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Supply Chain Management-
Basics.
     Rajendran Ananda Krishnan




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Topics to be covered
ï‚— Introduction to Supply Chain
  Management : Supply Chain –
  objectives, Importance
ï‚— Decision    Phases, Process view,
  Competitive     and     supply      chain
  strategies, achieving strategic fit
ï‚— Supply     chain drivers, obstacles,
  framework
ï‚— Facilities, inventory, transportation,
  information, sourcing, pricing
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Supply Chain- Meaning
ï‚— The supply chain encompasses all
  activities     involved       in    the
  transformation of goods from the raw
  material stage to the final stage, when
  the goods and services reach the end
  customer.
ï‚— Supply chain management involves
  planning, design and control of flow of
  material, information and finance
  along the supply chain to deliver
  superior value to the end customer in
  an effective and efficient manner.
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Definition
Mohanty and Deshmukh define supply
  chain management as a loop:
ï‚— It starts with the customer and ends with
  the customer.
ï‚— Through the loop flow all materials,
  finished goods, information and all
  transactions.
ï‚— It requires looking at the business as one
  continuous, seamless process.
ï‚— This process absorbs distinct functions
  such      as    forecasting,   purchasing,
  manufacturing and distribution, sales and
  marketing into a continuous business
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  interaction.           prettythings
Definition
ï‚—   Management of material, funds and
    information flows both in and between
    facilities such as vendors, manufacturing
    and assembly plants and distribution
    centers. – Thomas and Griffin

ï‚—   The objective of managing the supply is to
    synchronize the requirements of the
    customer with the flow of materials from
    suppliers in order to affect a balance
    between what are often seen as
    conflicting goals of high customer service,
    low inventory management and low unit
    cost. - Stevens         https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
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ï‚— For a simple product like soap, the
  HUL supply chain involves ingredient
  suppliers, transporters, the company’s
  manufacturing plants, carrying and
  forwarding     agents,      wholesalers,
  distributors and retailers.
ï‚— A supply chain is dynamic and
  involves the constant flow of
  information, product and funds
  between different stages.
ï‚— Of late, firms have realized that it is
  not the firms themselves but their
  supply chains that vie with each other
  in the marketplace.   https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
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Order Delivery Lead Time
Order                   Customer
penetration             order
                                      Order delivery lead
point                                 time

                   Make
     Source      component       Assembly             Delivery
                     s
                   Supply chain lead time

ï‚—   A typical firm sources material, manufactures components, assembles the
    product and delivers the finished product to the end customer.
ï‚—   Total time required for the supply chain to carry out all activities from the
    beginning to the end is the supply chain lead time.
ï‚—   Time required for the supply chain to deliver the order to the customer after they
    place it is the order delivery lead time.


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Order penetration point based supply
chain typology
                                     Customer
                                     order
               Make
 Source                   Assembly       Deliver               Made to
            components
                                                               Stock
 Customer                                                      (FMCG
 order                                                         Products)
               Make                                            Made to
 Source                   Assembly        Deliver
            components                                         Order
                                                               (Equipment
                         Customer                              Manufacturer)
                         order
               Make                                           Configure to
  Source                  Assembly        Deliver
            components                                        Order (Pizza
                                                              Manufacturer,
                                                              Laptop
                                                              Manufacturer)
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Objectives of Supply chain
ï‚—   The objective of every supply chain should be to
    maximize the overall value generated. The value a
    supply chain generates is the difference between what
    the final product is worth to the customer and the costs
    the supply chain incurs in filling the customer’s request.


ï‚—   Supply chain profitability is the difference between the
    revenue generated from the customer and the overall
    cost across the supply chain. The higher the supply
    chain profitability, the more successful is the supply
    chain.




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ï‚— Supply chain success should be
  measured in terms of supply chain
  profitability and not in terms of the profits
  at an individual stage.
ï‚— For any supply chain, there is only one
  source of revenue: the customer. All
  flows of information, product or funds
  generate costs within the supply chain.
  Thus the appropriate management of
  these flows is a key to supply chain
  success.
ï‚— Effective supply chain management
  involves the management of supply
  chain assets and product, information
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  and fund flows to maximize total supply
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ï‚— The small size of Indian retail outlets limits the
  amount of inventory they can hold, thus
  requiring frequent replenishment.
ï‚— The only way for a manufacturer to keep
  transportation costs low is to bring full
  truckloads of product close to the market and
  then distribute locally using milk runs with
  smaller vehicles.
ï‚— The presence of an intermediary who can
  receive a full truckload shipment, break bulk,
  and then make smaller deliveries to the
  retailers is crucial if transportation costs are to
  be kept low.
ï‚— Distributors in India are also able to reduce
  transportation costs for outbound delivery to
  the retailer by aggregating products across
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  multiple manufacturers during the delivery
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Supply Chain Stages
  Supplier            Manufacturer            Distributor



                                 Customer                      Retailer



A typical supply chain may involve a variety of stages. These
  supply chain stages include: Customers, Retailers,
  Wholesalers/distributors, Manufacturers, Raw material
  suppliers.

Each stage in a supply chain is connected through the flow of
 products, information, and funds. These flows often occur
 in both directions and may be managed by one of the
 stages or an intermediary.           https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
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Importance of Supply Chain Decisions
  Helps in achieving success – Companies
   being a leader at using supply chain design,
   planning and operation help in achieving
   success.
  Effective flow of goods and information –
   Companies like Walmart who have invested
   heavily in transportation and information
   infrastructure help in achieving effective flow of
   goods and information.
 ï‚— Reduces the level of Inventory with the
   manufacturer – Dell centralizes manufacturing
   and inventories in a few locations and
   postpones final assembly until orders arrive.
   Thus, Dell is able to provide a large variety of
   PC configurations while keeping very low
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ï‚— Improved match between supply and
  demand – To improve the match between
  supply and demand, Dell makes an active
  effort to steer customers in real time, on the
  phone or via the internet, toward PC
  configurations that can be built given the
  components available.
 Reason for company’s success – For the
  Companies like Dell, Toyota etc., the supply
  chain design, and its management of
  product, information and cash flows play a
  key role in the company’s success.
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Reasons for Growing Importance of Supply Chain
Firms that do not manage their supply chain will incur huge
   inventory costs and eventually end up losing a lot of customers
   because the right products are not available at the right place
   and time.
Five major trends that have emerged to make supply chain
   management a critical success factor in most industries.
 Proliferation in product lines – Companies have realized
   that more and more product variety is needed to satisfy the
   growing range of customer tastes and requirements.
   Companies like HUL, in their personal care products, manage,
   on an average, 1200 SKU’s. Chains like Foodworld manage
   about 6000 SKU’s. With increasing product variety, it becomes
   rather difficult to forecast accurately. Hence, retailers and other
   organizations involved in the business are forced to either
   maintain greater amount of inventories or lose customers.



