Original article from the Flevy business blog can be found here:
http://flevy.com/blog/have-you-heard-of-postponement-strategy-in-the-supply-chain/
The postponement strategy is based on the following two basic principles of demand forecasting.
The accuracy of forecast demand decreases with an increase in the time horizon. The farther the time window for which the demand is being forecasted, the more inaccurate it will be. This effect can be shown as a funnel: as time extends farther into the future, the forecast error grows, showing that the forecast demand will have larger and larger variations as time periods progress into the future.
Demand projections for a product group are generally more accurate than projections for individual products. For example, it is much easier to forecast the total demand for LCD TVs than it is for an individual TV of a specific brand, model, screen size, resolution, and color contrast ratio.
The postponement strategy leverages the above characteristics of demand forecasting. It dictates that the firms should postpone the creation or delivery of the final product as long as possible. For retailers, this takes the shape of postponing the delivery of the final product to its destination, while for assemble-to-order manufacturers this means postponing the final assembly of the product. For manufacturing scenarios like build-to-stock, the postponement strategy may drive pushing the packaging or final assembly of the products, allowing the manufacturer to personalize, configure finished products to customer orders, and change the final product mix to suit any changes in demand.
The postponement strategy effectively reduces inventory obsolescence and takes out the risk and uncertainty costs associated with having undesirable products, but it requires an integrated and agile supply chain to ensure that the latest demand forecasts can be frequently created and propagated through the supply chain to produce or allocate the right products for their customers.
The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf(CBTL), Business strategy case study
Have You Heard of Postponement Strategy in the Supply Chain?
1. Have You Heard of Postponement
Strategy in the Supply Chain?
Contributed by Charles Intrieri on July 29, 2015 in Operations & Supply Chain
The postponement strategy is based on the following two basic principles of demand
forecasting.
The accuracy of forecast demand decreases with an increase in the time horizon. The farther
the time window for which the demand is being forecasted, the more inaccurate it will be.
This effect can be shown as a funnel: as time extends farther into the future, the forecast
error grows, showing that the forecast demand will have larger and larger variations as time
periods progress into the future.
Demand projections for a product group are generally more accurate than projections for
individual products. For example, it is much easier to forecast the total demand for LCD TVs
than it is for an individual TV of a specific brand, model, screen size, resolution, and color
contrast ratio.
2. The postponement strategy leverages the
above characteristics of demand
forecasting. It dictates that the firms should
postpone the creation or delivery of the final
product as long as possible. For retailers, this
takes the shape of postponing the delivery of
the final product to its destination, while for
assemble-to-order manufacturers this means
postponing the final assembly of the product.
For manufacturing scenarios like build-to-
stock, the postponement strategy may drive
pushing the packaging or final assembly of
the products, allowing the manufacturer to personalize, configure finished products to
customer orders, and change the final product mix to suit any changes in demand.
The postponement strategy effectively reduces inventory obsolescence and takes out the risk
and uncertainty costs associated with having undesirable products, but it requires an
integrated and agile supply chain to ensure that the latest demand forecasts can be
frequently created and propagated through the supply chain to produce or allocate the right
products for their customers.
3. While postponement is conventionally thought of as a supply chain strategies, a little
thinking will dispel this notion. Postponement is not an absolute choice , it is an imperative
forced by the type of industry, assortment, and demand patterns. For example, a
postponement strategy for delivering supplies to a trauma center or cereal to a grocery store
are just not practical choices, even though it may allow for delivery of specific medical kits
optimal for the type of trauma or the correct size of cereal packages in response to the actual
demand. Therefore, medical supplies manufacturer cannot select postponement as their
supply chain strategy any more than a grocer can postpone delivering their cereal. However,
in few situations the production and demand patterns may allow postponement to become a
business option, in which case, the supply chain must be designed to support that choice –
an example is Avon.
Avon declined to label their bottles themselves for a long time, viewing this as additional
cost and complexity. However, after developing an end-to-end supply chain visibility, Avon
saw the opportunity in postponing the creation of its final product by placing the labels in
the desired target language. It successfully deployed an idea that had been pushed out
earlier, after understanding that this allowed them to postpone the production of final
finished goods and better align their supplies to the end-demand without tremendously
increasing their inventory. The situations in which postponement may be an explicit choice
4. to be made for a supply chain are limited, but may become real options for specific
categories of products or sales channels of a company.
Dell has mastered the art of postponement for their custom-designed machines for
individual consumers. When Dell started, this was not necessarily the case in the industry,
however, Dell invented a new business model and leveraged postponement as a business
model – not as a supply chain strategy – though, it then designed their supply chain to
support this business model.
About Charles Intrieri
Charles Intrieri is subject matter expert on Cost Reduction, Supply Chain, and 3rd Party Logistics.
Managing his own consultancy for the past 25 years, Charles has helped dozens of clients achieve leaner
and more efficient operations. You can connect with him here on LinkedIn or email him directly (
cmiconsulting93@gmail.com).
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