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Outline. DefinitionsEntity and flowCyclesProcesses 1: Global Supply Chain ForumProcesses 2: Supply Chain Operations Reference Model. APICS definition of SC. Global network used to deliver products and services from raw material to end customers through an engineered flow of information, physical distribution and cash..
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1. Basics of Supply Chains Entities, Flows, Cycles and Processes
Bird Eye View
2. Outline Definitions
Entity and flow
Cycles
Processes 1: Global Supply Chain Forum
Processes 2: Supply Chain Operations Reference Model
3. APICS definition of SC Global network used to deliver products and services from raw material to end customers through an engineered flow of information, physical distribution and cash.
4. Institute for Supply Management Definition
Supply chain management is the design and management of seamless, value-added processes across organizational boundaries to meet the real needs of the end customer.
6. Wrong Definitions/ Perspectives 3PL company: it is warehouse and transportation management
ERP vendor: it is advanced modules to be added to the company’s original ERP system
Consulting Firm: it is strategy building and market analysis
Financial Analyst: finding ways to reduce cost
7. Examples of Supply Chains DELL: e-commerce and customization.
Zara: innovative versus functional products.
Toyota: efficient production.
Amazon / Borders / Barnes and Noble: bad synchronization between physical flow and e-commerce.
Wal-Mart: cross-docking, VMI, super Wal-Mart, data mining …etc.
Dell has three production sites worldwide and builds to order. Compaq does both. Consider some decisions involved - where to locate facilities? How to size them? Where is the push/pull boundary? What modes of transport to use? How much inventory to carry? In what form? Where to source from?Dell has three production sites worldwide and builds to order. Compaq does both. Consider some decisions involved - where to locate facilities? How to size them? Where is the push/pull boundary? What modes of transport to use? How much inventory to carry? In what form? Where to source from?
8. How to View SC Entities+ Flows
Cycles
Processes
9. P & G example Notes:
Supply chain involves everybody, from the customer all the way to the last supplier.
Key flows in the supply chain are - information, product, and cash. It is through these flows that a supply chain fills a customer order. The management of these flows is key to the success or failure of a firm. Give Dell & Compaq example, Amazon & Borders example to bring out the fact that all supply chain interaction is through these flows.Notes:
Supply chain involves everybody, from the customer all the way to the last supplier.
Key flows in the supply chain are - information, product, and cash. It is through these flows that a supply chain fills a customer order. The management of these flows is key to the success or failure of a firm. Give Dell & Compaq example, Amazon & Borders example to bring out the fact that all supply chain interaction is through these flows.
10. Entities + Flows
11. Supply Chain: Manufacturing Example
12. Supply Chain: Service Example
13. Class Exercise I
14. Cycle View of Supply Chains The supply chain is a concatenation of cycles with each cycle at the interface of two successive stages in the supply chain. Each cycle involves the customer stage placing an order and receiving it after it has been supplied by the supplier stage.
One difference is in size of order. Second difference is in predictability of orders - orders in the procurement cycle are predictable once manufacturing planning has been done.
This is the predominant view for ERP systems. It is a transaction level view and clearly defines each process and its owner.The supply chain is a concatenation of cycles with each cycle at the interface of two successive stages in the supply chain. Each cycle involves the customer stage placing an order and receiving it after it has been supplied by the supplier stage.
One difference is in size of order. Second difference is in predictability of orders - orders in the procurement cycle are predictable once manufacturing planning has been done.
This is the predominant view for ERP systems. It is a transaction level view and clearly defines each process and its owner.
15. Thinking processes Functional thinking limits cooperation and impedes creative thinking.
Process management promotes collaboration, facilitating customer satisfaction at low cost.
Thinking ERP = thinking processes
16. Process Management Process Management requires companies to:
Recognize the limiting nature of functional structures
Instill process thinking throughout the company
Process integration remains rare
less than 10% of companies world wide have made a serious and successful effort
Requires major changes to measurement, job design, management roles, and organizational structure
17. Functional Organization Groups resources into specific departments which perform specific tasks to help the company achieve desired goals.
Research and Development - translates customer needs into tangible products. The goal is to design appealing, easy-to-make products with shorter concept-to-market lead times.
Purchasing acquires the right materials at the right price for use in operations. Sourcing’s goal is to select the right suppliers and then build the right relationships with them.
Production transforms inputs into a more highly valued and desirable product or service. The goal: to use capital, energy, knowledge, and labor are used to build processes that make low-cost, high-quality goods.
Logistics moves and stores goods so they are available for use in operations or for sale to customers. Logistics seeks to leverage critical activities like transportation, warehousing, and order processing to make sure materials and products are where they need to be when they need to be at the lowest cost.
Marketing identifies customer needs and communicates to the customer how the company can meet those needs. Marketing’s objective is to perform a liaison role between the company and its customers.
18. (Dys)Functional Behavior Functional structures result in a failure to see beyond the department level to the end user.
Decisions are made to achieve local, functional optimum without regard to impact on the remainder of the company.
Due to inherent conflicts between department goals and measurements, departments are compelled to take dysfunctional actions.
19. Functional Organization Goals
20. Process Thinking Process thinking aligns decisions with corporate strategy and coordinates actions across functions.
Each process consists of a set of flows and value-added activities.
Information Flow
Physical Flow
Financial Flow
21. Value-Added Process
22. Thinking process Global supply chain forum model
Supply Chain Operations Reference SCOR model
23. Processes: Global supply chain forum
24. Customer Relationship Management Duties:
Locate , assess profitability and design products and services to maintain the customers’ base
Define Product and service agreements PSAs
Improve order and delivery processes
Why cross-functional, cross-company?, Who?
25. Customer Service Management Duties:
Daily administration of the PSAs
Management of details related to logistics (shipping date, exceptions …etc.)