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   Shorter product life cycles – With increased
    competition, product life cycles across all
    industries are becoming shorter. So a firm like
    Dell, which has, on an average, just 7 days of
    inventory, as compared to the industry average
    of 35 days, does not have to worry about product
    and component obsolescence. Its competitors
    with higher inventories end up writing off huge
    amounts of stocks every year as obsolete.

   Higher level of outsourcing – Firms
    increasingly focus on their core activities and
    outsource non-core activities to other competent
    players.    This trend towards outsourcing is
    irreversible but a higher level of outsourcing
    makes supply chains more vulnerable, thereby
    forcing firms to develop different types of supply
    chain capabilities within the organization.

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   Shift in power structure in the chain – In every
    industry, the entities closer to customers are becoming
    more powerful. With increasing competition, a steadily
    rising number of products are chasing the same retail
    shelf space. Retail shelf space has not increased at the
    pace at which product variety has increased. So there
    have been case of retailers asking for slotting allowance
    when manufacturers introduce new products in the
    market place. Retailers have realized that they are
    powerful entities in the chain and hence expect the
    manufacturers to be more responsive to their demands
    and needs.

   Globalization of manufacturing – Over the past
    decade, tariff levels have come down significantly. Many
    companies are restructuring their production facilities to
    be at par with global standards. Unlike in the past, when
    firms used to source components, produce goods and
    sell them locally, now firms are integrating their supply
    chain for the entire world market. This has made
    managing supply chains extremely complicated.
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Decision Phases in a Supply
Chain
Successful supply chain management
 requires many decisions relating to the
 flow of information, products and
 funds. Each decision should be made
 to raise the supply chain surplus.
 These decisions fall into three
 categories or phases, depending on
 the frequency of each decision and
 the time frame during which the
 decision phase has an impact.
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Supply Chain Strategy or Design – It
decides what the chain’s configuration will
be, how resources will be allocated and
what processes each stage will perform.
Strategic decisions made by companies
include whether to outsource or perform a
supply chain function in-house, the location
and     capacities    of   production     and
warehousing facilities, the products to be
manufactured or stored at various locations,
the modes of transportation to be made
available along different shipping legs and
the type of information system to be utilized.
Cisco’s decisions regarding its choice of
supply sources for components, contract
manufacturers for manufacturing and the
location and capacity of its warehouses are
all supply chain design or strategic
decisions.


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2. Supply Chain Planning – The goal
of planning is to maximize the supply
chain surplus that can be generated
over the planning horizon given the
constraints established during the
strategic or design phase. Planning
includes making decisions regarding
which markets will be supplied from
which locations, the subcontracting of
manufacturing, the inventory policies to
be followed and the timing and size of
marketing and price promotions. Dell’s
decisions regarding markets supplied by
a production facility and target
production quantities at each location
are classified as planning decisions.




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Supply Chain Operation – The
goal of supply chain operations is
to handle incoming customer
orders in the best possible manner.
During this phase, firms allocate
inventory     or    production      to
individual orders, set a date that an
order is to be filled, generate pick
lists at a warehouse, allocate an
order to a       particular shipping
mode and shipment, set delivery
schedules of trucks and place
replenishment orders.




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Process View
A supply chain is a sequence of processes and
  flows that take place within and between
  different stages and combine to fill a customer
  need for a product. There are two different
  ways to view the processes performed in a
  supply chain.
 Cycle View – The processes in a supply
  chain are divided into a series of cycles, each
  performed at the interface between two
  successive stages of a supply chain.
 Push/Pull View – Pull processes are initiated
  in response to a customer order, whereas
  push processes are initiated and performed in
  anticipation of customer orders.
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All supply chain processes can be
  broken down into four process cycles:
ï‚— Customer order cycle
ï‚— Replenishment cycle
ï‚— Manufacturing cycle
ï‚— Procurement cycle
Each cycle occurs at the interface
  between two successive stages of the
  supply chain.


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Supply Chain Process Cycles




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Sub processes in Each Supply
Chain Process Cycle
Supplier stage    Buyer returns
  markets        reverse flows to
   product       supplier or third
                      party


 Buyer stage      Buyer stage
 places order      receives
                    supply



Supplier stage   Supplier stage
receives order   supplies order




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ï‚— Each cycle starts with the supplier
  marketing the product to customers.
ï‚— A buyer then places an order that is
  received by the supplier.
ï‚— The supplier supplies the order, which is
  received by the buyer.
ï‚— The buyer may return some of the
  product or other recycled material to the
  supplier or a third party.



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ï‚— Within each cycle, the goal of the
  buyer is to ensure product availability
  and to achieve economies of scale in
  ordering.
ï‚— The supplier attempts to forecast
  customer orders and reduce the cost
  of receiving the order.
ï‚— The supplier then works to fill the
  order on time and improve efficiency
  and accuracy of the order fulfillment
  process.
ï‚— The buyer then works to reduce the
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  cost of the receiving process.
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Few differences between cycles:
ï‚— In the customer order cycle, demand
  is external to the supply chain and
  thus uncertain. In all other cycles,
  order placement is uncertain but can
  be projected based on policies
  followed by the particular supply chain
  stage.
ï‚— As we move from the customer to the
  supplier, the number of individual
  orders declines and the size of each
  order increases.
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Push/Pull View of Supply Chain
Processes
ï‚— With pull processes, execution is
  initiated in response to a customer
  order. With pull processes, execution
  is initiated in anticipation of customer
  orders.
ï‚— At the time of execution of a pull
  process, customer demand is known
  with certainty, whereas at the time of
  execution of a push process, demand
  is not known and must be forecast.
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ï‚—   Pull processes may also be referred to
    as reactive processes because they
    react to customer demand. Push
    processes may also be referred to as
    speculative processes because they
    respond to speculated rather than
    actual demand.
               Push/Pull
               Boundary

    Push                         Pull Processes
    Processes




                Customer Order       https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
                Arrives              prettythings
Examples of Push and Pull Processes
 Make to stock Companies like HP –
  Executes all processes in the customer
  order cycle after the customer arrives. All
  processes that are part of the customer
  order cycle are thus pull processes.
ï‚— All processes in the replenishment cycle,
  manufacturing and procurement cycle are
  performed in anticipation of demand and
  are thus push processes.


