Title: Production and Operations Management: Manufacturing and Services
1Chapter 10
Supply Chain Strategy
210-2
OBJECTIVES
- Supply-Chain Management
- Measuring Supply-Chain Performance
- Supply Chain Decisions
- Cycle and Push-Pull View of Supply Chains
- Bullwhip Effect
- Outsourcing
- Value Density
- Mass Customization
3What is a Supply Chain?
10-3
- Supply-chain is a term that describes how
organizations (suppliers, manufacturers,
distributors, and customers) are linked together
4What is Supply Chain Management?
10-4
- Supply-chain management is a total system
approach to managing the entire flow of
information, materials, and services from
raw-material suppliers through factories and
warehouses to the end customer
5What is a Supply Chain?
Customer wants detergent and goes to Jewel
Jewel Supermarket
Jewel or third party DC
PG or other manufacturer
6What is a Supply Chain?
Customer wants detergent and goes to Jewel
Jewel Supermarket
Jewel or third party DC
PG or other manufacturer
Plastic Producer
Tenneco Packaging
Chemical manufacturer (e.g. Oil Company)
7What is a Supply Chain?
Customer wants detergent and goes to Jewel
Jewel Supermarket
Jewel or third party DC
PG or other manufacturer
Plastic Producer
Tenneco Packaging
Chemical manufacturer (e.g. Oil Company)
Chemical manufacturer (e.g. Oil Company)
Paper Manufacturer
Timber Industry
8Formulas for Measuring Supply-Chain Performance
10-8
- One of the most commonly used measures in all of
operations management is Inventory Turnover - In situations where distribution inventory is
dominant, Weeks of Supply is preferred and
measures how many weeks worth of inventory is in
the system at a particular time
9Example of Measuring Supply-Chain Performance
10-9
- Suppose a companys new annual report claims
their costs of goods sold for the year is 160
million and their total average inventory
(production materials work-in-process) is worth
35 million. This company normally has an
inventory turn ratio of 10. What is this years
Inventory Turnover ratio? What does it mean?
10Example of Measuring Supply-Chain Performance
(Continued)
10-10
- 160/35
- 4.57
- Since the companys normal inventory turnover
ration is 10, a drop to 4.57 means that the
inventory is not turning over as quickly as it
had in the past. Without knowing the industry
average of turns for this company it is not
possible to comment on how they are competitively
doing in the industry, but they now have more
inventory relative to their cost of goods sold
than before.
11Decision Phases of a Supply Chain
- Supply chain strategy or design
- Supply chain planning
- Supply chain operation
12Supply Chain Strategy or Design
- Decisions about the structure of the supply chain
and what processes each stage will perform - What are some strategic supply chain decisions?
- Locations and capacities of facilities
- Products to be made or stored at various
locations - Modes of transportation
- Information systems
- Chain design must support strategic objectives
- Design decisions are long-term and expensive to
reverse must address market uncertainty
13Supply Chain Planning
- Definition of a set of policies that govern
short-term operations - Fixed by the supply configuration from previous
phase - Starts with a forecast of demand in the coming
year
14Supply Chain Planning
- What are some planning decisions?
- Which markets will be supplied from which
locations - Planned buildup of inventories
- Subcontracting, backup locations
- Inventory policies
- Timing and size of market promotions
- Must consider in planning decisions demand
uncertainty, exchange rates, competition over the
time horizon
15Supply Chain Operation
- Time horizon is weekly or daily
- Decisions regarding individual customer orders
- Supply chain configuration is fixed and operating
policies are determined - Goal is to implement the operating policies as
effectively as possible some examples? - Allocate orders to inventory or production, set
order due dates, generate pick lists at a
warehouse, allocate an order to a particular
shipment, set delivery schedules, place
replenishment orders - Much less uncertainty (short time horizon)
16Process View of a Supply Chain
- Cycle view processes in a supply chain are
divided into a series of cycles, each performed
at the interfaces between two successive supply
chain stages - Push/pull view processes in a supply chain are
divided into two categories - Executed in response to a customer order (pull)
- Executed in anticipation of a customer order
(push)
17Cycle View of Supply Chains
Customer
Customer Order Cycle
Retailer
Replenishment Cycle
Distributor
Manufacturing Cycle
Manufacturer
Procurement Cycle
Supplier
18Cycle View of a Supply Chain
- Each cycle occurs at the interface between two
successive stages - Customer order cycle (customer-retailer)
- Replenishment cycle (retailer-distributor)
- Manufacturing cycle (distributor-manufacturer)
- Procurement cycle (manufacturer-supplier)
- Cycle view clearly defines processes involved and
the owners of each process. Specifies the roles
and responsibilities of each member and the
desired outcome of each process.
