3. Drivers of Supply Chain Performance
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Facilities
â places where inventory is stored, assembled, or fabricated
â production sites and storage sites
Inventory
â raw materials, WIP, finished goods within a supply chain
â inventory policies
Transportation
â moving inventory from point to point in a supply chain
â combinations of transportation modes and routes
Information
â data and analysis regarding inventory, transportation, facilities throughout the supply
chain
â potentially the biggest driver of supply chain performance
Sourcing
â functions a firm performs and functions that are outsourced
Pricing
â Price associated with goods and services provided by a firm to the supply chain
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4. A Framework for Structuring Drivers
Competitive Strategy
Supply Chain
Strategy
Efficiency
Responsiveness
Supply chain structure
Logistical Drivers
Facilities
Inventory
Transportation
Information
Sourcing
Pricing
Cross Functional Drivers
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5. Facilities
It is the place where utility is added to convert the inputs ( to
outputs) for instance inventory is either processed to
another form or stored before being transported or
delivered to the next partner of the chain . A facility of a SC
may be factory warehouse or a retail store. Decisions
regarding the location of the facilities (plant), their capacity
and the flexibility of the facilities have a major impact on
the performance of the SC for Ex. An automobile firm can
locate its spare parts distributors and service centers close
to customers to increase responsiveness at the cost of
efficiency .On, the contrary, fewer spare parts distributors
and service centers may increase the efficiency of the SC
network at the cost of its responsiveness
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6. Facilities
⢠Role in the supply chain
â the âwhereâ of the supply chain
â manufacturing or storage (warehouses)
⢠Role in the competitive strategy
â economies of scale (efficiency priority)
â larger number of smaller facilities (responsiveness
priority)
⢠Example : Toyota and Honda
⢠Components of facilities decisions
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7. Components of Facilities Decisions
⢠Location
â centralization (efficiency) vs. decentralization
(responsiveness)
â other factors to consider (e.g., proximity to customers)
⢠Capacity (flexibility versus efficiency)
⢠Manufacturing methodology (product focused
versus process focused)
⢠Warehousing methodology (SKU storage, job lot
storage, cross-docking)
⢠Overall trade-off: Responsiveness versus efficiency
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8. Facility âRelated Metrics
⢠A manager should track the following facility related metrics
that influence SC performance
They are
⢠Capacity
⢠Utilization
⢠Theoretical flow/cycle time of production
⢠Actual flow cycle time
⢠Flow time efficiency
⢠Product Variety
⢠Volume contribution of top 20% SKUâs and customers
⢠Processing/Set up/down/idle time
⢠Average production Batch Size
⢠Production Service level
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9. Overall Tradeoffs
⢠Facilities drivers
Increase efficiency
1) Low no of facilities
2) Centralized facilities
3) Minimal amounts of excess
capacity
4) Single product focus
Increase Effectiveness
1) High no of facilities
2) DeCentralized facilities
3) Large amounts of excess
capacity
4) Multiple product focus
Efficiency
Responsiveness
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10. Inventory
⢠All raw materials ,WIP and finished goods within a SC
are referred to as inventory , any change in inventory
policies can greatly effect the efficiency and
responsiveness of the SC. Decisions such as how
much to store and where to store (in the firmâs
premises or warehouse or at the retailerâs premises)
For Ex. A retailer can quickly meet a customer
demand by a maintaining a large inventory of an
item but it will increase the retailerâs cost ,thereby
affecting its efficiency even though the
responsiveness has increased. On the contrary,
reducing inventory will increase the retailerâs
efficiency but will affect its responsiveness
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11. Inventory
⢠Role in the supply chain
⢠Role in the competitive
strategy
⢠Components of inventory
decisions
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12. Inventory: Role in the Supply Chain
⢠Inventory exists because of a mismatch between
supply and demand
⢠Source of cost and influence on responsiveness
⢠Impact on
â material flow time: time elapsed between when material
enters the supply chain to when it exits the supply chain
â throughput
⢠rate at which sales to end consumers occur
⢠I = RT (Littleâs Law)
⢠I = inventory; R = throughput; T = flow time
Example
⢠Inventory and throughput are âsynonymousâ in a supply chain
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13. Inventory: Role in Competitive
Strategy
⢠If responsiveness is a strategic
competitive priority, a firm can locate
larger amounts of inventory closer to
customers
⢠If cost is more important, inventory can
be reduced to make the firm more
efficient
⢠Trade-off
⢠Example â Nordstrom
