Title: Supply Chain Best Practices
1Supply Chain Best Practices
- Issues that are driving and
- will drive companies
by Tom Craig tomc_at_ltdmgmt.com
2 Best Practice Topics
- Metrics
- Inventory velocity
- Cycle time compression
- Lean logistics
- Technology
- Supplier performance
- Segmenting supply chains
3Set the Stage
4SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT--FOUNDATION--
- Applies regardless
- of industry
- Make to Stock and Make to Order
- Runs from suppliers doors through to your
customers doors or your stores - Process
- Internal
- External
53 Supply Chains Flows
- Product
- Information
- Finance
6Supply Chains
- Flow is important for supply chains
- Is not ONE supply chain
- Are series of supply chains supply chains
within supply chains
7Big Guys and SCM
- Link supply chain to corporate strategy
- Optimize inventory and service with Best
Practices (these tie together)-- - inventory velocity
- cycle time compression
- lean logistics
- supplier performance
- splinter supply chains
8Complex and extended real supply chain
Are chains within chains
9Additional supply chain challenges
10Supply Chain as Competitive Differentiator
Lower performing companies are 3 times more
likely to view their supply chains as cost
centers.
Cost center necessary to conduct business 25
Market strategy competitive differentiator 27
Customer service competitive differentiator 30
Cost savings opportunity area to help fund RD or
business expansion 18
11The Opportunity for the Best
Laggards
Industry Average
Best in Class
Organization
Best in Class organizations have clear
competitive advantages over Industry Average
Laggards.
Knowledge
Technology
Performance Metrics
12Benefits of Best
- Revenue Lift
- Customer service enhancements
- Product quality improvements
- Increased quality availability
Revenue Enhancement
Profit Enhancement
- Reduced Supply Chain Costs by 10 to 15
- Operational efficiencies
- Process enhancements
- Procurement savings
Operating Cost Reduction
Shareholder Value Enhancement
- Reduced Working Capital Requirements by 20 to 30
- Inventory reductions
- Reduced cycle times
Working Capital Reduction
Invested Capital Reduction
- Reduced Supply Chain-Related Capital
- Capital asset transfer
- Enhanced asset utilization
- Capital procurement savings
Fixed Capital Reduction
13Walmart
- Private labels
- Buying direct
- Expanding leveraging
- More control of supply chain (going upstream)
14Walmart
- Take control of deliveries from suppliers (with
its fleet--price cuts greater than what freight
costs suppliersand possible warehouse
inefficiencies for suppliers) - Consolidating its purchasing with suppliers
(Pepsi and potatoes) - Orders 1Bil in supply chain savings (produce)
15Retailers
- Will Walmart expand their efforts to other
products/categories? - Will other retailers copy the programs?
- Taking total control of its total supply chain
(de facto vertical integrationthrowback to
Standard Oil and US Steel?) (does it change role
for suppliers?)
16You
- Do you have a supply chain strategy (or do you
just react?) - Is it tiered by market segment and/or customers
(or is it one size fits all?) - How much do you spend annually on SCMinventory,
sourcing, transport, warehousing, people,
technology, etc?
17Your Supply Chain
- Do you know how well it performs?
- Do you measure? (Or is it by complaints or
chargebacks?) - How much do you expedite/fight fires?
- What metrics do you use to measure?
- Do you look at it as a process or in functional
terms or tasks freight, warehousing?
18LSPs
- Do you initiate best SCM practices?
- How do you develop/lead best practices?
- Way to create value proposition
- Higher margins
- Greater customer retention
- Separate from other commodity service providers
- Way to gain share
19Best PracticeMetrics
20Metrics
- Metrics for sake of metrics
- Good vs bad from my article
21Are They Really Metrics?
- Financial measuresused as performance metrics
- Internal SCM KPIs
- Warehousingorders picked
- Freight costs
- Etc.
