Manufacturing Planning Manager

FCC Commercial FurnitureRoseburg, OR
$95,000 - $125,000Onsite

About The Position

FCC Commercial Furniture is creating a manufacturing planning capability that will help shape how the business operates. As they invest in a modern ERP platform, they are looking for an experienced manufacturing planning professional who enjoys solving complex production challenges, improving manufacturing performance, and building systems that help an organization grow. FCC Commercial Furniture is a privately held manufacturer in Roseburg, Oregon with approximately 150 employees, including more than 100 in manufacturing. They manufacture nearly everything on the customer-facing side of a quick-service restaurant in a complex, high-mix, primarily make-to-order environment. Leadership is accessible, employee tenure is exceptionally high, and this newly created position reflects FCC's commitment to making planning a competitive advantage.

Requirements

  • 5+ years of manufacturing planning, production planning or master scheduling experience.
  • ERP/MRP experience.
  • Knowledge of BOMs, routings, capacity planning and scheduling.
  • Strong analytical and communication skills.
  • Proven ability to influence and lead cross-functional initiatives without direct authority.

Nice To Haves

  • High-mix discrete manufacturing.
  • ERP implementation participation.
  • APICS/ASCM certification.
  • Lean or continuous improvement experience.

Responsibilities

  • Establish a modern manufacturing planning process.
  • Develop capacity-based planning and production visibility.
  • Own MRP and planning master data.
  • Improve production availability communication.
  • Support ERP planning configuration.
  • Improve throughput, planning accuracy and on-time delivery.
  • Position planning as a trusted business function and competitive advantage.

Benefits

  • Annual incentive opportunity
  • Relocation assistance available
  • Comprehensive benefits package
© 2026 Teal Labs, Inc
Privacy PolicyTerms of Service