19Customer Order Cycle
- Involves all processes directly involved in
receiving and filling the customers order - Customer arrival
- Customer order entry
- Customer order fulfillment
- Customer order receiving
20Replenishment Cycle
- All processes involved in replenishing retailer
inventories (retailer is now the customer) - Retail order trigger
- Retail order entry
- Retail order fulfillment
- Retail order receiving
21Manufacturing Cycle
- All processes involved in replenishing
distributor (or retailer) inventory - Order arrival from the distributor, retailer, or
customer - Production scheduling
- Manufacturing and shipping
- Receiving at the distributor, retailer, or
customer
22Procurement Cycle
- All processes necessary to ensure that materials
are available for manufacturing to occur
according to schedule - Manufacturer orders components from suppliers to
replenish component inventories - However, component orders can be determined
precisely from production schedules (different
from retailer/distributor orders that are based
on uncertain customer demand) - Important that suppliers be linked to the
manufacturers production schedule
23Push/Pull View of Supply Chains
Procurement,
Customer Order
Manufacturing and
Cycle
Replenishment cycles
PUSH PROCESSES
PULL PROCESSES
Customer
Order Arrives
24Push/Pull View of Supply Chain Processes
- Supply chain processes fall into one of two
categories depending on the timing of their
execution relative to customer demand - Pull execution is initiated in response to a
customer order (reactive) - Push execution is initiated in anticipation of
customer orders (speculative) - Push/pull boundary separates push processes from
pull processes - Strategic supply chain decisions may lead to
changing the push/pull boundary
25Example L.L. Bean
- Where is the push/pull boundary for L.L. Bean?
- Customer order cycle is pull, remaining processes
are push - What are the implications of moving the boundary
to the replenishment cycle?
26Example Dell
- Where is the push/pull boundary for Dell?
- Customer and manufacturing is a pull cycle
- Procurement is a push cycle
- What are the implications of moving the boundary
to the customer cycle?
27L.L. Bean vs. Dell Computer
- How would you compare the two cycles?
- Dell has fewer stages (customer, manufacturer,
supplier) and more pull processes than L.L. Bean - Can these differences affect supply chain
performance? - For Dell, no FG inventory, very low component
inventory, supplier integration (demand info,
part quality), faster new product introduction,
outsources service/support (better coord.), close
tracking of cash flows
28Example Snapple Acquisition
- Quaker owns Gatorade and acquired Snapple in 1994
and tried to synergize the two distribution
systems - Snapple produced under contract, sold through
restaurants, strong in northeast and west coast - Gatorade manufactured by Quakers plants, sold in
supermarkets and grocery stores, strong in south
and southwest - Efforts to merge supply chains failed, and in 28
months Quaker sold Snapple for 20 less than
purchase price
29The Importance of Supply Chain Flows
- Close connection between design and management of
supply chain flows (product, information, and
cash) and supply chain success - Dell success
- Quaker Oats (Snapple) failure
- Supply chain decisions can play a significant
role in the success or failure of a firm
30Bullwhip Effect
10-30
The magnification of variability in orders in the
supply-chain
Retailers Orders
Wholesalers Orders
Manufacturers Orders
Order Quantity
Order Quantity
Order Quantity
Time
Time
Time
A lot of retailers each with little variability
in their orders.
can lead to greater variability for a fewer
number of wholesalers, and
can lead to even greater variability for a
single manufacturer.
