Automating the Cost Calculation: From Material and Runtime to a Winning Price
For small manufacturing job shops, the RFQ response process is often a bottleneck. Calculating an accurate, competitive price for custom parts requires pulling together material costs, machine runtime, secondary operations, and margin rules—all within minutes. AI automation can eliminate the guesswork and manual spreadsheet juggling. Here’s how to build a structured system that turns raw RFQ data into a winning price.
Start Structured: The Material Database
Begin by creating a rigorous database of your 10 most common materials. Each entry should include: material type (e.g., 6061-T6 Aluminum, 304 Stainless Steel, Delrin), form factor (sheet, plate, round bar, hex bar, tube), dimensions (thickness, diameter), cost per unit (per pound, per square foot, or per linear foot), last update date, and supplier part number for API integration. This single source of truth ensures every quote uses current pricing.
Apply Smart Markup Rules
Automation shines with conditional business rules. For example: if the annual projected volume exceeds 1,000 pieces, apply a 15% margin instead of the standard 30%. If the customer is in the medical industry, increase margin to 40% to account for higher inspection overhead. For a strategic fit—say a part that uses your niche 5-axis capability—keep margin at 25% to win the work. Also include expedite fees: add a 20% premium for rush turnaround.
The Runtime Calculator and Operations Library
An automated system must estimate machine time precisely. For turning, time can be calculated from stock diameter, finished diameter, length, and number of passes. For milling, feed the part geometry to a Runtime Calculator that outputs hours per operation (e.g., 2.7 hours on Machine_04). Then add standard times from your Operations Library—deburring, heat treat, etc.—and pull supplier costs for secondary processes like Anodizing_Type_III.
Example: A 6061 Plate RFQ
An RFQ arrives for a 5″ x 5″ x 0.5″ plate of 6061 aluminum. Your system automatically: queries the Material Database for 6061 plate cost, runs part geometry through the Runtime Calculator (outputs 2.7 hours of mill time), adds standard deburring time from the Operations Library, pulls the standard cost for Anodizing_Type_III from your supplier database, then applies the appropriate margin (e.g., standard 30%). If the calculated total falls below your shop minimum of $150, it enforces that charge automatically.
The Runtime Calculator Checklist
- Build the Material Database with your 10 most common materials. Input current costs and supplier info.
- Define clear markup rules: volume breaks, industry multipliers, strategic fit discounts.
- Create a Runtime Calculator that accepts part geometry and outputs machine time per operation.
- Integrate a Standard Operations Library for secondary tasks like deburring.
- Set minimum order charges to avoid under-pricing small jobs.
By structuring material data, automating runtime estimates, and applying intelligent margin rules, your shop can generate accurate quotes in seconds—not hours. The result: faster responses, fewer pricing errors, and more winning bids. Start with your top 10 materials and one standard machine, then scale.
For a comprehensive guide with detailed workflows, templates, and additional strategies, see my e-book: AI for Small Manufacturing Job Shops: How to Automate RFQ Response Generation and Technical Capability Matching.