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Agenda. Basics of SCMDrivers of SCMElements of SCME-Commerce Impact on SCMPerformance MeasurementCollaboration in SCMPurchasingHow to Choose and Evaluate Suppliers. Basic Concepts of Supply Chain Management. Supply Chain Management. Supply Chain: The sequence of organizations - their facili
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1. Operations Management(MD021) Supply Chain Management
2. Agenda Basics of SCM
Drivers of SCM
Elements of SCM
E-Commerce Impact on SCM
Performance Measurement
Collaboration in SCM
Purchasing
How to Choose and Evaluate Suppliers
3. Basic Concepts of Supply Chain Management
4. Supply Chain Management Supply Chain:
The sequence of organizations - their facilities, functions, and activities - that are involved in producing and delivering a product or service.
5. The Value Chain internal to a company
6. Typical Supply Chain activities for a Manufacturer
7. Typical Supply Chain for a Service
8. Goal of SCM Goal of SCM
To link all components of the supply chain so that market demand will be met as efficiently as possible across the entire chain
Match supply to demand at each stage of the supply chain
9. Supply network encompasses a number of facilities Warehouses
Factories
Processing centers
Distribution centers
Retail outlets
Offices
10. Supply network performs various functions and activities Forecasting
Purchasing
Inventory management
Information management
Quality assurance
Scheduling
Production and delivery
Customer service
11. Supply Chain Management Issues
12. Drivers of Supply Chain Management
13. History of SCM Why attempt to manage supply chains?
In the not too distant past (i.e. pre-1990s), many companies didn’t manage their supply chains
Some advanced companies realized that huge inefficiency resulted from no/poor SCM
In particular, identified the “Bullwhip Effect”
14. Bullwhip Effect
15. Bullwhip Effect
16. Result of the Bullwhip Effect
17. Benefits of Supply Chain Management Counteract the Bullwhip Effect
Lower inventories
Higher productivity
Greater agility
Shorter lead times
Higher profits
Greater customer loyalty
18. Today, many other problems can also drive Supply Chain Management Improve operations
Increasing levels of outsourcing
Increasing transportation costs
Competitive pressures
Increasing globalization
Increasing importance of e-commerce
Complexity of supply chains
Manage inventories
19. Supply Chain Benefits and Drawbacks
20. Examples of SCM Benefits at Various Companies
21. As a result of competitors working on SCM, SCM has become strategic Strategic importance
Cost
Quality
Agility
Customer service
Competitive advantage
22. But, SCM projects can be very risky to undertake Technology management drives SCM Adoption/Success/Failure
Benefits
SCM packages, when adopted well, can transform an organization’s operations
Risks
Poorly planned for/implemented SCM packages can wreck a company’s operations
Very expensive to install these pages – many millions of dollars
23. Elements of SCM
24. SCM involves coordinating activities across supply chain
25. Logistics Logistics
Refers to the movement of materials and information within a facility and to incoming and outgoing shipments of goods and materials in a supply chain
Raw materials
Work in process
Finished goods
Support items – fuel, equipment, parts, tools, etc.
26. Logistics
27. Materials Movement
28. Distribution Requirements Planning (DRP) Distribution requirements planning (DRP) is a system for inventory management and distribution planning
Extends the concepts of MRPII to multiechelon warehouse inventories
29. Uses of DRP Management uses DRP to plan and coordinate:
Transportation
Warehousing
Workers
Equipment
Financial flows
30. Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) EDI
The direct transmission of inter-organizational transactions, computer-to-computer, including purchase orders, shipping notices, and debit or credit memos.
31. Electronic Data Interchange Increased productivity
Reduction of paperwork
Lead time and inventory reduction
Facilitation of just-in-time systems
Electronic transfer of funds
Improved control of operations
Reduction in clerical labor
Increased accuracy
32. Third Party Logistics (3PL) 3PL
The outsourcing of logistics management
Companies turn over their warehouse and distribution to companies that specialize in these areas
33. E-Commerce Impact on SCM
34. E-Commerce E-Commerce:
The use of electronic technology (e.g., WWW, Web Services, mobile devices) to facilitate business transactions
