Title: Chapter 3: Network Planning
1- Chapter 3 Network Planning
- CMB 8050
- Matthew J. Liberatore
23.1 Why Network Planning?
- Find the right balance between inventory,
transportation and manufacturing costs, - Match supply and demand under uncertainty by
positioning and managing inventory effectively, - Utilize resources effectively by sourcing
products from the most appropriate manufacturing
facility
3Three Hierarchical Steps
- Network design
- Number, locations and size of manufacturing
plants and warehouses - Assignment of retail outlets to warehouses
- Major sourcing decisions
- Typical planning horizon is a few years.
- Inventory positioning
- Identifying stocking points
- Selecting facilities that will produce to stock
and thus keep inventory - Facilities that will produce to order and hence
keep no inventory - Related to the inventory management strategies
- Resource allocation
- Determine whether production and packaging of
different products is done at the right facility - What should be the plants sourcing strategies?
- How much capacity each plant should have to meet
seasonal demand?
43.2 Network Design
- Physical configuration and infrastructure of the
supply chain. - A strategic decision with long-lasting effects on
the firm. - Decisions relating to plant and warehouse
location as well as distribution and sourcing
5Reevaluation of Infrastructure
- Changes in
- demand patterns
- product mix
- production processes
- sourcing strategies
- cost of running facilities.
- Mergers and acquisitions may mandate the
integration of different logistics networks
6Key Strategic Decisions
- Determining the appropriate number of facilities
such as plants and warehouses. - Determining the location of each facility.
- Determining the size of each facility.
- Allocating space for products in each facility.
- Determining sourcing requirements.
- Determining distribution strategies, i.e., the
allocation of customers to warehouse
7Objective and Trade-Offs
- Objective Design or reconfigure the logistics
network in order to minimize annual system-wide
cost subject to a variety of service level
requirements - Increasing the number of warehouses typically
yields - An improvement in service level due to the
reduction in average travel time to the customers - An increase in inventory costs due to increased
safety stocks required to protect each warehouse
against uncertainties in customer demands. - An increase in overhead and setup costs
- A reduction in outbound transportation costs
transportation costs from the warehouses to the
customers - An increase in inbound transportation costs
transportation costs from the suppliers and/or
manufacturers to the warehouses.
8Data Collection
- Locations of customers, retailers, existing
warehouses and distribution centers,
manufacturing facilities, and suppliers. - All products, including volumes, and special
transport modes (e.g., refrigerated). - Annual demand for each product by customer
location. - Transportation rates by mode.
- Warehousing costs, including labor, inventory
carrying charges, and fixed operating costs. - Shipment sizes and frequencies for customer
delivery. - Order processing costs.
- Customer service requirements and goals.
- Production and sourcing costs and capacities
9Data Aggregation
- Customer Zone
- Aggregate using a grid network or other
clustering technique for those in close
proximity. - Replace all customers within a single cluster by
a single customer located at the center of the
cluster - Five-digit or three-digit zip code based
clustering. - Product Groups
- Distribution pattern
- Products picked up at the same source and
destined to the same customers - Logistics characteristics like weight and volume.
- Product type
- product models or style differing only in the
type of packaging.
10Warehouse Costs
- Handling costs
- Labor and utility costs
- Proportional to annual flow through the
warehouse. - Fixed costs
- All cost components not proportional to the
amount of flow - Typically proportional to warehouse size
(capacity) but in a nonlinear way. - Storage costs
- Inventory holding costs
- Proportional to average positive inventory levels.
11Potential Locations
- Geographical and infrastructure conditions.
- Natural resources and labor availability.
- Local industry and tax regulations.
- Public interest.
- Not many will qualify based on all the above
conditions
12Service Level Requirements
- Specify a maximum distance between each customer
and the warehouse serving it - Proportion of customers whose distance to their
assigned warehouse is no more than a given
distance - 95 of customers be situated within 200 miles of
the warehouses serving them - Appropriate for rural or isolated areas
13Future Demand
- Strategic decisions have to be valid for 3-5
years - Consider scenario approach and net present values
to factor in expected future demand over planning
horizon
14Number of Warehouses
Optimal Number of Warehouses
15Industry BenchmarksNumber of Distribution
Centers
Food Companies
Chemicals
Pharmaceuticals
Avg. of WH
3
14
25
- High margin product - Service not important (or
easy to ship express) - Inventory
expensive relative to transportation
- Low margin product - Service very important -
Outbound transportation expensive relative to
inbound
16Model Validation
- Reconstruct the existing network configuration
using the model and collected data - Compare the output of the model to existing data
- Compare to the companys accounting information
- Often the best way to identify errors in the
data, problematic assumptions, modeling flaws. - Make local or small changes in the network
configuration to see how the system estimates
impact on costs and service levels. - Positing a variety of what-if questions.
- Answer the following questions
- Does the model make sense?
- Are the data consistent?
- Can the model results be fully explained?
- Did you perform sensitivity analysis?
17Solution Techniques
- Mathematical optimization techniques
- 1. Exact algorithms find optimal solutions
- 2. Heuristics find good solutions, not
necessarily optimal - Simulation models provide a mechanism to
evaluate specified design alternatives created by
the designer.
18Example
- Single product
- Two plants p1 and p2
- Plant p2 has an annual capacity of 60,000 units.
- The two plants have the same production costs.
- There are two warehouses w1 and w2 with identical
warehouse handling costs. - There are three markets areas c1,c2 and c3 with
demands of 50,000, 100,000 and 50,000,
respectively.