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ï‚— Build to order computer manufacturer
  like Dell – All processes in the
  customer order, replenishment and
  manufacturing cycle at Dell are
  classified as pull processes because
  they are initiated by customer arrival.
ï‚— Dell,    however, does not place
  component orders in response to a
  customer       order.    Inventory      is
  replenished in anticipation of customer
  demand. All processes in the
  procurement cycle for Dell are thus
  classified as push processes, because
  they are in response to a forecast.
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Competitive and Supply Chain
Strategies
   A company’s competitive strategy
    defines, relative to its competitors, the
    set of customer needs that it seeks to
    satisfy through its products and services.
    For eg. Wal Mart aims to provide high
    availability of a variety of products of
    reasonable quality at low prices. Most
    products sold at Wal Mart are common-
    place and can be purchased elsewhere.
    What Wal Mart provides is a low price
    and product availability.
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Contd.
 Dell has stressed customization and variety at a
   reasonable cost, with customers having to wait
   approximately one week to get their product.
 In contrast, a customer can walk into a computer
   retailer, be helped by a salesperson, and leave the
   same day with HP computer. The amount of variety
   and customization available at the retailer, however,
   is limited.
 In each case, the competitive strategy is defined
   based on how the customer prioritizes product cost,
   delivery time, variety and quality. A Dell customer,
   purchasing online, places great emphasis on
   product variety and customization. A customer
   purchasing HP laptop is most concerned with price,
   fast response time and help in product selection.
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   A firm’s competitive strategy will be
    defined based on its customer’s
    priorities. Competitive strategy targets
    one or more customer segments and
    aims to provide products and services
    that satisfy these customer’s needs.

ï‚—   To see the relationship between
    competitive      and    supply    chain
    strategies, we start with the value
    chain for a typical organization.

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The Value Chain in a
Company
Finance, Accounting, Information Technology, Human
                    Resources


New Product Marketing
Development and Sales Operation    Distribution       Service
                      s




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Value Chain
ï‚—   It begins with new product development, which
    creates specifications for the product.
ï‚—   Marketing and sales generate demand by
    publicizing the customer priorities that the
    products and services will satisfy.
ï‚—   Marketing also brings customer input back to
    new product development.
ï‚—   Using new product specifications, operations
    transforms inputs to outputs to create the
    product.
ï‚—   Distribution either takes the product to the
    customer or brings the customer to the product.
ï‚—   Service responds to customer requests during
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ï‚— A product development strategy specifies the
  portfolio of new products that a company will
  try to develop. It also dictates whether the
  development effort will be made internally or
  outsourced.
ï‚— A marketing and sales strategy specifies how
  the market will be segmented and how the
  product will be positioned, priced and
  promoted.
ï‚— A supply chain strategy determines the
  nature of procurement of raw materials,
  transportation of materials to and from the
  company, manufacture of the product or
  operation to provide the service, and
  distribution of the product to the customer,
  along with any follow-up service and a
  specification of whether these processes will
  be performed in-house or outsourced.
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Achieving Strategic Fit
Strategic fit means that both the competitive
  and supply chain strategies have aligned
  goals. It refers to consistency between the
  customer priorities that the competitive
  strategy hopes to satisfy and the supply chain
  capabilities that the supply chain strategy
  aims to build.

A company may fail either because of a lack of
  strategic fit or because its overall supply
  chain design, processes and resources do
  not provide the capabilities to support the
  desired strategic fit.  https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
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All processes and functions that are part of a
  company’s value chain contribute to its
  success or failure. A company’s success or
  failure is thus closely linked to the following
  keys:
ï‚— The competitive strategy and all functional
  strategies must fit together to form a
  coordinated overall strategy. Each functional
  strategy must support other functional
  strategies and help a firm reach its
  competitive strategy goal.
ï‚— The different functions in a company must
  appropriately structure their processes and
  resources to be able to execute these
  strategies successfully.
ï‚— The design of the overall supply chain and
  the role of each stage must be aligned to
  support the supply chain strategy.
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How is Strategic Fit
Achieved?
ï‚—   A competitive strategy will specify,
    either explicitly or implicitly, one or
    more customer segments that a
    company hopes to satisfy. To achieve
    strategic fit, a company must ensure
    that its supply chain capabilities
    support its ability to satisfy the
    targeted customer segments.

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Three basic steps to achieve strategic
  fit:
1. Understanding the customer and
    supply chain Uncertainty – First, a
    company must understand the
    customer needs for each targeted
    segment and the uncertainty the
    supply chain faces in satisfying these
    needs. These needs help the
    company define the desired cost and
    service requirements. The supply
    chain uncertainty helps the company
    identify   the    extent     of    the
    unpredictability     of       demand,
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    disruption and delay that the supply
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Demand     uncertainty      reflects  the
 uncertainty of customer demand for a
 product. An example of product with
 low demand uncertainty is common
 salt. Salt has a very low margin,
 accurate demand forecasts, low
 stockout rates, and virtually no
 markdowns. It is a product with highly
 certain demand. On the other end of
 the spectrum, a new palmtop
 computer       has      high     demand
 uncertainty. It will likely have a high
 margin, very inaccurate demand
 forecasts, high stockout rates and
 large markdowns.      https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
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Implied Demand uncertainty is often correlated
  with other characteristics of demand, as
  follows:
ï‚— Products with uncertain demand are often less
  mature and have less direct competition. As a
  result margins, tend to be high.
ï‚— Forecasting is more accurate when demand
  has less uncertainty.
ï‚— Increased implied demand uncertainty leads to
  increased difficulty in matching supply with
  demand.
ï‚— Markdowns are high for products with high
  implied    demand       uncertainty  because
  oversupply often results.
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There is uncertainty resulting from the
 capability of the supply chain. For eg,
 when a new component is introduced in
 the PC industry, the quality yields of the
 production process tend to be low and
 breakdowns are frequent. As a result,
 companies have difficulty delivering
 according to a well-defined schedule,
 resulting in high supply uncertainty for
 PC manufacturers.
As the production technology matures and
 yields improve, companies are able to
 follow a fixed delivery schedule, resulting
 in low supply uncertainty.
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The Uncertainty(Demand and
 Supply) Spectrum
                       Predictable supply and
                       uncertain demand or uncertain
  Predictable supply   supply and predictable                Highly uncertain
  and demand           demand or somewhat                    supply and
                       uncertain supply and demand           demand