Applications include
Internet buying and selling
E-mail
Order and shipment tracking
Electronic data interchange
35. SCM Benefits of E-Commerce Companies can:
Have a global presence
Improve competitiveness and quality
Analyze customer interests
Collect detailed information
Shorten supply chain response times
Realize substantial cost savings
Create virtual companies
Level the playing field for small companies
36. SCM Challenges of E-Commerce Customer expectations
Order quickly -> fast delivery
Order fulfillment
Order rate often exceeds ability to fulfill it
Inventory holding
Outsourcing loss of control
Internal holding costs
37. How to Measure SCM Performance?
38. Successful SCM has certain characteristics Trust among trading partners
Effective communications
Supply chain visibility
Access to real-time data on inventory levels, shipping status, related information
Requires data sharing between trading partners
Event-management capability
The ability to detect and respond to unplanned events
Performance metrics
Measure the system to make sure you are doing well
39. Overall Objectives for Supply Chain Performance Cost
Quality
Flexibility
Velocity
Customer service
40. Velocity Inventory velocity
The rate at which inventory (material) goes through the supply chain
Information velocity
The rate at which information is communicated in a supply chain
41. Trade-offs Between Performance Measures Lot-size vs. inventory
Ordering economies vs. inventory held
Risks the Bullwhip effect
Inventory vs. transportation costs
Shippers prefer to ship full truckloads, which increases inventory carrying costs
Solutions: combine orders, smaller trucks, cross-docking
Lead time vs. transportation costs
Waiting for a full truck increases production lead times
Product variety vs. inventory
Higher variety leads to smaller lot sizes, more setups, other costs
Solution: Delayed differentiation
Cost vs. customer service
Large volumes reduce cost, but can hurt customer service
Solution: Disintermediation
42. Cross-Docking Cross-docking
Goods arriving at a warehouse from a supplier are unloaded from the supplier’s truck and loaded onto outbound trucks
43. Delayed Differentiation Delayed differentiation
Production of standard components and subassemblies, which are held until late in the process to add differentiating features
44. Disintermediation Disintermediation
Reducing one or more steps in a supply chain by cutting out one or more intermediaries
45. SCM Performance Measures SCOR (Supply Chain Operations Reference) Model
Plan, Source, Make Deliver, Return
SCOR addresses …
Product from supplier’s to customer’s
SCOR does not address …
Sales, Marketing, R&D, Support
46. SCOR Metrics provide a standard way to measure SCM
47. SCOR’s SCM Performance Metrics Reliability – delivery performance, fill rate, perfect fulfillment
Responsiveness – order fill lead time
Flexibility – SC response time, ops flexibility
Cost – warranty cost, productivity, CGS, SCM cost
Assets – turns, inventory days, cash cycle
48. Collaborative Approaches to SCM
49. Creating an Effective Supply Chain Involves Partnerships Develop strategic objectives and tactics
Integrate and coordinate activities in the internal supply chain
Coordinate activities with suppliers with customers
Coordinate planning and execution across the supply chain
Form strategic partnerships
50. Collaboration Assumes Your Supplier can be a Partner
51. Partnerships with suppliers can improve your own operations Ideas from suppliers could lead to improved competitiveness
Reduce cost of making the purchase
Reduce transportation costs
Reduce production costs
Improve product quality
Improve product design
Reduce time to market
Improve customer satisfaction
Reduce inventory costs
Introduce new products or services
52. Efficient Consumer Response Efficient Consumer Response (ECR)
A supply chain management initiative specific to the food industry
Reflects companies’ efforts to achieve quick response using EDI and bar codes
53. CPFR Collaborative Planning, Forecasting, and Replenishment (CPFR)
Focuses on information sharing among trading partners
Forecasts can be frozen and then converted into a shipping plan
Eliminates typical order processing
54. CPFR Process Step 1 – Front-end agreement on structure of CPFR collaboration
Step 2 – Develop joint business plan for collaborators
Steps 3-5 – Sales forecast collaboration
Steps 6-8 – Order forecast collaboration
Step 9 – Order generation/delivery execution
55. CPFR Results Nabisco and Wegmans
50% increase in category sales
Wal-mart and Sara Lee
14% reduction in store-level inventory
32% increase in sales
Kimberly-Clark and Kmart
Increased category sales that exceeded market growth
56. Challenges to Collaboration Barriers to integration of organizations
Getting top management on board
Dealing with trade-offs
Small businesses – no money to invest, no time, no slack resources, insufficient technology
Actions that create more variability and uncertainty
Long lead times hinder the ability of a supply chain to respond to changing customer demands
57. Purchasing
58. Purchasing Purchasing is responsible for obtaining the materials, parts, and supplies and services needed to produce a product or provide a service.
Goal of Purchasing
Develop and implement purchasing plans for products and services that support operations strategies
Quality of materials purchased is sufficient for operations
Timing of deliveries supports operations
59. Fun Facts About Purchasing Institute for Supply Management
> 60% cost of finished manufactured goods is purchased
>90% cost of retail & wholesale goods is purchased
60. Duties of Purchasing Identifying sources of supply
Negotiating contracts
Maintaining a database of suppliers
Obtaining goods and services
Managing supplies
61. Purchasing interfaces with other functions and with external suppliers
62. Purchasing follows a cycle of activities Requisition received
Supplier selected
Order is placed with supplier
Monitor orders
Receive orders
63. Centralized vs. Decentralized Purchasing Centralized purchasing
Purchasing is handled by one special department
Decentralized purchasing
Individual departments or separate locations handle their own purchasing requirements
64. How to Choose and Evaluate Suppliers?
65. Management of Supplier Network Involves Several Activities Choosing suppliers
Evaluating sources of supply
Supplier audits
Supplier certification
Supplier relationships
Supplier partnerships
66. Factors in Choosing a Supplier Quality and quality assurance
Flexibility
Location
Price
Product or service changes
Reputation and financial stability
Lead times and on-time delivery
Other accounts
67. Evaluating Sources of Supply Vendor Analysis - evaluating the sources of supply in terms of …
Price
Quality
Services
Location
Inventory policy
Flexibility