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Overview. BackgroundEssentials of Supply ChainsEnterprise Resource Planning and the Internal Supply ChainSupply Chain ManagementGlobal Supply ChainsSCM and E-Commerce. Background. Supply Chain Management is an Old ConceptClercus of Sparta (401 BC)Napoleon vs. RussiaGermany vs. Russia (WWII) Gulf WarSupply chain consisted of strategically placed bases of soldiers and materiel (inventory)Half of this supply chain was closed during the 1990sPresent Day US Military
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1. MD240Supply Chain Management (SCM) and Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
2. Overview Background
Essentials of Supply Chains
Enterprise Resource Planning and the Internal Supply Chain
Supply Chain Management
Global Supply Chains
SCM and E-Commerce
3. Background Supply Chain Management is an Old Concept
Clercus of Sparta (401 BC)
Napoleon vs. Russia
Germany vs. Russia (WWII)
Gulf War
Supply chain consisted of strategically placed bases of soldiers and materiel (inventory)
Half of this supply chain was closed during the 1990s
Present Day US Military
“Air Bridge” … a supply chain of transport planes continually refueled by strategically located gas tanker planes
4. Essentials of Supply Chains
5. Essentials of Supply Chains Supply Chain
The flow of material, information, and services from raw material suppliers through factories and warehouses to the end customers
Supply Chain Management (SCM)
To plan, organize, and coordinate all the supply chain’s activities
A total systems approach for coordinating all of a supply chain’s activities
6. Essentials of Supply Chains Demand Chains
The segment of the supply chain involving the process of taking orders from customers
Demand Chain Management
Similar to SCM, but more of a focus on ...
customer touchpoints
“pull” orientation
7. Essentials of Supply Chains The Components of Supply Chains
Upstream supply chain
includes the organization’s first-tier suppliers and their suppliers
Internal supply chain
includes all the processes used by an organization in transforming the inputs of the suppliers to outputs
Downstream supply chain
includes all the processes involved in delivering the products to final customers
8. Essentials of Supply ChainsA Generic Supply Chain
9. Essentials of Supply ChainsPush vs. Pull Orientation
10. Essentials of Supply ChainsTypical “Push” Supply Chain
11. Essentials of Supply Chains Forward Supply Chain
The supply chain that manufactures and delivers new products to end customers
Reverse Supply Chain
A supply chain for defective or returned products that are being sent from the customer back to the retailer/distributor/manufacturer to wherever they will be refurbished/junked
Reverse logistics concerns the reverse flows of these items along the supply chain
12. Essentials of Supply Chains Green Supply Chains/Green Manufacturing
Designing environmentally friendly supply chains
Supports manufacturing stage, use of products, and disposal of products
13. Enterprise Resource Planning and the Internal Supply Chain
14. Internal Supply ChainEvolution of Manufacturing Info. Systems
15. Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) ERP
A process of planning and managing all resources and their use in the entire enterprise
Objective
To integrate all departments and functions across a company onto a single computer system that can serve all of the enterprise’s needs
Results
productivity improvement
better profitability
increases customer satisfaction
16. Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Pros
provides a single interface for managing all the routine activities performed in manufacturing
can integrate several hundred applications
plays critical role in getting small- and medium-sized manufacturers to focus on business processes
Cons
may need to change existing business processes to fit SAP, PeopleSoft or other ERP vendor’s format
never meant to fully support supply chains (SCM)
never meant to support CRM
difficult to build, operate, change and maintain
17. Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Generations of ERP First Generation ERP
Supported routine transactional activities
Excelled in transaction management
Generated reports which provided a snapshot of the business at a point in time
Did not support the continuous refining and enhancing of plans as changes and events occur, up to the very last minute before executing the plan
Second Generation ERP
Adds decision support (DSS) and business intelligence (BI) capabilities
Integration of database management systems (DBMS) and spreadsheets in Excel or Lotus 1-2-3
Web-based
Integrates CRM and EC
18. Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) ERP Technologies ERP Application Vendors
SAP
Oracle
PeopleSoft
ERP Integration Tools
Message-oriented Middleware (e.g. IBM MQSeries, Microsoft MSMQ)
WWW technologies
Web Services technologies (.NET/J2EE)
19. Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) ERP Implementation ERP Implementation Approaches
Vendor Specific
Use ERP software components from a single vendor
Using a single vendor speeds up implementation times, reduces incompatibility problems, reduces the need for middleware to connect different vendors’ ERP components
Best of Breed
Pick and choose the best software components available for various ERP tasks
Picking best-of-breed components allow you to choose ERP processes that work better for your business, and to have the best available components, at the possible cost of additional implementation time and maintenance costs
20. Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) ASPs and ERP Outsourcing Application Service Providers (ASP)
Some ASPs offer to lease ERP-based applications to other businesses over long-term (>5 year) contracts
Offerings evident in ERP-added functions
Electronic commerce
Customer relationship management (CRM)
Datamarts
Desktop productivity
Human resources information systems (HRMS)
Other supply chain-related applications
21. Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) If a company installs an ERP system, how will it affect their management of their supply chain problems?
22. Supply Chain Problems
23. Supply Chain Problems History
First industry to focus on rationalized management of the supply chain was the retail food industry
Multi-tier supply chain structure causes difficulties in inventories and delivery times
Manufacturers offer lots of temporary price cuts to move perishables
Retailers hold lots of special sales
Consumers are willing to stock up and hold inventories
All of these together create chaos in this supply chain
Efficient Consumer Response (ECR) is the food industry’s version of SCM
Developed by large food company consortia
Large retailers forced all of their suppliers to adopt ECR, or lose their business
24. Supply Chain ProblemsProblems Along Supply Chains
25. Supply Chain ProblemsProblems Along Supply Chains Uncertainties
demand forecasts
influenced by competition, prices, weather conditions, technological development, and customers’ general confidence
delivery times
depend on several factors ranging from machine failures to road conditions and traffic jams, that way interfere with shipments
Symptoms of poor SCM
poor customer service, which hinders people from getting the product or service when and where needed, or gives them a product of poor quality
High cost, low (or no) profit
The “Bullwhip Effect”
27. Supply Chain Management
29. Supply Chain ManagementPotential Solutions to Problems Vertical integration - building inventories
Coordination of all different activities
Use outsourcing rather than do-it-yourself during demand peaks
‘Buy’ rather than ‘make’ production inputs whenever appropriate
Configure optimal shipping plans
Create strategic partnerships with suppliers
Use just-in-time approach to purchasing
Use fewer suppliers
Use IT to support the above, to integrate processes and to communicate better
34. Supply Chain ManagementSuccess Story: P&G and Wal-Mart Wal-Mart provides access to sales data for every item P&G makes for Wal-Mart
P&G obtains similar data from other retailers
By monitoring inventory positions at all retailers, P&G can know what is selling, what to make, and how quickly to make it
35. Supply Chain ManagementFailure Story: Cisco Cisco supply chain was touted as an amazing feat in SCM
When Cisco needed something, the order was sent out via the SCM system to all of the various vendors
In order to get the vendors to work with the SCM system, Cisco guaranteed that they would pay for any unused inventories that vendors ended up with
What Cisco didn’t realize was that their ordering system was flawed …
Vendors could not communicate with each other
The total SCM system didn’t control the MRP process further down the supply chain
When an order (say 100) was offered to the vendors, the vendors (say 25) would each place an order for 100 sets of required components, leading to 2500 units being moved into Cisco’s supply chain
Eventually, Cisco had to re-write their SCM system and write off $1 Billion for inventories that they did not need
36. Supply Chain ManagementTrends Integrating CRM to ERP and SCM
Business Intelligence
Building knowledge about what is going on in your business by using DSS, EIS, data mining, intelligent support systems, and other knowledge-oriented IT
Supply Chain Intelligence
Business intelligence technologies embedded in SCM applications
Componentization
A component architecture takes advantage of modularity … the ability to mix-and-match different modules that work together seamlessly
Componentization saves money on maintenance and upgrading, since each module/component/object can be upgraded individually, in a manner that does not affect other modules
37. Global Supply Chains
38. Global Supply Chains Global supply chains exhibit their own unique challenges
Local regulations
Different labor laws
Regional customs (business, religious, etc.)