Salt at a                An existing                          A new
supermarke               automobile                           communication
t                        model                                device




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2. Understanding the Supply Chain Capabilities –Creating
  strategic fit is all about creating a supply chain strategy that
  best meets the demand a company has targeted given the
  uncertainty it faces.
Supply chain responsiveness includes a supply chain’s ability to
  do the following:
• Respond to wide ranges of quantities demanded.
• Meet short lead times
• Handle a large variety of products
• Build highly innovative products
• Meet a high service level
• Handle supply uncertainty
Responsiveness, however comes at a cost. For instance, to
  respond to a wider range of quantities demanded, capacity
  must be increased, which increases cost.
Supply chain efficiency is the inverse of the cost of making and
  delivering a product to the customer. For every strategic
  choice to increase responsiveness, there are additional costs
  that lower efficiency.
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Cost-Responsiveness Efficient
Frontier
    Responsivenes
     s
  High




   Low
         Hig   Cost   Low
         h


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The Responsiveness
   Spectrum


    Highly         Somewha                  Somewhat                    Highly
    efficient        t                      responsive                  responsiv
                     efficien                                           e
                     t

Integrated steel   Apparel: A traditional
                                            Most automotive                 Reliance
mills :            make-to-stock
                                            production: Delivering aFresh:
Production         manufacturer with
                                            large variety of products       Changing
scheduled          production lead time
                                            in a couple of weeks merchandi
weeks in           of several weeks
                                                                            se mix by
advance with                                                                location
little variety                                                              and time of
                                                                            day
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Achieving Strategic Fit – The final step is To
 ensure that the degree of supply chain
 responsiveness is consistent with the implied
 uncertainty. The goal is to target high
 responsiveness for a supply chain facing high
 implied uncertainty and efficiency for a supply
 chain facing low implied uncertainty.
For eg. The competitive strategy of Dell targets
 customers who value having customized PCs
 delivered within days. Given the vast variety of
 PCs, the high level of innovation and rapid
 delivery, demand from Dell customers is having
 high demand uncertainty. Some supply
 uncertainty also exists, especially for newly
 introduced components. Building a responsive
 supply chain, will allow Dell to meet its
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On the other hand, salt is a product with
 relatively stable customer demand,
 giving it a low implied demand
 uncertainty. Supply is also quite
 predictable. It will be in a much better
 position if it designs a more efficient
 supply chain with a focus on cost
 reduction.




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Drivers of Supply chain Performance
 To understand how a company can improve supply chain
   performance in terms of responsiveness and efficiency, the
   logistical and cross functional drivers of supply chain
   performance must be examined.
  Facilities – Actual physical locations in the supply chain network
   where product is stored, assembled or fabricated. The two major
   types of facilities are production sites and storage sites.
   Decisions regarding the role, location, capacity and flexibility of
   facilities have a significant impact on supply chain’s
   performance. For instance, an auto parts distributor striving for
   responsiveness could have many warehousing facilities located
   close to customers even though this practice reduces efficiency.
  Inventory – It encompasses all raw materials, work in process
   and finished goods within a supply chain. Changing inventory
   policies can dramatically alter the supply chain’s efficiency and
   responsiveness. A clothing retailer can make itself more
   responsive by stocking large amounts of inventory, however, it
   increases the retailer’s cost, thereby making it less efficient.

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                                            prettythings
 Transportation – It entails moving inventory
  from point to point in the supply chain.
  Transportation can take the form of many
  combinations of modes and routes, each with
  its own performance and characteristics.
  Companies can use faster modes of
  transportation which increases responsiveness
  but also less efficient.
 Information – It consists of data and analysis
  concerning facilities, inventory, costs, prices
  and customers throughout the supply chain.
  Information is potentially the biggest driver of
  performance in the supply chain because it
  directly affects each of the other drivers.
  Information presents management with the
                               https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink

  opportunity to make supply chains more
                               prettythings
 Sourcing – It is the choice of who will perform a
  particular supply chain activity such as production,
  storage, transportation or the management of
  information. At the strategic level, these decisions
  determine what functions a firm performs and what
  functions the firm outsources. Outsourcing the
  activities to an economic third party will make the
  supply chain efficient but at the same time its
  responsiveness suffer because of the long distance.
 Pricing – It determines how much a firm will charge
  for goods and services that it makes available in the
  supply chain. Pricing affects the behavior of the
  buyer of the good or service, thus affecting supply
  chain performance. Customers who value efficiency
  will order early and who value responsiveness wait
  and order just before they need a product
  transported.                     https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
                                   prettythings
Framework for Structuring
Drivers
                        Competitive
                         Strategy

                       Supply Chain
                         Strategy


                   Supply Chain Structure
                    Supply Chain
  Efficiency       Structure                           Responsiveness

