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Improving the Competitiveness of Supply Chains. Advanced Diploma in Procurement and Supply. Evolutionary stages of purchasing. Clerical (transactional) Purchasing is perceived as a low-ranking routine function, characterised by a focus on internal performance and efficiency. Commercial
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Improving the Competitivenessof Supply Chains Advanced Diploma in Procurement and Supply
Evolutionary stages of purchasing • Clerical (transactional) • Purchasing is perceived as a low-ranking routine function, characterised by a focus on internal performance and efficiency. • Commercial • The focus shifts to price and cost savings, obtained mainly through the interface with suppliers. This stage is characterised by adversarial relationships with suppliers and the exploitation of short-term tactical advantages. • Strategic (proactive) • The focus is on effective contribution to competitive advantage. Strategies are introduced to improve the performance of external supply chains, through a more holistic approach to logistics or supply chain management.
The chain metaphor • It emphasises ‘serial co-operation’ or ‘working together in turn’ • It emphasises mutual dependency and collaboration, because each link in a chain is essential to the completeness and strength of the whole • It emphasises the importance of ‘linkages’ or interfaces between members • It is continuous and non-directional
Benefits of a ‘customer-focused’ approach • Integrating the objectives of units and functions throughout the value chain • Encouraging procurement staff to be proactive in planning procurements • Reducing resistance to procurement involvement in strategic issues and processes • Enhancing procurement’s role and status in the organisation
Supply networks • Seeing the supply chain as a network is helpful for a number of reasons: • It is a more strategic model for mapping and analysing supply chain relationships • It raises the possibility of a wider range of collaborations • It recognises the potential of ‘extended enterprises’ and virtual organisations • It recognises that extended enterprises may overlap, creating complex patterns of relationship, competition and potential risk
Value-adding strategies • Value engineering • Analysing the value of products at the design and development stage • Lean supply • Collaborating closely with the supply chain to eliminate or minimise wastes in all activities and processes • Agile supply • Collaborating closely with the supply chain to increase its speed and flexibility of response to changing customer demands • Value-adding negotiations and relationships • Working collaboratively and constructively with suppliers to find ways of continuously improving and adding value, with mutual benefit to all parties
Supply network design decisions • How should the network be configured? • Where should each part of the network owned by the organisation be located? • What physical capability should each part of the network owned by the company have?
Management issues in closed-loop supply chains • Effective supply base management, integration and collaboration • Effective supplier and customer relationships • Supplier selection and contract award on the basis of recycling or ecologically friendly disposal capacity • Product and packaging design to facilitate return, recycling and safe disposal • Visibility: the ability to access and view relevant logistics data, in order to manage the operation effectively • Reverse logistical activities
Risks of a narrow supplier base • Over-dependence on a few suppliers, in the event of supplier failure • Supply disruption • The loss of preferred suppliers’ goodwill and co-operation • Preferred suppliers growing complacent, and ceasing to offer competitive value • Being ‘locked in’ to long-term relationship and co-investment with suppliers who turn out to be under-performing or incompatible with the culture, ethics or objectives of the buying organisation • Missing out on seeking or utilising new or more competitive suppliers in the wider supply market
Drivers for supply chain management • Cost pressures • Time pressures • Reliability pressures • Response pressures • Transparency pressures • Globalisation pressure
Benefits of an SCM approach • Reduced total costs • Improved responsiveness to customers’ requirements • Access to complementary resources and capabilities • Enhanced product and service quality • Improved supply chain communication • Improved inventory management • Reduced cycle times • Greater transparency for cost and risk management • Greater supply chain visibility • Optimising the balance of service levels and costs
Improving quality • Selecting suppliers with third party approved or accredited quality management systems • Appraising the quality management systems and ‘track record’ of suppliers • Preparing preferred or approved supplier lists • Influencing the quality of product design • Translating design requirements into clear, accurate materials and service specifications • Developing goods inwards procedures for quality inspection and testing • Managing relationships with suppliers • Monitoring and controlling suppliers’ quality performance over time • Working with suppliers to resolve quality disputes, solve quality problems and/or make ongoing quality improvements
Supporting innovation • Enhanced access to market intelligence • Faster and more effective product design and development processes • Tapping into synergies and opportunities available from pooling information, ideas and expertise • Creating incentives for supply chain partners to innovate • The intentional selection of long-term strategic supply chain partners • Supporting the use of collaborative techniques • Supporting the ongoing development of supplier innovation capability • Supporting supply chain management techniques which are themselves regarded as ‘innovative’ in traditional procurement settings • Supporting continuous supply chain improvement and development
Reducing risk • Encouraging the proactive monitoring, identification and assessment of risks • Providing greater end-to-end supply chain data sharing, transparency and visibility • Supporting greater transparency and trust in individual supplier relationships • Improving security and continuity of supply • Promoting the intentional and rigorous selection of long-term strategic supply chain partners • Promoting the effective management of contracts, suppliers and supplier performance • Encouraging systems integration and joint development, • Encouraging supply chain mapping and analysis • Creating improved end-to-end supply chain visibility
Added value • The core product represents the key benefits received directly from purchasing the product • The actual product is the key elements of the product which differentiate one product from another • The augmented product may include a range of tangible and intangible elements which add value (and often differentiate competing products)