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14. Components of Inventory Decisions
⢠Cycle inventory
â Average amount of inventory used to satisfy demand between
shipments
â Depends on lot size
⢠Safety inventory
â inventory held in case demand exceeds expectations
â costs of carrying too much inventory versus cost of losing sales
⢠Seasonal inventory
â inventory built up to counter predictable variability in demand
â cost of carrying additional inventory versus cost of flexible production
⢠Overall trade-off: Responsiveness versus efficiency
â more inventory: greater responsiveness but greater cost
â less inventory: lower cost but lower responsiveness
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15. Inventory related -Metrics
⢠Average inventory
⢠Products with more than a specified no of
days of inventory
⢠Average replenishment batch size
⢠Average safety inventory
⢠Seasonal Inventory
⢠Fill rate
⢠Fraction of time out of stock
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16. Overall Tradeoffs
⢠Inventory drivers
Increase efficiency
1) Maintain low levels of inventory
2) Single inventory storage location
Efficiency
Increase Effectiveness
1)Maintain high levels of inventory
2)Multiple inventory storage location
Responsiveness
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17. Transportation
⢠Role in the supply chain
⢠Role in the competitive
strategy
⢠Components of transportation
decisions
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18. Transportation: Role in
the Supply Chain
⢠Moves the product between stages
in the supply chain
⢠Impact on responsiveness and
efficiency
⢠Faster transportation allows greater
responsiveness but lower efficiency
⢠Also affects inventory and facilities
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19. Transportation
⢠Inventory has to be moved from point to point
in the SC using transportation facilities taking
the form of many combinations of
modes(multi modal) and routes, each having
its own performance characteristics .
⢠The responsiveness and efficiency of the SC is
significantly affected by the choice of
transportation modes and routes (affecting
the speed and cost of transportation).
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20. Transportation
⢠Hence decisions regarding issues related
to how to move a product from one
location to another and by what mode of
transportation that are usually trade-off
decisions. It is necessary to evaluate
economies on one hand and desired level
of customer on the other. It is concerned
with movement of the product between
different stages of the SC.
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21. Transportation:
Role in the Competitive Strategy
⢠If responsiveness is a strategic competitive
priority, then faster transportation modes can
provide greater responsiveness to customers
who are willing to pay for it
⢠Can also use slower transportation modes for
customers whose priority is price (cost)
⢠Can also consider both inventory and
transportation to find the right balance
⢠Example 3.3: Laura Ashley
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22. Components of
Transportation Decisions
⢠Mode of transportation:
â air, truck, rail, ship, pipeline, electronic transportation
â vary in cost, speed, size of shipment, flexibility
⢠Route and network selection
â route: path along which a product is shipped
â network: collection of locations and routes
⢠In-house or outsource
⢠Overall trade-off: Responsiveness versus
efficiency
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23. Overall Tradeoffs
⢠Transportation drivers
Increase efficiency
1) Reduced speed of delivery
2) Reduced cost of delivery
3) Ship products to a distributor
Efficiency
Increase Effectiveness
1) Increased speed of delivery
2) Increased cost of delivery
3) Ship products directly to a customer
Responsiveness
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24. Information: Role in
the Supply Chain
⢠The connection between the various
stages in the supply chain â allows
coordination between stages
⢠Crucial to daily operation of each
stage in a supply chain â e.g.,
production scheduling, inventory
levels
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25. Information
⢠Information consist of data and analysis regarding
inventory , facilities ( location, capacity etc) ,
transportation and customers through out the SC.
Information affects each of the other drivers and
hence is the biggest driver of the SC performance.
The information is helpful in making the SC more
efficient and responsive at the same time for Ex.
Information regarding the demand pattern results
in the more accurate forecast of demand, which in
turn will enable a firm to produce the required
quantity of the product at the right time to meet
customer demand .This makes the SC more
responsive and yet efficient.
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26. Information
⢠Role in the supply chain
⢠Role in the competitive
strategy
⢠Components of information
decisions
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27. Information:
Role in the Competitive Strategy
⢠Allows supply chain to become more efficient
and more responsive at the same time
(reduces the need for a trade-off)
⢠Information technology
⢠What information is most valuable?