                           Logistical Drivers

      Facilities                 Inventory                  Transportation




     Information                  Sourcing                       Pricing


                                          https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
                      Cross-Functional Drivers
                                       prettythings
Most companies begin with             a
 competitive strategy and then decide
 what their supply chain strategy ought
 to be. The supply chain strategy
 determines how the supply chain
 should perform with respect to
 efficiency and responsiveness. The
 supply chain must then use the three
 logistical and three cross-functional
 drivers to reach the performance level
 the supply chain strategy dictates and
 maximize the supply chain profits.
                      https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
                      prettythings
Framework – Walmart as an example
   Wal Mart’s competitive strategy is to be a reliable, low-
    cost retailer for a wide variety of mass-consumption
    goods. This strategy dictates that the ideal supply chain
    will emphasize efficiency but also maintains an
    adequate level of responsiveness.
ï‚—   Pioneered cross-docking, a system in which inventory is
    not stocked in a warehouse but rather is shipped to
    stores from the manufacturer.
ï‚—   Runs its own fleet of trucks, to keep responsiveness
    high. Benefits in terms of reduced inventory and
    improved product availability justify this cost.
ï‚—   Makes use of Hub and spoke model, uses centrally
    located DCs within its network of stores to decrease the
    number of facilities and increase efficiency at each DC.
ï‚—   Practices EDLP for its products.
ï‚—   Invested significantly more than its competitors in
    information technology.
ï‚—   Identifies efficient sources for each product it sells and
    feeds them large orders.
                                    https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
                                    prettythings
Obstacles to achieving Strategic Fit
 Increasing variety of products – Increase in product
  variety and more customised products complicate the
  supply chain by making forecasting much more difficult.
  Increased variety tends to raise uncertainty and
  increased uncertainty hurts both efficiency and
  responsiveness within the supply chain.
 Decreasing Product Life Cycles – Makes the job of
  achieving strategic fit more difficult, as the supply chain
  must constantly adapt to manufacture and deliver new
  products, in addition to coping with these product’s
  demand uncertainty.
 Increasingly Demanding Customers – Customers are
  constantly demanding improvements in delivery lead
  times, cost, product quality and product performance. If
  they do not receive these improvements, they move on
  to new suppliers. Supply chain must provide more to
  maintain its business.
                                      https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
                                      prettythings
ï‚— Fragmentation        of     Supply      Chain
  Ownership – The new ownership structure,
  due to outsourcing many of the noncore
  functions, has made managing the supply
  chain more difficult. With the chain broken
  into many owners, each with its own policies
  and interests, the chain is more difficult to
  coordinate.
 Globalization – Adds stress to the chain,
  because facilities within the chain are farther
  apart, making coordination much more
  difficult.
 Difficulty Executing new Strategies –
  Toyota’s Production System, which is a
  supply chain strategy, has been widely known
  and understood and many other competitors
  have figured it out. The difficulty other firms
  have had in executing that strategy.
                            https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
                            prettythings
https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
prettythings

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Supply Chain Management, Basics