Why cross-functional, cross-company? , Who?
26. Demand Management Duties:
Forecasting
Scheduling plant operations
Capacity requirements
Managing inventory
Fulfilling orders
Sales tracking
Why cross-functional, cross-company? , Who?
27. Order fulfillment Duties
Insuring the delivery of the right product at the right time and location in the right amounts.
Why cross-functional, cross-company? , Who?
28. Manufacturing Flow Management Duties
Managing physical, information and funding flow
Ensuring the balance between sales and operations planning
Balancing capacity and demand
Why cross-functional, cross-company? , Who?
29. Supplier relationship management Duties
Selecting, rating and scoring suppliers
Building strategic alliances
Automating the supply process
Why cross-functional, cross-company? , Who?
30. Product development and commercialization Duties
Developing new products and bringing them to market at the right time
Why cross-functional, cross-company? , Who?
31. Returns Management Duties
Handle repairs and replacements
Developing strategies to diminish the number of returned products
Why cross-functional, cross-company? , Who?
32. Class Exercise II
33. Supply Chain Operations Reference SCOR The Supply-Chain Council was established in 1996. www.supply-chain.org
The Supply-Chain Council now has closer to 1,000 corporate members world-wide and has established international chapters in North America, Europe, Greater China, Japan, Australia/New Zealand, South East Asia, Brazil and Southern Africa. Development of additional chapters in India and South America are underway. The Supply-Chain Council's membership consists primarily practitioners representing a broad cross section of industries, including manufacturers, services, distributors, and retailers.
34. Process Reference Model It integrates the well-known concepts of business process reengineering, benchmarking and process measurement into a cross-functional framework.
It provides
Standard description of management processes
Framework of relationships among processes
Standard metrics to measure process framework
Best in class management practices
35. Capture
the “as-is” state and derive the “to-be” future state
36. Supply-Chain Operations Reference (SCOR) Model Five core processes for Level 1
Source
Make
Deliver
Return
Plan
Three expanded processes for Level 2
Planning
Execution
Enable
37. Source: Supply-Chain Council, www.supply-chain.orgSource: Supply-Chain Council, www.supply-chain.org
38. Cascading in SCOR/ 1-Overview
39. Planning Balance resources with requirements and communicate the plan to the whole supply chain
Management of business rules, performances, compliances and regulatory requirements
Align the unit plan with the financial plan
40. Source Schedule deliveries, receive… and authorize supplier payments
Identify and select supply sources when not predetermined for ETO
Manage business rules, assess suppliers performance and maintain data
41. Make Schedule production activities, issue product, produce and test …
Finalize engineering for engineer to order product
Manage rules, performance, data, WIP, equipment and facilities, transportation, …
42. Deliver Processing inquiries, and quotes to routing shipments and selecting carriers
Warehouse management
Receive and verify product at customer site
Invoicing customers
Manage deliver business rules, performance, information, finished product inventories ..
43. Return Defective, warranty and excess return processing
Authorization, scheduling, inspection, transfer, warranty administration, receiving and verifying defective products, disposition and replacement
44. Enable Information
Relationship
Business rules
Performance management
Capital assets
Network configuration and transportation
Regulatory requirements and compliances
45. Cascading in SCOR2-Category
46. Cascading in SCOR3-Process elements
48. Cascading in SCOR4-decompose process elements
49. Level 1 KPIs
50. Level1 performances measuresReliability: perfect order fulfillment =Total perfect orders/total number of orders
Perfect order:
Right product, right quantity, to right customer, right time, right location, right documentation and rightly installed
51. Level1 performances measuresResponsiveness: speed of delivery Average actual cycle time=sum of actual cycle times for all orders delivered/total number of orders delivered
Order fulfillment cycle time=order fulfillment process time+ order fulfillment dwell time
52. Level1 performances measuresFlexibility: ability to respond to market changes Upside measures:
Flexibility: number of days needed to face a sustainable 20% increase in demand.
Adaptability: amount of increase in production that could be achieved in 30 days
Downside measures (very nice):
Adaptability: reduction in quantities ordered sustainable for 30 days without incurring extra cost
53. Level1 performances measuresCosts: Cost accounting Cost of goods sold= Direct material+ Direct labor+ Overhead
Supply Chain Management Cost= cost to plan+ cost to source+ cost to make+ cost to return
54. Level1 performances measuresAsset management: financial accounting Examples:
Cash to cash cycle time=inventory days of supply+ days of sales outstanding-days of payables outstanding
Return on supply fixed assets=
(Revenue-COSG-supply chain management costs)/supply chain fixed assets
55. Level 2 KPIsM.1 make to stock
56. M.1 Best Practices Cellular manufacturing
Demand pull manufacturing: Kanban, replenishment signals, upper and lower triggering levels
Quick and real time performance measurements: dashboard, real time access to data
Paperless production orders and inventory tracking
Lean
Production level balancing
Flat management structures, self directed workforce
Linking individual performance to divisional and organizational goals
Move from make to stock to configure to order and push the system to high generic products to be easily customized
57. Level 3 KPIsM.1.1 Schedule production Activities
58. M.1.1 Schedule production, best practices Cross training and certification
Ensuring data integrity and accuracy
Schedule optimizes the use of shared resources and share equipment
Change include preventive maintenance and change over costs
Real time feedback from production, RM and inventory
Provide a schedule to workforce and material planning systems
59. Class Exercise III
60. Limits to SCOR model It does not apply to the following processes
Sales and marketing
R&D
Product development
Post delivery customer support
It also assumes
training
Quality
IT
61. Check list Name the basic entities, flows and cycles involved in SC
Compare between the functional and process views of SC management
Name the basic processes as defined by the GSCF model
Name the basic processes as defin