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Chapter 13. Order Fulfillment, Logistics, Supply Chain Management. Learning Objectives. 1. Understand the role of order fulfillment and back-office operations in EC 2. Describe the process of order fulfillment 3. Understand the concept of the supply chain, its importance and management
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Chapter 13 Order Fulfillment, Logistics, Supply Chain Management
Learning Objectives 1. Understand the role of order fulfillment and back-office operations in EC 2. Describe the process of order fulfillment 3. Understand the concept of the supply chain, its importance and management 4. Describe the problems of managing the supply chain and the use of innovative solutions there 5. Describe the need for integrating information systems of front office and back office 6. Trace the evolution of software that support activities along the supply chain and their management 7. Understand the relationship among ERP, SCM and EC.
The Y2K Order Fulfillment Problem • In Dec. 1999 Competition among E-Tailers increases • Special area: Toys; Big promotions, coupons • Demand: very high, not anticipated • Retailers: were unable to meet demand • Customers: very unhappy • Similar problems in gifts, book, etc. • Also: online retailers has warehousing and logistics problems
Order Fulfillment • Taking orders may be the easiest part • Difficulties in groceries and fresh food • One reason: Customized products • Second: Pull type manufacturing
Major Concepts • Order fulfillment: Deliver right order on time • Front office operations: Order taking, advertisement, CRM • Back office operations: Accounting, finance, inventor, packaging, logistics • Logistics: Managing the flow of goods, information and money along the supply chain
1. Payment Clearance 2. In-stock availability 3. Packaging, shipment 4. Insuring 5. Production (planning, execution) 6. Plant services 7. Purchasing, warehousing 8. Demand forecast 9. Accounting, billing 10. Customer contacts 11. Returns (Reverse logistics) The Steps of Order Fulfillment
Shipping a Tropical Fish 1. Placing order, payment 2. Transfer order to petstore.com, check stock 3. Use an wholesaler to get the fish 4. Supplier finds fish, ships to wholesalers 5. Wholesalers rushes to Petstore 6. Petstore uses FedEx to ship to customer with copy of credit card payment Discussion: What is the contribution of EC?
Why Intermediaries? 1. Wholesaler and deliveries in the Petstore case 2. Wholesalers as an aggregators; between many sellers and buyers 3. Can a virtual store replace a retailer? 4. Direct sales for large items 5. Example: The Lego Co. case
Channel Conflict • Elimination of Intermediary many create a conflict • Conflict between online and offline distribution • This may impact order fulfillment and returns • What if a manufacturer sells both wholesale and retail? (Microsoft) • Customized product by manufacturers: ideal for direct sale
Supply Chain Management • Definition: Flow of material, information, money, etc. from raw material suppliers through factories to customers • It includes: organizations, procedures, people • SCM: Integration of the business processes along the chain, Planning, Organizing, control of many activities • Activities: Purchasing, delivery, packaging, checking, warehousing, etc.
Components-Description • Upstream: Suppliers, their suppliers (several tiers). From Raw material to the company • Internal: All internal process that add value, conversion to find products • Downstream: All activities in distribution and delivery to end customers
Benefits of SCM • Reduce uncertainty along the chain • Proper inventory levels in the chain • Minimize delays • Eliminate rush (unplanned) activities • Provide superb customer service • Major contributor of success (ever survival)
Global Supply Chain • Can be very long • Possible cross-broader problems • Need information technology support of: • communication and collaboration • Possible delays due to: customs, tax, translations, politics
Problems along the Supply Chain • Delays in production, distribution etc. • Expensive Inventories • Lack of partners’ coordination • Uncertainties in deliveries • Poor demand forecast • Interference with production • Poor quality
More difficulties • Virtual companies do not have logistics infrastructures • One company is a member of several supply chain • Conventional warehouses are too expensive • Need automatic warehouses with robots as pickers
Preliminary Activities • Understand the supply chain (flow charts) • Study internal and external parts • Performance measurement are a must (Benchmarking) • Multidimension performance analysis • a BPR may be needed • People’s relationships are a must
Areas of Opportunities • Manufacturing processes • Warehousing operation • Packaging and delivery • Material inspection/receiving • Inbound and outbound transportation • Reverse logistics (return) • In-plant material handling • Vendor management program • Customer order processing
