Title: Global Manufacturing and Supply Chain Management
1Global Manufacturing and Supply Chain Management
- International Business (MB 40)
2Outline
- Dimensions of Global Manufacturing
- Elements of Global Supply Chain Management
- Role of Information Systems
- Issues of Quality and Global Supply Chain
- Inventory Management and Global Supply Chain
- Transportation Networks
3Why Manufacture Globally?
- Cost
- Access to raw-material
- New Markets
- Multi-Point Communication
- Overall goal, improvement in cash flows of the
parent firm to maximize shareholder wealth
4Global Manufacturing Strategies
- Manufacturing
- Setting up a subsidiary versus Virtual
Manufacturing - Depends on manufacturing compatibility
- What is manufacturing compatibility?
- Compatibility depends on
- Efficiency
- Dependability
- Quality
- Flexibility
- Innovation
5Global Manufacturing Strategies
- Manufacturing Configuration
- Should manufacturing be centralized in one
country or should we have manufacturing
facilities in specific zones to service those
zones or should we go multidomestic with a
facility in each country - When should we have a centralized location?
- When should we go for multidomestic location?
- Coordination and Control
- Linking or integrating activities into a unified
system is called COORDINATION - Defining organizational structure and reporting
systems to ensure timely implementation of
policies is termed as CONTROL
6Global Manufacturing Strategies
- Plant Location Strategies
- Transportation costs, duties, proximity to
customers and suppliers, foreign exchange rate
risk, economies of scale in the production
process, government incentives, climate,
technological requirements of the manufacturing
process. - Plant Layout Planning Strategies
- physical arrangement of economic activity centers
within a manufacturing facility - Every manufacturing facility cannot have the same
type layoutlocal conditions such as cost of
labor, cost of land, local culture must be
considered in deciding about the plant layout
7Global Supply Chain Management
- Meaning of Supply Chain Management
- Describes managers effort to oversee the flows
of raw materials, components, information, and
finance through their network of suppliers,
assemblers, and distributors, and customers
located around the world. - Elements of Supply Chain Management
- Supply Chain Management and Enterprise Resource
Planning (ERP) - E-Commerce
- Internet, intranet, and extranet
8Role of Information Systems and Technology
- Key to successful global supply chain management
9Supply Chain Management
- LINKAGE OF ACTIVITIES
- BUYING
- MAKING
- MOVING
- INTEGRATES
- SUPPLIER
- DISTRIBUTOR
- LOGISTICS REQUIREMENTS
10MAJOR ENTITIES
Capacity, inventory levels, delivery schedule,
payment terms
Supplier
Manufacturer
Distributor
Retail Outlets
Customer
Orders, return requests, repair and service
requests, payments
11What Does Supply Chain Involve?
- NETWORK OF FACILITIES
- MATERIALS
- RAW MATERIALS PRODUCTS
- FINISHED PRODUCTS
- LINKS
- PROCUREMENT
- LOGISTICS
- ELIMINATE
- REDUNDANCY
- DELAYS
- RESOURCES
12What Does Supply Chain Involve?
- RIGHT AMOUNT OF PRODUCT
- SOURCE
- CONSUMPTION POINT
- LEAST
- TIME
- COST
13ROLE OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS
- coordinate, schedule, and control
- procurement,
- production,
- inventory management, and
- delivery of products and services
14ROLE OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS
- Integrate
- demand planning,
- production forecasting,
- materials requisition,
- order processing,
- inventory allocation,
- order fulfillment,
-
15ROLE OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS
- transportation services,
- receiving, invoicing, and payment.
16Supply chain management systems
- Intranets
- Extranets
- Supply chain management software
17 EXAMPLE
Sales Representative (Brussels)
Factory (Hong Kong)
Customer Order
Production
online
replenishes
Warehouse
Customer Service Representative
Enterprise System
Track
Shipment Date Stock of Parts
Corporate Headquarter (London)
Accounting
Payroll
Available Cash
Cost Centers
Balance Sheets
Accounts Receivables/ Payables
18Quality and Supply Chain
- Meaning of Quality
- Meeting or exceeding the expectations of a
customer - Total Quality Management (TQM) versus Acceptable
Quality Level (AQL) - Zero defects and TQM
19Challenges in Supply Chain Management
- Operational Threats
- Different languages
- Differences in Currencies
- Differences in Measurement Systems (metric versus
decimal) - Strategic Challenges
- National Cultures
- Technological capabilities
- Tax Policies
- National Culture
- Western culture typically foster adversarial
positions in which buyers and sellers share as
little information as possible. - Toyota requires a broad understanding of a
potential suppliers manufacturing capabilities
and financial position
20Supplier Networks
- Meaning of outsourcing
- The process of a firm having inputs supplied to
it from outside suppliers for the production
process. - Domestic outsourcing versus global outsourcing
- Why go for domestic sourcing?
- Why go for global sourcing?
- Why pursue global outsourcing?
- Reduce costs
- improve quality
- exposure to global technology
- improve delivery of supplies
- access to materials non-available otherwise
- establish presence in a foreign market
- to compete in the global market
21Outsourcing Configurations
- Vertical Integration
- Arms-length purchases from outside suppliers
- Japanese keiretsu relationships with suppliers
22Make or buy Decisions
23Supplier Relations
- How much should be the degree of involvement with
your suppliers?
24Inventory Management
- Outsourcing from around the world and its impact
on inventory management - issues of distance, time, and uncertainty in
foreign environment - Just-In-Time Systems