31Hau Lees Concepts of Supply Chain Management
10-31
- Hau Lees approach to supply chain (SC) is one of
aligning SCs with the uncertainties revolving
around the supply process side of the SC - A stable supply process has mature technologies
and an evolving supply process has rapidly
changing technologies - Types of SCs
- Efficient SCs
- Risk-Hedging SCs
- Responsive SCs
- Agile SCs
32Hau Lees SC Uncertainty Framework
10-32
Efficient SC Ex. Grocery
Responsive SC Ex. Computers
Risk-Hedging SC Ex. Hydro-electric power
Agile SC Ex. Telecom
33Types of Supply Chain Strategies
- Efficient highest cost efficiency
- Risk-hedging pool and share resources so that
risks in supply disruption can be shared - Responsive be responsive and flexible to
customer needs - Agile be responsive and flexible to customers,
hedge risks of supply shortages
34What is Outsourcing?
10-34
- Outsourcing is defined as the act of moving a
firms internal activities and decision
responsibility to outside providers
35Reasons to Outsource
10-35
- Organizationally-driven
- Improvement-driven
- Financially-driven
- Revenue-driven
- Cost-driven
- Employee-driven
36(No Transcript)
37Value Density
10-37
- Value density is defined as the value of an item
per pound of weight - It is used as an important measure when deciding
where items should be stocked geographically and
how they should be shipped
38Sourcing/Purchasing-SystemDesign Matrix
10-38
39Mass Customization
10-39
- Mass customization is a term used to describe the
ability of a company to deliver highly customized
products and services to different customers - The key to mass customization is effectively
postponing the tasks of differentiating a product
for a specific customer until the latest possible
point in the supply-chain network
40Mass Customization
- Mass customization is a term used to describe the
ability of a company to deliver highly customized
products and services to different customers - The key to mass customization is effectively
postponing the tasks of differentiating a product
for a specific customer until the latest possible
point in the supply-chain network - Example H-P customizing DeskJet printers with
the power supply needed in various European
countries once printers arrive at its
distribution center in Germany
41Question Bowl
10-41
- A typical supply chain would include which of the
following? - Suppliers
- Manufacturers
- Distribution
- All of the above
- None of the above
Answer d. All of the above
42Question Bowl
10-42
- The supply chain measure of Inventory
Turnover is which of the following ratios? - Avg. inventory value/total costs
- Costs of goods sold/Avg. aggregate inventory
value - Total costs of goods/Avg. costs of goods
- Weeks worth of inventory/No. of weeks
- None of the above
Answer b. Costs of goods sold/Avg. aggregate
inventory value
43Question Bowl
10-43
- If the cost of goods sold for a company is
1,000,000 and the average aggregate inventory
value is 25,000, which of the following is the
inventory turnover? - 10
- 25
- 40
- 50
- None of the above
Answer c. 40 (1,000,000/25,00040)
44Question Bowl
10-44
- If the cost of goods sold for a company is
250,000 and the average aggregate inventory
value is 5,000, which of the following is the
inventory turnover? - 10
- 25
- 40
- 50
- None of the above
Answer d. 50 (250,000/5,00050)
45Question Bowl
10-45
- If the cost of goods sold for a company is
1,000,000 and the average aggregate inventory
value is 50,000, which of the following is the
weeks of supply measure for supply chain
performance? - 1 week
- 2.6 weeks
- 20 weeks
- 30 weeks
- None of the above
Answer b. 2.6 (50,000/1,000,000)x522.6)
46Question Bowl
10-46
- Which of the following refers to the phenomenon
of increasing variability as we move from the
customer to the producer in the supply chain? - Continuous replenishing
- Stable supply process
- Evolving supply process
- Agile supply chains
- None of the above
Answer e. None of the above (The correct term is
Bullwhip effect.)
47Question Bowl
10-47
- Which of the following are reasons why an
organization should use outsourcing as a supply
chain strategy? - Reduces investment in assets
- Turns fixed costs into variable costs
- Gives employees a stronger career
- All of the above
- None of the above
Answer d. All of the above
48Question Bowl
10-48
- Which of the following transportation modes
provides flexibility in delivery, timing and at
reasonable rates for small quantities and over
short distances? - Rail
- Highway (trucking)
- Water
- Pipeline
- Air
Answer b. Highway (trucking)
4910-49
End of Chapter 10