Problems with Porter’s model • Despite its customer perspective, the model still focuses on profitability as the primary objective • Despite its recognition of the importance of linkages, the model is not highly integrative • The distinction between primary and support functions is somewhat arbitrary • It is a static model, based solely on American firms
Organisational structure • To define work roles and relationships • To define work tasks and responsibilities • To channel information flows efficiently through the organisation • To coordinate goals and activities of different units • To control the flow of work, information and resources • To support flexible working and adaptability to changing internal and external demands • To encourage and support the commitment, involvement and satisfaction of the people who work for the organisation • To support and improve the efficiency, effectiveness and competitiveness of the organisation’s performance through all of the above
Key modern trends in flexible organisation • The flattening of organisation hierarchies, or ‘delayering’. • Chunked structures • Project management • Horizontal structures • Core-periphery structures • Network structures • Virtual structures
Advantages of centralisation • Specialisation of procurement staff • Potential for the consolidation of requirements • Greater co-ordination of procurement activities • More effective control of procurement activity • Avoidance of conflict between business divisions • Access to specialist skills, contacts and resources
Advantages in devolving procurement • Better communication and coordination between procurement and operating departments • Customer focus • Quicker response to operational and user needs and environmental changes and problems by local buyers • Knowledge of, and relationships with, local suppliers • Smaller purchase quantities • Accountability • Freeing central procurement units to focus on higher-level, value-adding tasks
Organisational systems • Communication, data-sharing and management information systems • Requirements planning systems • Inventory and warehouse management systems • Transport planning and management systems • Purchase to pay (P2P) systems, potentially part of a broader e-procurement or e-sourcing system • Quality management systems • Environmental management systems
Process mapping and management • Identifying the nature of process flows, and the sequence of process activities, enables the identification of: • Sources of process inefficiency and non-value-adding activity • Sources of process ineffectiveness • Points of process complexity • Points of risk • Points of cost • Points of profit and opportunity
Value-added flowchart • List all steps in a process and create a simple flowchart with the steps in a sequence of boxes • Add to each box the time currently required to complete each step • Identify steps that do not add value • Move the boxes representing non-value-added processes to the right of the boxes representing value-added processes • Total the times in the value-added column to derive a value-added cycle time, and the times in the non-value-added column to derive a non-value-added cycle time • Calculate the percentage of the total cycle time that results from non-value-added operations
Value chain analysis • Identifying sub-activities for each primary activity and support activity • Identifying linkages • Looking for opportunities to increase value
The 10 Cs of supplier appraisal • Competence (or capability) • Capacity • Commitment • Control • Cash • Consistency • Cost • Compatibility • Compliance • Communication
Key components of sourcing decisions • In-house or outsource • Supplier selection • Procurement • Sourcing-related metrics
Appropriate relationship factors • The nature and importance of the items being purchased • The competence, capability, co-operation and performance of the supplier • Geographical distance • The compatibility of the supply partners • The organisation’s and purchasing function’s objectives and priorities • Supply market conditions • Legal and regulatory requirements
Features of a constructive supply partnership • A joint and mutual search for greater efficiency and competitiveness • Joint planning for the future by the customer and the supplier. • Agreed shared objectives • Understanding between the customer and the supplier that there should be a joint effort to eliminate waste from the supply chain • Openness and transparency between the organisations • Each party understands the expectations of the other, and seeks to meet or exceed them • The relationship is one of equal partners • They recognise that the relationship might not last for ever, and have a prepared and agreed exit strategy
Key characteristics of partnership sourcing • Cultural compatibility between the partners • A high level of trust, knowledge sharing and openness between customer and supplier • Mutual acceptance of the concept of win-win within the supply chain • Relevant expertise, resources or competencies in complementary areas • Clear joint objectives and meaningful performance measures for assessing supply chain performance • The use of cross-functional teams to enhance co-ordination, process focus and continuous improvement • A total quality management philosophy, focused on co-operative efforts to maximise quality and secure continuous improvement • A high degree of systems integration
Characteristics of adversarial relationships • Lack of trust and therefore little information sharing • A one-off or short-term transaction focus • The use of power and negotiation to seek the best possible deal • Rigorously enforced compliance with contract terms • Little co-operation or recognition of mutual interests
Make/do or buy decisions • Strategic make/do or buy decisions • determine the long-term activities, capabilities, resources and ‘boundaries’ of the firm • Tactical make-do or buy decisions • reflect the organisation’s response to short-term or cyclical changes in demand for its products or services, in order to utilise available productive capacity efficiently • Operational or ‘component’ make-or-buy decisions • basically product design and manufacturing decisions, determining whether a particular component of a product should be manufactured in-house or bought in from the external supply chain
Business process outsourcing • Business process outsourcing (BPO) • ‘the transfer of responsibility to a third party of activities which used to be performed internally’ • Facilities management • outsourcing solutions in which the customer transfers to an external services provider the responsibility for the operation and maintenance of one or more facilities • Shared services • the outsourcing of a business function to an expert internal department or unit • Managed services • the outsourcing of responsibility for managing service operations and project or programme activity • In-sourcing • the reverse process: the transfer of an outsourced function to an internal department of the company, to be managed by employees
Drivers for outsourcing • Quality drivers • Cost drivers • Business focus drivers • Financial drivers • Relationship drivers • Human resource drivers