential problems with products, compress problem-resolution times, and improve manufacturing processes, he says.
Ford Motor Co. is leveraging nearly a terabyte of warranty-claims data to help 10,000 of its dealers improve auto-service operations. Ford's global warranty-measurement system incorporates a Teradata data warehouse with 24 months of warranty data and Information Builders Inc.'s WebFocus business-intelligence software.
While the program helps Ford lower its warranty expenses, Lollar says the real goal is to help dealers improve customer service. Ford has provided basic printed reports to dealers for two years, but last year the company implemented a system that provides dealers with Internet access to monthly WebFocus reports with charts and graphs and the ability to drill down into the reports' underlying statistics.
Ford is also leveraging the data warehouse for other tasks, including forecasting future warranty costs and identifying gaps in dealer technician training.
Ford analyzes the data to see how many repairs individual dealers are performing and the cost of those repairs. The system compares those results to other dealers in the region or within a country for European dealers. That makes it possible to spot instances where dealers may be performing unnecessary repairs or spending too much--and therefore charging too much--to service cars. "Our objective is to identify as early as possible a dealer that's trending in the wrong direction," says Jim Lollar, Ford's global warranty operations IT manager. Ford then works with the dealers to correct the problems.
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The goal of Ford's data warehouse is to improve customer service, Lollar says![]()
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