Cut materials usage, labor and energy costs in weeks
Manufacturing cost pressure does not wait for the annual planning cycle. Inflation volatility, pricing pressure, and energy uncertainty mean operations leaders need cash impact this quarter, not next year.
Yet many cost programs fail to deliver quickly because they rely on desk analysis, delayed approvals, and large transformation roadmaps. By the time results appear, conditions have already changed.
Rapid cost savings focuses on operational actions that deliver measurable cost reduction quickly — while strengthening operational capability.
Where to look first for rapid savings
Across manufacturing sectors, rapid cost savings consistently comes from three areas: raw materials usage, labor productivity and energy.
Raw materials usage: Restoring yield and eliminating waste
Raw material losses hide in plain sight. Scrap, off‑spec production, yield loss during startups, and changeover losses quietly inflate cost per unit.
A conservative and realistic starting point for most manufacturers is:
- 3–5% reduction in total raw material spend
This is typically unlocked by:
- Tightening process windows
- Reducing variation during transitions
- Identifying weak points through zero‑loss analysis
- Improving operator routines and feedback loops
Many organizations discover that once losses are made visible, opportunity is far larger than expected.


Improving yield
Over the course of 3 months, Chartwell helped to improve yield for an intraocular lens manufacturer by over 40%.
Labor productivity: Breaking constraints without adding headcount
Labor cost is rarely about headcount alone. It is about how effectively labor time converts into productive output.
Rapid labor productivity improvements often come from:
- Identifying constraints and unnecessary waiting
- Improving task sequencing
- Structuring tiered production reviews
- Removing chronic causes of unplanned work
These changes routinely free significant capacity without increasing workload or burning out teams.


Improving labor productivity
Chartwell helped a defense client improve labor productivity resulting in +70% reduction in average cost per maintenance activity.
Energy: Often the fastest win
Energy consumption is frequently poorly measured, loosely governed, and highly sensitive to operational discipline. The result is significant avoidable spend.
Without major CapEx, manufacturers can often achieve:
- 5–20% energy reduction potential
- 8–10% achievable within the first 90 days
Savings typically come from:
- Reducing idle and standby energy consumption
- Tightening operating windows
- Improving process stability and control
- Aligning start‑up, shutdown, and changeover routines

Cutting €3 million in annual savings
What rapid cost savings looks like in practice
With Chartwell, rapid cost savings follows a clear, execution‑led path:
- 2‑week Opportunity Scan to quantify losses and prioritize actions
- 8–12‑week pilot to prove savings in live operations
- 3–9‑month scale‑up to embed and sustain gains
The outcome: cash savings delivered inside the quarter, with visibility and control improved rather than weakened.
Set targets on day one
To move fast, leadership needs clear anchor points:
Energy: 8–10% of current spend
Raw materials usage: 3–5% of total raw material cost
Labor productivity: 20-50% productivity improvement
These targets are conservative — but credible and executable.