Areas of Opportunities (cont’d) • Invoicing, auditing and other accounting activities • Collaboration procedures with partners • Employee training and deployments • Labor scheduling • Use of teams and empowerment of employees • Automation of processes • Use of software for facilitating all the above • Inventory management and control
Using Inventories • An insurance against stock out • Can be in several places • Can be excessive • Can be insufficient • Example: Littlewoods stores; UK
Proper SCN • Coordination is needed • Understanding of the causes/problems • Information flow is a key • Communication is important • IT is needed
Information Technology for SCM • Links that enable communication/collaboration • Links the partners • Provide effective and efficient solutions • Extremely important • Need for information sharing
The bullwhip effect • Slight changes in actual demand create problems • Partners build “just in case” inventories • Lack of trust among partners • Stockpilling result in huge cost • The manufacturers can not plan production • Cannot order material from suppliers
Avoiding the sting of the bullwhip • Information sharing is a must • Trust and agreements • How to do it? • $30 billion/year just in the grocery industry
IT solutions • Automate order taking • Use EDI/Internet • Web based ordering; intelligent agents • Electronic payments • Make-to-order (JIT) • Tracking systems • Supplier monitor and manage inventories • Information from POS to suppliers • Electronic trading markets and exchanges
Electronic trading markets/exchanges • One company with many suppliers (catalogs, auctions) • One company with many buyers (RFQ) • Exchanges controlled by few large companies (e.g. ANX) • 3rd party managed exchanges • Vertical vs. Horizontal portals
Non-supply Chain Partnerships • Starbucks: Coffee to retailers, customers • Needed fast service; less expensive • Kozmo delivers in cities 30-60 minutes • Kozmo.com: Had a problem with drop boxes for returns • Partnership: Place Kozmo’s drop boxes inside starbuck coffee houses (open long hours) solve both problems • Amazon uses Kozmo for fast deliveries
The Role of 7-Eleven & Convenience Stores • Can be used as a collection point for returns • Can be used as a pick up place • Can be used as a place for order placing • Can pay in cash/card to the store • Returns are a problem: up to 30%
The role of FedEx & Similar Shippers • From a delivery to all-logistics • Many services (see Box 13.4) • Complete inventory control • Packaging, warehousing, reordering etc. • Tracking services to customers
Integration-Benefits • Automation of segments useful, but… • Tangible benefits • Inventory reduction, personnel reduction, productivity improvement, order management improvement, financial cycle improvements. • Intangible benefits • Information visibility, new / improved processes, customer responsiveness, standardization, flexibility, globalization, and business performance.
Integration along the Supply Chain • Need to streamline operations • New business models • New organizational relationships (virtual companies) • Examples Warner Lamber and Wal*Mart (Box 13.5)
Areas of Integration • Order taking - production inventory levels • Payment info in B2B - Visa, Master Card, etc. • Low inventory levels - automatic ordering • Order to manufacturing - generate a list of needed resources & their availability • Changes in an order - transmit to suppliers and their suppliers • Tracking systems - available to customers
Evolution of Software Integration • Completely Independent of each other • MRP= Material Requirements Planning: • Inventory, production • MRPII=Manufacturing Requirements Planning • more integrated, MRP+Finance+labor • ERP=Enterprise Resources Planning • All functional areas • Extended ERP=Include suppliers, customers
From SAP to mySAP.com • SAP=Traditional ERP=Automate and Integrate transactions • MySAP.com = web based comprehensive system • Workplace - a personalized, role-based interface • Marketplace - one stop destination for business professional to collaborate • Business Scenarios - products for the Internet and intranet • Application-hosing - hosting Web applications for SMEs
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) • ERP = Integrating business processes and activities in real time • Solves many supply chain problems • Necessary for medium to large corporations • Helpful also for some SMEs • Need to interface with EC order taking system • Manages all routine transactions in the Enterprise • Recently extended to suppliers and customers
Developing ERP Systems • Do it yourself, from scratch (only few will) • Use Integrated packages such as R/3 from SAP • “Best of Bread” approach, using integrating software • Rent in from ASP service
Post ERP (2nd Generation) • 1st generation - transaction processing orientation • 2nd generation • including decision making capabilities • EC requires decision support • EC requires business intelligence • SCM software: Production Planning, Manpower utilization, Profitability models, market analysis. • Integration of SCM capabilities • Other added functionalities: CRM, KM
ASP • Leasing information systems application • Back to the days of “time sharing” • A risk prevention strategy • Very popular with ERP (expensive, cumbersome)