19Unit Distribution Costs
Facility warehouse p1 p2 c1 c2 c3
w1 0 4 3 4 5
w2 5 2 2 1 2
20Heuristic 1Choose the Cheapest Warehouse to
Source Demand
D 50,000
2 x 50,000
D 100,000
5 x 140,000
1 x 100,000
2 x 60,000
Cap 60,000
D 50,000
2 x 50,000
Total Costs 1,120,000
21Heuristic 2Choose the warehouse where the
total delivery costs to and from the warehouse
are the lowestConsider inbound and outbound
distribution costs
0
D 50,000
3
P1 to WH1 3 P1 to WH2 7 P2 to WH1 7 P2 to WH
2 4
4
2
5
D 100,000
5
P1 to WH1 4 P1 to WH2 6 P2 to WH1 8 P2 to WH
2 3
4
1
2
Cap 60,000
D 50,000
2
P1 to WH1 5 P1 to WH2 7 P2 to WH1 9 P2 to WH
2 4
Market 1 is served by WH1, Markets 2 and 3 are
served by WH2
22Heuristic 2Choose the warehouse where the
total delivery costs to and from the warehouse
are the lowestConsider inbound and outbound
distribution costs
0 x 50,000
D 50,000
3 x 50,000
Cap 200,000
P1 to WH1 3 P1 to WH2 7 P2 to WH1 7 P2 to WH
2 4
D 100,000
5 x 90,000
P1 to WH1 4 P1 to WH2 6 P2 to WH1 8 P2 to WH
2 3
1 x 100,000
2 x 60,000
Cap 60,000
D 50,000
2 x 50,000
P1 to WH1 5 P1 to WH2 7 P2 to WH1 9 P2 to WH
2 4
Total Cost 920,000
23The Optimization Model
- The problem described earlier can be framed as
the following linear programming problem. - Let
- x(p1,w1), x(p1,w2), x(p2,w1) and x(p2,w2) be the
flows from the plants to the warehouses. - x(w1,c1), x(w1,c2), x(w1,c3) be the flows from
the warehouse w1 to customer zones c1, c2 and c3. - x(w2,c1), x(w2,c2), x(w2,c3) be the flows from
warehouse w2 to customer zones c1, c2 and c3
24The Optimization Model
- The problem we want to solve is
- min 0x(p1,w1) 5x(p1,w2)
4x(p2,w1) - 2x(p2,w2) 3x(w1,c1) 4x(w1,c2)
- 5x(w1,c3) 2x(w2,c1) 2x(w2,c3)
- subject to the following constraints
- x(p2,w1) x(p2,w2) ? 60000
- x(p1,w1) x(p2,w1) x(w1,c1) x(w1,c2)
x(w1,c3) - x(p1,w2) x(p2,w2) x(w2,c1) x(w2,c2)
x(w2,c3) - x(w1,c1) x(w2,c1) 50000
- x(w1,c2) x(w2,c2) 100000
- x(w1,c3) x(w2,c3) 50000
- all flows greater than or equal to zero.
25Optimal Solution
Facility warehouse p1 p2 c1 c2 c3
w1 140,000 0 50,000 40,000 50,000
w2 0 60,000 0 60,000 0
Total cost for the optimal strategy is 740,000
26Simulation Models
- Useful for a given design and a micro-level
analysis. Examine - Individual ordering pattern.
- Specific inventory policies.
- Inventory movements inside the warehouse.
- Not an optimization model
- Can only consider very few alternate models
27Which One to Use?
- Use mathematical optimization for static analysis
- Use a 2-step approach when dynamics in system has
to be analyzed - Use an optimization model to generate a number of
least-cost solutions at the macro level, taking
into account the most important cost components. - Use a simulation model to evaluate the solutions
generated in the first phase.
283.3 Inventory Positioning and Logistics
Coordination
- Multi-facility supply chain that belongs to a
single firm - Manage inventory so as to reduce system wide cost
- Consider the interaction of the various
facilities and the impact of this interaction on
the inventory policy of each facility - Ways to manage
- Wait for specific orders to arrive before
starting to manufacture them make-to-order
facility - Otherwise, decide on where to keep safety stock?
- Which facilities should produce to stock and
which should produce to order?
29Integrating Inventory Positioning and Network
Design
- Consider a two-tier supply chain
- Items shipped from manufacturing facilities to
primary warehouses - From there, they are shipped to secondary
warehouses and finally to retail outlets - How to optimally position inventory in the supply
chain? - Should every SKU be positioned both at the
primary and secondary warehouses?, OR - Some SKU be positioned only at the primary while
others only at the secondary?
30Integrating Inventory Positioning and Network
Design
FIGURE 3-18 Sample plot of each SKU by volume
and demand
31Three Different Product Categories
- High variability - low volume products
- Low variability - high volume products, and
- Low variability - low volume products.
32Supply Chain Strategy Different for the Different
Categories
- High variability low volume products
- Inventory risk the main challenge for
- Position them mainly at the primary warehouses
- demand from many retail outlets can be
aggregated reducing inventory costs. - Low variability high volume products
- Position close to the retail outlets at the
secondary warehouses - Ship fully loaded tracks as close as possible to
the customers reducing transportation costs. - Low variability low volume products
- Require more analysis since other characteristics
are important, such as profit margins, etc.
33SUMMARY
- Optimizing supply chain performance is difficult
- conflicting objectives
- demand and supply uncertainties
- supply chain dynamics.
- Through network planning, firms can globally
optimize supply chain performance - Combines network design, inventory positioning
and resource allocation - Consider the entire network
- account production
- Warehousing
- transportation inventory costs
- service level requirements.