Title: MS3121 Fundamentals of Business Logistics
1MS3121 Fundamentals of Business Logistics
Logistics/Supply Chain managers are owners of
the product-flow process from raw material
sources to final consumers, not activity
administrators.
Topic 2 Logistics Planning
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2Learning Objectives
- Discuss product characteristics
- Understand the relationship between products
nature and logistics planning - Define and model logistics customer service
3Product in the Planning Triangle
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4Nature of the Product
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5Product Life-Cycle Curve
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6ABC Classification for 14 Products
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3-5
7Cumulative 80-20 Curve
3-6
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8Nature of the Product (Contd)
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9Effect of Weight-Bulk Ratio on Logistics Costs
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10Effect of Value-Weight Ratio on Logistics Costs
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11Effect of Transport Service and Inventory Level
on Logistics Costs
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12Effect of Product Risk on Logistics Costs
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13Reasons for Product Packaging
- Facilitate storage and handling
- Promote better utilization of transport
equipment - Provide product protection
- Promote the sale of the product
- Change the product density
- Facilitate product use
- Provide reuse value for the customer
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14Product Pricing
- Geographic pricing methods
- - F.o.b. pricing
- - Zone pricing
- - Single, or uniform, pricing
- - Freight equalization
- - Basing point pricing
- Incentive pricing
- Quantity discounts
- The Deal
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15Zone 2 136.31
Zone 3 137.38
Boston
Zone 8 147.38
Zone 7 144.81
Zone 5 140.00
Zone 6 142.43
Zone 4 138.33
UPS Pricing Zones
3-18
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16Per-Case Logistics Costs as a Justification for
Price Discounts
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17Example Glass Jars
18Customer Service in Planning Triangle
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19Customer Service Defined
Customer service is generally presumed to be a
means by which
companies attempt to differentiate their product,
keep customers
loyal, increase sales, and improve profits.
Its elements are
Price
-
Product quality
-
Service
-
It is an integral part of the marketing mix of
Price
-
Customer service here
Product
-
Promotion
-
-
Physical Distribution
Relative importance of service elements
Physical distribution variables dominate price,
product, and
-
promotional considerations as customer service
considerations
Product availability
and
order cycle time
are dominant physical
-
distribution variables
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20Customer Service Elements
4-4
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21Common Customer Service Complaints
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22Most Important Customer Service Elements
- On-time delivery
- Order fill rate
- Product condition
- Accurate documentation
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23Order Cycle Time
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24Components of a Customer Order Cycle
WAREHOUSE Order processing and assembly
Customer order transmittal
Transmittal of backorder items
CUSTOMER Retail outlet
Order delivery
FACTORY Order processing, assembly from stock,
or production if no stock
Express order delivery
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4-10
25Importance of Logistics Customer Service
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26Service Observations
- The dominant customer service elements are
logistical in nature - Late delivery is the most common service
complaint and speed of delivery is the most
important service element - The penalty for service failure is primarily
reduced patronage, i.e., lost sales - The logistics customer service effect on sales
is difficult to determine
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27Modeling a Sales-Service Relationship
Remember Revenue in ROLA
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28Range of transition
Range of transition
Sales-Service Relationship
Sales
Threshold
Diminishing returns
Decline
0
0
Increasing logistics customer service level of a
supplier to the best of its competition
4-15
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29Sales-Service Relationship by the Two-Points
Method
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30Determining Optimum Service Levels
- Cost vs. service
- Theory
- Find the function of revenue f(SL)
- Find the function of service cost g(SL)
- Calculate the difference p(SL) f(SL) g(SL)
- Take the first-order differentiation of p(SL)
- Obtain the optimal service level SL
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31Generalized Cost-Revenue Tradeoffs
Revenue
Profit maximization
Costs or sales
Logistics costs
0
0
Improved logistics customer service
4-17
32Optimizing on Service Performance Variability
- Setting service variability according to Taguchi
- A loss function of the form
- L loss in
- k a constant to be determined
- y value of the service variable
- m the target value of the service variable
Service penalty only if outside this
range?Traditional
Cost penalty, L
Missing target causes increasing penalty ? Taguchi
y
Target Service variable, m
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33Optimizing on Service Performance Variability
(Contd)
- Setting the allowable deviation from the target
service level m is to optimize the sum of
penalty cost for not meeting the service target
and the cost of producing the service. - TC service penalty cost service delivery
cost - If the service delivery cost is of the general
form DC A ? B(y-m), then find the optimum
allowed deviation from the service target.
If m is set to 0, y is the optimal deviation
allowed from target
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34Service Variability Example
Example Pizzas are to be delivered in 30 minutes
(target.) Pizzas delivered more than 10 minutes
late incur a penalty of 3 off the pizza bill.
Delivery costs are estimated at 2, but decline
at the rate of 0.15 for each minute deviation
from target. How much variation should be
allowed in the delivery service?
Convert fixed penalty to Taguchi-style loss curve
3
Cost penalty,
40
30
Delivery service, min
No more than 2.5 minutes should be allowed from
the 30-minute delivery target to minimize cost.
35Setting Service Levels
- Service treated as a constraint on design
- Planning for service contingencies
Measuring Service Performance
- Percent of sales on backorder
- No. of stockouts
- Percent of on-time deliveries
- No. of inaccurate orders
- Order cycle time
- Fill rate-- of demand met, of orders filled
complete, etc.
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36Service Contingencies
System Breakdown Actions
- Insure the risk
- Plan for alternate supply sources
- Arrange alternate transportation
- Shift demand
- Build quick response to demand shifts
- Set inventories for disruptions
- Product Recall Actions
- Establish a task force committee
- Trace the product
- Design a reverse logistics channel
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