OEE & Downtime in CPG / Consumer Goods Manufacturing
Key takeaways
- CPG lines typically run 50 to 70 percent OEE.
- The big losses: SKU and promotional changeovers, packaging micro-stops, and material variation.
- SKU proliferation multiplies changeovers, and each one is an availability loss.
- The packaging hall is where most of the OEE leaks, just like F&B.
Consumer packaged goods, from home and personal care to household products, live with relentless SKU proliferation: pack sizes, promotional variants, private label and e-commerce formats. Every variant is another changeover, and the high-speed packaging lines underneath share every micro-stop problem of filling.
What's a good OEE in CPG?
CPG lines commonly sit at 50 to 70 percent OEE versus the 85 percent world-class mark. The two big differentiators are changeover speed (because runs are short and frequent) and micro-stop rate on the packaging line. Calculate your OEE.
The biggest losses in CPG
| Loss | Why it's big in CPG | OEE factor |
|---|---|---|
| SKU & promotional changeovers | High SKU counts and promo packs mean frequent, short runs | Availability |
| Packaging micro-stops | Fillers, cappers, labellers and case packers jam often, the hidden factory | Performance |
| Material / component variation | Films, caps, cartons and decoration vary and cause stops | Performance / Quality |
| Line imbalance | Serial machines starve and block each other | Performance |
| Startup & giveaway | Scrap and over-fill after each changeover | Quality |
CPG packaging lines lose the most to micro-stops. See yours in units and euros.
What downtime costs in CPG
Thin margins on high volume mean throughput is everything, and a stop near the end of the line risks finished-goods shipments and service levels to demanding retail customers. Estimate your downtime cost.
How leading CPG plants improve
- Attack changeover time with SMED, the biggest lever when runs are short.
- Capture micro-stops automatically and fix their true causes.
- Balance the line so healthy machines are not starved or blocked.
The partner we recommend, , reads stops from the line and shows the true cause of micro-stops on video, then routes a work order. It is EU-built with EU data residency and holds ISO 27001 / 20000-1 / 9001 (supports audit-readiness). Fabrico is a partner we recommend; the tools here are free regardless.
Is CPG the same as FMCG?
Broadly yes. The dynamics here apply to fast-moving consumer goods generally: high SKU counts, high-speed packaging and changeover-heavy production.
What is the single biggest lever?
Usually changeover reduction, because SKU proliferation makes changeovers frequent. Micro-stops are a close second. See the six big losses.
Does this overlap with food & beverage?
Yes, the packaging dynamics are shared. See also Food & Beverage and Packaging.
Common equipment to troubleshoot: Filling machines · Cappers · Cartoners · Palletizers · Packaging lines · full directory