⢠Example : Andersen Windows
⢠Example : Dell
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28. Components of Information Decisions
⢠Push (MRP) versus pull (demand information
transmitted quickly throughout the supply chain)
⢠Coordination and information sharing
⢠Forecasting and aggregate planning
⢠Enabling technologies
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EDI
Internet
ERP systems
Supply Chain Management software
⢠Overall trade-off: Responsiveness versus
efficiency
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29. Overall Tradeoffs
⢠Transportation drivers
Increase efficiency
1) Openly shares information with all
individuals
2) Pull information strategy
Increase Effectiveness
1) Selectively shares certain information
with certain individuals
1) Push information strategy
Efficiency
Responsiveness
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30. Sourcing
⢠It is the choice of who will perform a particular SC
activity such as production,storage, transportation
or the MIS. At the strategic level ,these decisions
determine what functions a firm performs and
what function the firm outsources. Sourcing
decision affects both the responsiveness and
efficiency of the SC. Ex. Motorla outsourced much
of its production to contract manufacturers in
China, it saw its efficiency improve but its
responsiveness suffered because of long
distances. To overcome this, Motorla started
flying in some of its cell phones from China but at
the cost of transportation (that increased the
cost)
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31. Sourcing
⢠Role in the supply chain
⢠Role in the competitive
strategy
⢠Components of sourcing
decisions
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32. Sourcing: Role inthe Supply Chain
⢠Set of business processes
required to purchase goods and
services in a supply chain
⢠Supplier selection, single vs.
multiple suppliers, contract
negotiation
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33. Sourcing:
Role in the Competitive Strategy
⢠Sourcing decisions are crucial because they
affect the level of efficiency and
responsiveness in a supply chain
⢠In-house vs. outsource decisions- improving
efficiency and responsiveness
⢠Example : Cisco
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34. Components of Sourcing Decisions
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In-house versus outsource decisions
Supplier evaluation and selection
Procurement process
Overall trade-off: Increase the supply chain
profits
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35. Overall Tradeoffs
⢠Sourcing drivers
Increase efficiency
Efficiency
1) Focusing on in-house processes
2) Maintaining JIT format for sourcing
Increase Effectiveness
1) Outsourcing the product in SC
2) Holding inventory through proper
sourcing
Responsiveness
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36. Pricing
⢠Pricing determines how much a firm will charge for
the goods and service that it makes available in the
SC. Pricing affects the behaviour of the buyer of the
good or service ,thus affecting SC performance . Ex. If
a transportation company varies its charges based on
the lead provided by the customers , it is very likely
that the customers who will efficiency will order
early and who value responsiveness will be willing to
wait and order just before they need a product
transported. Early orders are less likely if prices do
not vary with the lead time.
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37. Pricing
⢠Role in the supply chain
⢠Role in the competitive
strategy
⢠Components of pricing
decisions
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38. Pricing: Role in the Supply Chain
⢠Pricing determines the amount
to charge customers in a
supply chain
⢠Pricing strategies can be used
to match demand and supply
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39. Pricing:
Role in the Competitive Strategy
⢠Firms can utilize optimal pricing
strategies to improve efficiency and
responsiveness
⢠Low price and low product
availability; vary prices by response
times
⢠Example : Amazon
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40. Components of Pricing Decisions
⢠Pricing and economies of scale
⢠Everyday low pricing versus high-low
pricing
⢠Fixed price versus menu pricing
⢠Overall trade-off: Increase the firm
profits
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41. Overall Tradeoffs
⢠Pricing drivers
Increase efficiency
Efficiency
1) *EDLP pricing that foster stable demand
2) Cost based and standard pricing format
Increase Effectiveness
1) Differential pricing that attracts customers
2) Demand base and variable pricing format
Responsiveness
EDLP: Every day low price
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42. â˘
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Obstacles to Achieving Strategic Fit
Increasing variety of products
Decreasing product life cycles
Increasingly demanding customers
Fragmentation of supply chain ownership
Globalization
Difficulty executing new strategies
Refer others that is mentioned in class
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43. Summary
⢠What are the major drivers of supply chain
performance?
⢠What is the role of each driver in creating strategic fit
between supply chain strategy and competitive
strategy (or between implied demand uncertainty and
supply chain responsiveness)?
⢠What are the major obstacles to achieving strategic fit?
⢠In the remainder of the course, we will learn how to
make decisions with respect to these drivers in order to
achieve strategic fit and surmount these obstacles
Assignment : What are the metrics of other drivers?
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