  • 1. Supply Chain Management- Basics. Rajendran Ananda Krishnan https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthinkprettythings
  • 2. Topics to be covered ï‚— Introduction to Supply Chain Management : Supply Chain – objectives, Importance ï‚— Decision Phases, Process view, Competitive and supply chain strategies, achieving strategic fit ï‚— Supply chain drivers, obstacles, framework ï‚— Facilities, inventory, transportation, information, sourcing, pricing https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 3. Supply Chain- Meaning ï‚— The supply chain encompasses all activities involved in the transformation of goods from the raw material stage to the final stage, when the goods and services reach the end customer. ï‚— Supply chain management involves planning, design and control of flow of material, information and finance along the supply chain to deliver superior value to the end customer in an effective and efficient manner. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 4. Definition Mohanty and Deshmukh define supply chain management as a loop: ï‚— It starts with the customer and ends with the customer. ï‚— Through the loop flow all materials, finished goods, information and all transactions. ï‚— It requires looking at the business as one continuous, seamless process. ï‚— This process absorbs distinct functions such as forecasting, purchasing, manufacturing and distribution, sales and marketing into a continuous business https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink interaction. prettythings
  • 5. Definition ï‚— Management of material, funds and information flows both in and between facilities such as vendors, manufacturing and assembly plants and distribution centers. – Thomas and Griffin ï‚— The objective of managing the supply is to synchronize the requirements of the customer with the flow of materials from suppliers in order to affect a balance between what are often seen as conflicting goals of high customer service, low inventory management and low unit cost. - Stevens https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 6. ï‚— For a simple product like soap, the HUL supply chain involves ingredient suppliers, transporters, the company’s manufacturing plants, carrying and forwarding agents, wholesalers, distributors and retailers. ï‚— A supply chain is dynamic and involves the constant flow of information, product and funds between different stages. ï‚— Of late, firms have realized that it is not the firms themselves but their supply chains that vie with each other in the marketplace. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 7. Order Delivery Lead Time Order Customer penetration order Order delivery lead point time Make Source component Assembly Delivery s Supply chain lead time ï‚— A typical firm sources material, manufactures components, assembles the product and delivers the finished product to the end customer. ï‚— Total time required for the supply chain to carry out all activities from the beginning to the end is the supply chain lead time. ï‚— Time required for the supply chain to deliver the order to the customer after they place it is the order delivery lead time. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 8. Order penetration point based supply chain typology Customer order Make Source Assembly Deliver Made to components Stock Customer (FMCG order Products) Make Made to Source Assembly Deliver components Order (Equipment Customer Manufacturer) order Make Configure to Source Assembly Deliver components Order (Pizza Manufacturer, Laptop Manufacturer) https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 9. Objectives of Supply chain ï‚— The objective of every supply chain should be to maximize the overall value generated. The value a supply chain generates is the difference between what the final product is worth to the customer and the costs the supply chain incurs in filling the customer’s request. ï‚— Supply chain profitability is the difference between the revenue generated from the customer and the overall cost across the supply chain. The higher the supply chain profitability, the more successful is the supply chain. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 10. ï‚— Supply chain success should be measured in terms of supply chain profitability and not in terms of the profits at an individual stage. ï‚— For any supply chain, there is only one source of revenue: the customer. All flows of information, product or funds generate costs within the supply chain. Thus the appropriate management of these flows is a key to supply chain success. ï‚— Effective supply chain management involves the management of supply chain assets and product, information https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink and fund flows to maximize total supply prettythings
  • 11. ï‚— The small size of Indian retail outlets limits the amount of inventory they can hold, thus requiring frequent replenishment. ï‚— The only way for a manufacturer to keep transportation costs low is to bring full truckloads of product close to the market and then distribute locally using milk runs with smaller vehicles. ï‚— The presence of an intermediary who can receive a full truckload shipment, break bulk, and then make smaller deliveries to the retailers is crucial if transportation costs are to be kept low. ï‚— Distributors in India are also able to reduce transportation costs for outbound delivery to the retailer by aggregating products across https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink multiple manufacturers during the delivery prettythings
  • 12. Supply Chain Stages Supplier Manufacturer Distributor Customer Retailer A typical supply chain may involve a variety of stages. These supply chain stages include: Customers, Retailers, Wholesalers/distributors, Manufacturers, Raw material suppliers. Each stage in a supply chain is connected through the flow of products, information, and funds. These flows often occur in both directions and may be managed by one of the stages or an intermediary. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 13. Importance of Supply Chain Decisions ï‚— Helps in achieving success – Companies being a leader at using supply chain design, planning and operation help in achieving success. ï‚— Effective flow of goods and information – Companies like Walmart who have invested heavily in transportation and information infrastructure help in achieving effective flow of goods and information. ï‚— Reduces the level of Inventory with the manufacturer – Dell centralizes manufacturing and inventories in a few locations and postpones final assembly until orders arrive. Thus, Dell is able to provide a large variety of PC configurations while keeping very low https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 14. ï‚— Improved match between supply and demand – To improve the match between supply and demand, Dell makes an active effort to steer customers in real time, on the phone or via the internet, toward PC configurations that can be built given the components available. ï‚— Reason for company’s success – For the Companies like Dell, Toyota etc., the supply chain design, and its management of product, information and cash flows play a key role in the company’s success. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 15. Reasons for Growing Importance of Supply Chain Firms that do not manage their supply chain will incur huge inventory costs and eventually end up losing a lot of customers because the right products are not available at the right place and time. Five major trends that have emerged to make supply chain management a critical success factor in most industries. ï‚— Proliferation in product lines – Companies have realized that more and more product variety is needed to satisfy the growing range of customer tastes and requirements. Companies like HUL, in their personal care products, manage, on an average, 1200 SKU’s. Chains like Foodworld manage about 6000 SKU’s. With increasing product variety, it becomes rather difficult to forecast accurately. Hence, retailers and other organizations involved in the business are forced to either maintain greater amount of inventories or lose customers. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 16. ï‚— Shorter product life cycles – With increased competition, product life cycles across all industries are becoming shorter. So a firm like Dell, which has, on an average, just 7 days of inventory, as compared to the industry average of 35 days, does not have to worry about product and component obsolescence. Its competitors with higher inventories end up writing off huge amounts of stocks every year as obsolete. ï‚— Higher level of outsourcing – Firms increasingly focus on their core activities and outsource non-core activities to other competent players. This trend towards outsourcing is irreversible but a higher level of outsourcing makes supply chains more vulnerable, thereby forcing firms to develop different types of supply chain capabilities within the organization. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 17. ï‚— Shift in power structure in the chain – In every industry, the entities closer to customers are becoming more powerful. With increasing competition, a steadily rising number of products are chasing the same retail shelf space. Retail shelf space has not increased at the pace at which product variety has increased. So there have been case of retailers asking for slotting allowance when manufacturers introduce new products in the market place. Retailers have realized that they are powerful entities in the chain and hence expect the manufacturers to be more responsive to their demands and needs. ï‚— Globalization of manufacturing – Over the past decade, tariff levels have come down significantly. Many companies are restructuring their production facilities to be at par with global standards. Unlike in the past, when firms used to source components, produce goods and sell them locally, now firms are integrating their supply chain for the entire world market. This has made managing supply chains extremely complicated. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 18. Decision Phases in a Supply Chain Successful supply chain management requires many decisions relating to the flow of information, products and funds. Each decision should be made to raise the supply chain surplus. These decisions fall into three categories or phases, depending on the frequency of each decision and the time frame during which the decision phase has an impact. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 19. Supply Chain Strategy or Design – It decides what the chain’s configuration will be, how resources will be allocated and what processes each stage will perform. Strategic decisions made by companies include whether to outsource or perform a supply chain function in-house, the location and capacities of production and warehousing facilities, the products to be manufactured or stored at various locations, the modes of transportation to be made available along different shipping legs and the type of information system to be utilized. Cisco’s decisions regarding its choice of supply sources for components, contract manufacturers for manufacturing and the location and capacity of its warehouses are all supply chain design or strategic decisions. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 20. 2. Supply Chain Planning – The goal of planning is to maximize the supply chain surplus that can be generated over the planning horizon given the constraints established during the strategic or design phase. Planning includes making decisions regarding which markets will be supplied from which locations, the subcontracting of manufacturing, the inventory policies to be followed and the timing and size of marketing and price promotions. Dell’s decisions regarding markets supplied by a production facility and target production quantities at each location are classified as planning decisions. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 21. Supply Chain Operation – The goal of supply chain operations is to handle incoming customer orders in the best possible manner. During this phase, firms allocate inventory or production to individual orders, set a date that an order is to be filled, generate pick lists at a warehouse, allocate an order to a particular shipping mode and shipment, set delivery schedules of trucks and place replenishment orders. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 22. Process View A supply chain is a sequence of processes and flows that take place within and between different stages and combine to fill a customer need for a product. There are two different ways to view the processes performed in a supply chain. ï‚— Cycle View – The processes in a supply chain are divided into a series of cycles, each performed at the interface between two successive stages of a supply chain. ï‚— Push/Pull View – Pull processes are initiated in response to a customer order, whereas push processes are initiated and performed in anticipation of customer orders. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 23. All supply chain processes can be broken down into four process cycles: ï‚— Customer order cycle ï‚— Replenishment cycle ï‚— Manufacturing cycle ï‚— Procurement cycle Each cycle occurs at the interface between two successive stages of the supply chain. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 24. Supply Chain Process Cycles https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 25. Sub processes in Each Supply Chain Process Cycle Supplier stage Buyer returns markets reverse flows to product supplier or third party Buyer stage Buyer stage places order receives supply Supplier stage Supplier stage receives order supplies order https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 26. ï‚— Each cycle starts with the supplier marketing the product to customers. ï‚— A buyer then places an order that is received by the supplier. ï‚— The supplier supplies the order, which is received by the buyer. ï‚— The buyer may return some of the product or other recycled material to the supplier or a third party. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 27. ï‚— Within each cycle, the goal of the buyer is to ensure product availability and to achieve economies of scale in ordering. ï‚— The supplier attempts to forecast customer orders and reduce the cost of receiving the order. ï‚— The supplier then works to fill the order on time and improve efficiency and accuracy of the order fulfillment process. ï‚— The buyer then works to reduce the https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink cost of the receiving process. prettythings
  • 28. Few differences between cycles: ï‚— In the customer order cycle, demand is external to the supply chain and thus uncertain. In all other cycles, order placement is uncertain but can be projected based on policies followed by the particular supply chain stage. ï‚— As we move from the customer to the supplier, the number of individual orders declines and the size of each order increases. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 29. Push/Pull View of Supply Chain Processes ï‚— With pull processes, execution is initiated in response to a customer order. With pull processes, execution is initiated in anticipation of customer orders. ï‚— At the time of execution of a pull process, customer demand is known with certainty, whereas at the time of execution of a push process, demand is not known and must be forecast. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 30. ï‚— Pull processes may also be referred to as reactive processes because they react to customer demand. Push processes may also be referred to as speculative processes because they respond to speculated rather than actual demand. Push/Pull Boundary Push Pull Processes Processes Customer Order https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink Arrives prettythings
  • 31. Examples of Push and Pull Processes ï‚— Make to stock Companies like HP – Executes all processes in the customer order cycle after the customer arrives. All processes that are part of the customer order cycle are thus pull processes. ï‚— All processes in the replenishment cycle, manufacturing and procurement cycle are performed in anticipation of demand and are thus push processes. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 32. ï‚— Build to order computer manufacturer like Dell – All processes in the customer order, replenishment and manufacturing cycle at Dell are classified as pull processes because they are initiated by customer arrival. ï‚— Dell, however, does not place component orders in response to a customer order. Inventory is replenished in anticipation of customer demand. All processes in the procurement cycle for Dell are thus classified as push processes, because they are in response to a forecast. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 33. Competitive and Supply Chain Strategies ï‚— A company’s competitive strategy defines, relative to its competitors, the set of customer needs that it seeks to satisfy through its products and services. For eg. Wal Mart aims to provide high availability of a variety of products of reasonable quality at low prices. Most products sold at Wal Mart are common- place and can be purchased elsewhere. What Wal Mart provides is a low price and product availability. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 34. Contd. Dell has stressed customization and variety at a reasonable cost, with customers having to wait approximately one week to get their product. In contrast, a customer can walk into a computer retailer, be helped by a salesperson, and leave the same day with HP computer. The amount of variety and customization available at the retailer, however, is limited. In each case, the competitive strategy is defined based on how the customer prioritizes product cost, delivery time, variety and quality. A Dell customer, purchasing online, places great emphasis on product variety and customization. A customer purchasing HP laptop is most concerned with price, fast response time and help in product selection. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 35. ï‚— A firm’s competitive strategy will be defined based on its customer’s priorities. Competitive strategy targets one or more customer segments and aims to provide products and services that satisfy these customer’s needs. ï‚— To see the relationship between competitive and supply chain strategies, we start with the value chain for a typical organization. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 36. The Value Chain in a Company Finance, Accounting, Information Technology, Human Resources New Product Marketing Development and Sales Operation Distribution Service s https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 37. Value Chain ï‚— It begins with new product development, which creates specifications for the product. ï‚— Marketing and sales generate demand by publicizing the customer priorities that the products and services will satisfy. ï‚— Marketing also brings customer input back to new product development. ï‚— Using new product specifications, operations transforms inputs to outputs to create the product. ï‚— Distribution either takes the product to the customer or brings the customer to the product. ï‚— Service responds to customer requests during https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink or after the sale. prettythings
  • 38. ï‚— A product development strategy specifies the portfolio of new products that a company will try to develop. It also dictates whether the development effort will be made internally or outsourced. ï‚— A marketing and sales strategy specifies how the market will be segmented and how the product will be positioned, priced and promoted. ï‚— A supply chain strategy determines the nature of procurement of raw materials, transportation of materials to and from the company, manufacture of the product or operation to provide the service, and distribution of the product to the customer, along with any follow-up service and a specification of whether these processes will be performed in-house or outsourced. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 39. Achieving Strategic Fit Strategic fit means that both the competitive and supply chain strategies have aligned goals. It refers to consistency between the customer priorities that the competitive strategy hopes to satisfy and the supply chain capabilities that the supply chain strategy aims to build. A company may fail either because of a lack of strategic fit or because its overall supply chain design, processes and resources do not provide the capabilities to support the desired strategic fit. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 40. All processes and functions that are part of a company’s value chain contribute to its success or failure. A company’s success or failure is thus closely linked to the following keys: ï‚— The competitive strategy and all functional strategies must fit together to form a coordinated overall strategy. Each functional strategy must support other functional strategies and help a firm reach its competitive strategy goal. ï‚— The different functions in a company must appropriately structure their processes and resources to be able to execute these strategies successfully. ï‚— The design of the overall supply chain and the role of each stage must be aligned to support the supply chain strategy. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 41. How is Strategic Fit Achieved? ï‚— A competitive strategy will specify, either explicitly or implicitly, one or more customer segments that a company hopes to satisfy. To achieve strategic fit, a company must ensure that its supply chain capabilities support its ability to satisfy the targeted customer segments. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 42. Three basic steps to achieve strategic fit: 1. Understanding the customer and supply chain Uncertainty – First, a company must understand the customer needs for each targeted segment and the uncertainty the supply chain faces in satisfying these needs. These needs help the company define the desired cost and service requirements. The supply chain uncertainty helps the company identify the extent of the unpredictability of demand, https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink disruption and delay that the supply prettythings
