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Production Logistics and ERP. Chapter 6. Production Logistics. Increased competitive pressures on production processes due to: Shorter product development times Focus on product quality Shorter product life cycles Production Logistics is SAP approach to production planning and control
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Production Logistics and ERP Chapter 6
Production Logistics • Increased competitive pressures on production processes due to: • Shorter product development times • Focus on product quality • Shorter product life cycles • Production Logistics is SAP approach to production planning and control • Integrated with other Value chains in R/3 such as procurement and warehousing and SD.
Production Logistics (cont.) • Builds upon the integration of MRP II • Provides specific support for TQM and Kanban material management processes • More customer centric than MRP II with integration of sales information
R/3 Org. Elements Plant Storage Location Work center MRP area R/3 Business Objects Material master Production order BOM Sales & Operations plan Master recipe Production Logistics (cont)
Production Logistics Scenarios • Sales-order related production • Production by lot size • Sales-order related repetitive manufacturing • Project-oriented make-to-order production • Production replenishment
Production Logistics VC Production Order Prelim Costing Production Order Execution Quality Inspection After production Production Order Creation Inspection Check by lot Capacity Planning Defects Recording Inspection Point Related to process Material Staging Sales Support Capacity Planning Information System QM cost input
Processing of Sales Plan Determining quantities and dates Purchase requisitions created Single Item MPS Creation, release and execution of production order 5. Goods issue 6. Completions of PO confirmation 7. Goods receipt 8. Settlement of PO Production by Lot Size Scenario
V V Production By Lot Size: Plan Processing Profitability Analysis w/static Standard cost Sales quantity Copied from CO-PA Processing of Sales and operation planning Demand Program is to Be created Production Plan is created Sales plan Is created Demand Management Demand Program edited
^ V Production By Lot Size: Demand Management Single Item MPS Purchase Requisition created Planned Orders created Planned Order conversion Processing Stock Material Requests for quotation sent to vendors Management Of consignment stocks Internal procurement With stock support Order arrived
V Production By Lot Size: Creating Production Order Con. Of plan Order to prod. Order is started Creation of Production order Production Order is created Release of Production order Quality Management In production Trans. Req. generated Prod. Order Is released Inspection lot Created for Prod order
^ V Production By Lot Size: Execute Production Order Execution of Production order Material is produced Material issue for Production order Is to be posted Production order to Be confirmed Goods receipt To be posted Goods issue For production orders Completion Confirmation of Prod. order Goods receipt processing Prod. Order Is completely confirmed Prod. Order Status is Fully delivered Actual costs Updated in Prod. order Goods issue is Posted for Prod. order Time management processing Settlement of Production order
Repetitive manufacturing Make-to-order production Process manufacturing Project-related “Engineer to order” Quality management for goods receipt from production Other Production Scenarios
Autodesk Inc. Case • $400M Company, growing at 20%/year • Ten sales offices in US and 5 development centers in US and Switzerland with 1900 people • Sells famous CAD and MM software • Goal was to maintain growth rate and ship products within 1 hour of receiving customer order • existing system was stretched by global growth and couldn’t handle multiple order codes; operating info was not available to executives for decision making • Used R/3 to redesign business model and 25 major business processes, including 240 subprocesses • Re-engineered order process for automatic pricing; reduced number of order codes • Can track sales in real time along with new product evaluation copies and manufacturing costs around the world • Future plans were to extend the software to Europe and Asia regions, remote access, allow for product downloading
A Normal Company’s Systems • Fitter Snacker, Inc. • Founded in the ’50s • A small manufacturer of healthy snack bars • NRG-A and NRB-B bars • Two divisions; Wholesale and Direct Sales
Problems with Fitter Snacker’s Systems: • Sources: • Three unintegrated systems • Sales Order System • Warehouse System • Accounting System • Manual handling of transactions • Information not available in “real time”
Warehouse Sales Order Pick, Pack and Ship Quote Sales Fitter Snacker’s Sales Process Receiving Returns Invoice Accounting Payment Fitter Snacker’s Systems
Production and Materials Management at Fitter Snacker • Must answer the following questions: • How much of each bar should be produced? • What quantities of raw materials should be ordered? • When should raw materials be ordered
General Approaches to Production • Make-to-stock: Items produced in anticipation of orders • Make-to-order: Items produced to meet specific customer orders • Assemble to order: Final product assembled from make-to-stock items
Mixer Snack Bar Line Mixer Form Bake Pack Raw Material Warehouse Finished Goods Warehouse Mixer Mixer Fitter Snacker Manufacturing Process
Fitter Snacker Production Problems • Communications • Marketing does not share data with production (sales promotions and large, unexpected orders) • Inventory • True inventory status not known • No real-time data on actual sales • Accounting and Purchasing • Difficulty forecasting raw material and labor costs • Adjusting accounts for actual vs. standard costs time consuming and done infrequently
Production Planning Process • Work from sales forecast to create aggregate production plan • Break down aggregate plan into more specific plans • Use production plan to determine raw material requirements
Sales Forecasting Sales and Operations Planning Demand Management MRP Detailed Scheduling Production Purchasing SAP R/3 Approach to Production Planning
Demand Management • Calculation for Week 5 4,134 cases in Jan. x 3 days in week 5 ÷ 22 working days in Jan. = 563.7 cases 4,1984 cases in Feb. x 3 days in week 5 ÷ 20 working days in Feb. = 419.8 cases Total = 983.5 cases
MRP • Bill of Material
MRP • MRP Record
Detailed Production Scheduling • Snack bar production line is bottleneck • Scheduling of production line is key to determining detailed production schedule
Detailed Production Scheduling • Length of production runs • Longer runs reduces cost of setups • Longer runs increase capacity utilization • Shorter runs reduces cost of inventory
Providing Production Data to Accounting • Production data does not get entered into an ERP system directly • Many methods of gathering shop floor data are available • ERP allows shop floor data to be collected once for production and accounting purposes, and data is consistent in both areas
ERP in Supply Chain Management $ $ $ $ $ Goods Goods Goods Goods Goods Raw Materials Customer Supplier Manufacturer Wholesaler Retailer Information Information Information Information Information
Supply Chain Management and ERP • ERP not required for Supply Chain Management (SCM) • ERP can facilitate sharing information in real time • Use of internet can reduce communication costs
Supply Chain Metrics • Total Supply Chain • Cash-to-cash cycle time: Time from paying for raw materials to the time when cash is collected from the customer • Total supply chain costs
Supply Chain Metrics • Buyer-Supplier • Initial fill rate • Initial-order lead-time • On-time performance
Summary • An ERP system can improve the efficiency of the production and purchasing processes. Efficiency begins with Marketing sharing sales forecasts with Production, which shares its production plans with Purchasing
Summary continued • Production planning can be done without an ERP system, but and ERP system allows production to be linked to Purchasing and Accounting. This data sharing increases a company’s overall efficiency
Summary continued • Companies are building on their ERP systems to practice supply chain management. In doing this, the company looks at itself as part of a large process that includes customers and suppliers. Using information more efficiently along the supply chain can significantly reduce costs.