22QuestionWhich Are You
- Are you focused on freight and other logistics
costs? (misdirection) - --or--
- Are you focused on your supply chain and how well
it performs?
23Key Metrics
- Customer orders DELIVERED complete, accurate, on
time (customer service / chargebacks) - Purchase orders DELIVERED complete, accurate, on
time (critical to your SCM success) - Inventory turns
24Metrics--More
- Measures that are strategic and complement
company direction - Time it takes from sales order through to
payment is received from customer - SCM has a key role in that PROCESS whether
existing product, new product development, etc. - Inventory turns or the corollary of how long
inventory is in the supply chain
25Best PracticeInventory Velocity
26Ask
- Are you inventory rich and cash poor?
- How often does your inventory turn (Raw, WIP,
Finished Goods)? Why does it not turn faster? - How long does it take from when you know you need
to reorder until the material is received? Why
does it take so long?
27Inventory
- Raw, WIP, finished goods
- Buffer against uncertainty
- Inventory rich and cash poor
- More uncertainty (time) means more inventory
- Turns represent time company goes unpaid
- More warehouses means more inventory with safety
stock (square root of the number of warehouses) - Too muchmore than capital tied up and the
opportunity cost becomes part of the company
portfolio
28Inventory
- Out of stock of needed productscustomer service
problems - Too much of products that sell slowly or almost
not at all - Impact of long lead times on levels?
- Inventory rich and cash poor?
29Inventory Turns
- Is both a problem and a symptom
- Reflects how fast company is paid (like a salary)
- Aggregate turns and Breakdown
- A B C and .
- product category
- market segment
- revenue and profit contributions
- domestic vs imports
30Inventory/Time Measures
- Days in inventory Cost of Goods Sold / 365 Days
- Can understate total inventory in the supply
chain excludes inventory that is on order and
inventory in transit - Manufacturers and wholesalersover 60 days of
inventory - Retailersover 90 days of inventory
- Factor in what is excluded makes it 25 more
31Increase Inventory Velocity
- Multi-step program
- Align with business strategy
- Key metric--Perfect Order--orders delivered
complete, accurate and on-time - Purpose/Direction
- Manage and reduce total supply chain costs
- Increase inventory velocity
- Compress cycle time
- Need for Lean success
- Provides structure, platform and integration for
new processes internally and externally with
suppliers
32Inventory Velocity
- How fast inventory moves through the supply chain
- Is more than turns
- Shows as days of inventory on hand
- Flaw because it excludes product on order and/or
in transit
33Inventory Velocity
- Recognizes emphasis is beginning of supply chain
with suppliers - Transit time is one factor
- Avoid stopping inventory (lean)
- Supplier performance is key
34Inventory Yield
- Time is very important
- Issues with demand planning and time
- Internal battles can create discord to create
inventory yield maximization and minimize supply
chain costs, inventory and time--Procurement
looks at low product price and Transport looks at
low freight price
35Inventory Yield Maximization
- Yield Maximizationused to sell airline seats and
hotel rooms - Is a right time to sell
- View inventory is same way
- Too little inventorylost sales
- Too much inventorymark down and fire sales
- Inventory can go stale
36Best PracticeCycle Time Compression
37Cycle Time
- Time to convert a sales / replenishment /
purchase order into finished product that is at
the customer or at the store - Ties to scope of supply chain
- Remember effect of time on inventory
- Cycle time often exceed demand planning
credibility and capability - Supplier performance is key
38Cycle Time Compression
- Recognize need for product till sales paid by
customer - Subsetssuch as time from recognize need (before
PO is issued) until product delivered to you - In Lean, time is waste
39Best PracticeLean Logistics
40Lean SCM
- Similarity with Lean principles
- Pull vs push
- Inventory reduction (reduce waste)
- Cycle time compression (reduce waste)
41Lean Logistics
- Extending it beyond domestic and factory walls
(end to end) - Waste
- Unnecessary, additional time
- Unnecessary, additional inventory
- Stopping or waiting on the flow of inventory and
information (add no value to final product or - value for customer)
42Lean
- Assess entire supply chain as to where time is
spent and why - Look especially at internal
- Smaller orders/more frequency from suppliers
- Do not store--cross dock at port or DC
435Rs (Rights) of Lean SCM
- Right Product
- Right Quantity
- Right Condition
- Right Place
- Right Time
- Anything that does not contribute to the 5Rs is
waste
44Examples of SCM Waste
- Over supply--Supplying product at a faster rate
than customer requires, having it ahead of
demand. Bringing in large quantities of product
without matching demand creates excess inventory
and can cause write-down and fire sales to draw
down inventoriesand revenues and profits. - Transportation. Unnecessary or slow movement of
product adds no value (for lower freight cost).