Difficulties of sourcing materials
40. Global Supply Chain ManagementSuccess Story: Li & Fung Li & Fung, Hong Kong (lifung.com)
Supplies The GAP, many other US companies
Very competitive markets
Now up to 7 different apparel seasons per year
Maintain a huge network of manufacturers throughout Southeast Asia, Africa, Eastern Europe
Have used IT -- built on top of existing supplier relationships -- to thoroughly integrate supply chain
Can ship orders in very short times
Have used the Internet to extend their capabilities to even small US clothing retailers
41. Global Supply Chain ManagementFuture Managerial Issues SCM was necessitated/facilitated by past 10 years of “globalization”
Uncertainty about future globalization (after 9/11/2001) will change SCM directions
Less willingness to take risk in foreign supply sources
Longer time/costs for nations to inspect and accept goods from foreign sources
More backup inventories will need to be held to hedge against supply variability
Greater breadth of shipping channels will need to be used to ensure enough supplies can get to factories on time
42. SCM and E-Commerce
43. SCM and E-CommerceDigital Supply Chains E-Commerce sites themselves are supply chains for digital services
When you click on a URL, it is a request for a service
When you get a page in your browser as a response to a click on a URL, it is the result of an N-Tier architecture that serves as a supply chain for digital content
The process by which the digital content is generated can span one organization (an internal supply chain) or several organizations (an upstream supply chain for content)
44. SCM and E-CommerceEC Facilitates SCM E-Commerce technologies can help to improve the functioning of traditional supply chains
Formalizes (e.g. using XML) and speeds up supply chain communication
Faster response to customer demands
Better information about supply chain activities provided to customers and to supply chain partners
Facilitate a hub structure for new supply chain designs
Facilitate real-time knowledge about on-hand inventory positions and locations of inventories
E-marketplaces can help clear markets, or dump inventories that were mistakenly produced by the supply chain
45. SCM and E-CommerceEC Makes SCM More Competitive E-Commerce also makes SCM more challenging
Customers expect faster response times
Order fulfillment problems have been rampant in E-Commerce due to lack of knowledge of historical demands, and inability to ramp up capacity to serve actual demands
Customers are more knowledgeable about their rights … by law, supply chains must react in certain manners to customer orders
companies can be fined if they do not
customers can keep anything they did not order
A variety of IT has been employed to provide better information to customers about where their order is in the shipping process
Quick delivery (online)
Integrated warehouses (bar coding)
Order tracking and shipment tracking
46. SCM and E-CommerceEC Necessitates New Supply Chain Types New promises are made to customers at the point of order procurement
Same day delivery/Same hour delivery
Customized goods/service
Order Fulfillment – need to create new supply chains that can fulfill on the above promises
Processes for mass customization
Automated warehouses for quickly picking and packing orders
New delivery processes between warehouse and customer
47. SCM and E-CommerceSome EC Supply Chains Don’t Work Some industries just aren’t made for EC, due to the nature of their supply chain
Yes: Books
Lightweight, easy to transport long distances
Can get dinged a bit, and people still will read them
People typically buy them and don’t return them
No: Furniture
Heavy, difficult and expensive to transport long distances
Furniture is usually shipped by the truckload … not by the piece
Furniture defects typically make people send the items back
Furniture showrooms typically employ many people who can touch up furniture defects so that customers won’t notice