  • 43. Demand uncertainty reflects the uncertainty of customer demand for a product. An example of product with low demand uncertainty is common salt. Salt has a very low margin, accurate demand forecasts, low stockout rates, and virtually no markdowns. It is a product with highly certain demand. On the other end of the spectrum, a new palmtop computer has high demand uncertainty. It will likely have a high margin, very inaccurate demand forecasts, high stockout rates and large markdowns. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 44. Implied Demand uncertainty is often correlated with other characteristics of demand, as follows: ï‚— Products with uncertain demand are often less mature and have less direct competition. As a result margins, tend to be high. ï‚— Forecasting is more accurate when demand has less uncertainty. ï‚— Increased implied demand uncertainty leads to increased difficulty in matching supply with demand. ï‚— Markdowns are high for products with high implied demand uncertainty because oversupply often results. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 45. There is uncertainty resulting from the capability of the supply chain. For eg, when a new component is introduced in the PC industry, the quality yields of the production process tend to be low and breakdowns are frequent. As a result, companies have difficulty delivering according to a well-defined schedule, resulting in high supply uncertainty for PC manufacturers. As the production technology matures and yields improve, companies are able to follow a fixed delivery schedule, resulting in low supply uncertainty. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 46. The Uncertainty(Demand and Supply) Spectrum Predictable supply and uncertain demand or uncertain Predictable supply supply and predictable Highly uncertain and demand demand or somewhat supply and uncertain supply and demand demand Salt at a An existing A new supermarke automobile communication t model device https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 47. 2. Understanding the Supply Chain Capabilities –Creating strategic fit is all about creating a supply chain strategy that best meets the demand a company has targeted given the uncertainty it faces. Supply chain responsiveness includes a supply chain’s ability to do the following: • Respond to wide ranges of quantities demanded. • Meet short lead times • Handle a large variety of products • Build highly innovative products • Meet a high service level • Handle supply uncertainty Responsiveness, however comes at a cost. For instance, to respond to a wider range of quantities demanded, capacity must be increased, which increases cost. Supply chain efficiency is the inverse of the cost of making and delivering a product to the customer. For every strategic choice to increase responsiveness, there are additional costs that lower efficiency. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 48. Cost-Responsiveness Efficient Frontier Responsivenes s High Low Hig Cost Low h https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 49. The Responsiveness Spectrum Highly Somewha Somewhat Highly efficient t responsive responsiv efficien e t Integrated steel Apparel: A traditional Most automotive Reliance mills : make-to-stock production: Delivering aFresh: Production manufacturer with large variety of products Changing scheduled production lead time in a couple of weeks merchandi weeks in of several weeks se mix by advance with location little variety and time of day https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 50. ï‚—Achieving Strategic Fit – The final step is To ensure that the degree of supply chain responsiveness is consistent with the implied uncertainty. The goal is to target high responsiveness for a supply chain facing high implied uncertainty and efficiency for a supply chain facing low implied uncertainty. For eg. The competitive strategy of Dell targets customers who value having customized PCs delivered within days. Given the vast variety of PCs, the high level of innovation and rapid delivery, demand from Dell customers is having high demand uncertainty. Some supply uncertainty also exists, especially for newly introduced components. Building a responsive supply chain, will allow Dell to meet its customer’s needs. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 51. On the other hand, salt is a product with relatively stable customer demand, giving it a low implied demand uncertainty. Supply is also quite predictable. It will be in a much better position if it designs a more efficient supply chain with a focus on cost reduction. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 53. Drivers of Supply chain Performance To understand how a company can improve supply chain performance in terms of responsiveness and efficiency, the logistical and cross functional drivers of supply chain performance must be examined. ï‚— Facilities – Actual physical locations in the supply chain network where product is stored, assembled or fabricated. The two major types of facilities are production sites and storage sites. Decisions regarding the role, location, capacity and flexibility of facilities have a significant impact on supply chain’s performance. For instance, an auto parts distributor striving for responsiveness could have many warehousing facilities located close to customers even though this practice reduces efficiency. ï‚— Inventory – It encompasses all raw materials, work in process and finished goods within a supply chain. Changing inventory policies can dramatically alter the supply chain’s efficiency and responsiveness. A clothing retailer can make itself more responsive by stocking large amounts of inventory, however, it increases the retailer’s cost, thereby making it less efficient. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 54. ï‚— Transportation – It entails moving inventory from point to point in the supply chain. Transportation can take the form of many combinations of modes and routes, each with its own performance and characteristics. Companies can use faster modes of transportation which increases responsiveness but also less efficient. ï‚— Information – It consists of data and analysis concerning facilities, inventory, costs, prices and customers throughout the supply chain. Information is potentially the biggest driver of performance in the supply chain because it directly affects each of the other drivers. Information presents management with the https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink opportunity to make supply chains more prettythings
  • 55. ï‚— Sourcing – It is the choice of who will perform a particular supply chain activity such as production, storage, transportation or the management of information. At the strategic level, these decisions determine what functions a firm performs and what functions the firm outsources. Outsourcing the activities to an economic third party will make the supply chain efficient but at the same time its responsiveness suffer because of the long distance. ï‚— Pricing – It determines how much a firm will charge for goods and services that it makes available in the supply chain. Pricing affects the behavior of the buyer of the good or service, thus affecting supply chain performance. Customers who value efficiency will order early and who value responsiveness wait and order just before they need a product transported. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 56. Framework for Structuring Drivers Competitive Strategy Supply Chain Strategy Supply Chain Structure Supply Chain Efficiency Structure Responsiveness Logistical Drivers Facilities Inventory Transportation Information Sourcing Pricing https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink Cross-Functional Drivers prettythings
  • 57. Most companies begin with a competitive strategy and then decide what their supply chain strategy ought to be. The supply chain strategy determines how the supply chain should perform with respect to efficiency and responsiveness. The supply chain must then use the three logistical and three cross-functional drivers to reach the performance level the supply chain strategy dictates and maximize the supply chain profits. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 58. Framework – Walmart as an example ï‚— Wal Mart’s competitive strategy is to be a reliable, low- cost retailer for a wide variety of mass-consumption goods. This strategy dictates that the ideal supply chain will emphasize efficiency but also maintains an adequate level of responsiveness. ï‚— Pioneered cross-docking, a system in which inventory is not stocked in a warehouse but rather is shipped to stores from the manufacturer. ï‚— Runs its own fleet of trucks, to keep responsiveness high. Benefits in terms of reduced inventory and improved product availability justify this cost. ï‚— Makes use of Hub and spoke model, uses centrally located DCs within its network of stores to decrease the number of facilities and increase efficiency at each DC. ï‚— Practices EDLP for its products. ï‚— Invested significantly more than its competitors in information technology. ï‚— Identifies efficient sources for each product it sells and feeds them large orders. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 59. Obstacles to achieving Strategic Fit ï‚— Increasing variety of products – Increase in product variety and more customised products complicate the supply chain by making forecasting much more difficult. Increased variety tends to raise uncertainty and increased uncertainty hurts both efficiency and responsiveness within the supply chain. ï‚— Decreasing Product Life Cycles – Makes the job of achieving strategic fit more difficult, as the supply chain must constantly adapt to manufacture and deliver new products, in addition to coping with these product’s demand uncertainty. ï‚— Increasingly Demanding Customers – Customers are constantly demanding improvements in delivery lead times, cost, product quality and product performance. If they do not receive these improvements, they move on to new suppliers. Supply chain must provide more to maintain its business. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings
  • 60. ï‚— Fragmentation of Supply Chain Ownership – The new ownership structure, due to outsourcing many of the noncore functions, has made managing the supply chain more difficult. With the chain broken into many owners, each with its own policies and interests, the chain is more difficult to coordinate. ï‚— Globalization – Adds stress to the chain, because facilities within the chain are farther apart, making coordination much more difficult. ï‚— Difficulty Executing new Strategies – Toyota’s Production System, which is a supply chain strategy, has been widely known and understood and many other competitors have figured it out. The difficulty other firms have had in executing that strategy. https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink prettythings