This can include movement of inventory between
company facilities.
45SCM Waste
- Movement. Any unnecessary movement of product or
people during their work is to be avoided. This
may be seen in warehouses or in special
operations such as kitting. - Defective Service or Product. Poor quality,
rework, or scrap because it does not meet the
customer requirements adds no value. - Over processing. This is doing more than is
necessary.
46SCM Waste
- Inventory. Firms have more finished product, raw
materials, or work in process than the absolute
minimum. This includes inventory in transit,
regardless of whether it is treated as inventory
when it is delivered or not it is still
inventory regardless of such transaction nuances. - Waiting. Delays in previous supply chain steps
cause unnecessary waiting of people or equipment.
Inventory at warehouses reflect waiting.
47Becoming Lean
- Realize cause-effect impacts. Distinguish problem
from symptom of a problem - High freight cost can be a problem or a symptom.
- Inventory can be a problem or symptom of a
problem - Ask customers about how well your supply chain
operates - Comprehend the complexity of supply chains with
multiple suppliers in multiple countries,
distribution centers and customers - Assess timeespecially internalfor waste
48Best PracticeTechnology
49Technology--IS
50Process Enabler
- Manage the buy even
- Important tool to deliver complete, accurate , on
time
51Technology
- Supply chain execution tool for
- integration
- end-to-end global visibility
- dealing with complexity
- issue PO and changes to PO
- exception management
52Supply Chain Technology
- Much more than online track and trace
- Not about the containerabout whats in the
container - Its about the PO
53Best PracticeSupplier Performance
54Supplier Performance
- SCM success starts here
- Key to
- reduced cycle time
- increased inventory velocity
- improved inventory turns
- removing waste
- better demand planning
55Importance
- Supplier performance is critical to
- SCM success
- Inventory velocity and turns improvement
- Cycle time compression
- Lean SCM
- Costs, such as expedited freight
- And more
56KRALJIC MODEL
57Supplier Performance
- Start with Procurement Strategy
- Its about price and MUCH MORE
- Include
- Supplier rationalization
- Supplier collaboration
- Supplier development
- Spend management and compliance
58Best PracticeSegment Supply Chains
59One Size Does Not Fit All
- Is not one approach to SCM for all industries and
all businesses - Should be multiple approaches used by a company
- For A vs B vs C items
- For Tier 1 vs Tier 2 vs Tier 3 customers
60Different Approaches
- Segment use of speed--transport modes
- Where/how inventory is positioned
- Segment integrationinternal and external
- Cannot be everything to everybody
61Develop multiple supply chains
- Move away from monolithic supply chain approach
- Splinter/multiple supply chain approaches
- reduce static/noise with better focus
- increased flexibility and responsiveness
- enables better demand planning
62Types of SCM Splintering
- Master/prioritize/differentiate by--
- product demand, volatility, velocity
- where made or sourced
- when sold in quarter or year
- market segments
63 Nothing will come of nothing King Lear Act 1,
Scene 1
- Doing the same thing over and over and expecting
the same results. - Einsteins definition of insanity