Title: Which EBusiness is Right for Your Supply Chain
1Which E-Business is Right for Your Supply Chain?
2What is E-Business?
- Business transacted over the Internet
- Is product information displayed on the Internet?
- Is negotiation over the Internet?
- Is the order placed over the Internet?
- Is the order tracked over the Internet?
- Is the order fulfilled over the Internet?
- Is payment transacted over the Internet?
3Potential Revenue Opportunities from E-Business
- Direct sales to customers
- 24 hour access for order placement
- Information aggregation
- Personalization and Customization of Information
- Flexibility on pricing and promotion
- Faster time to market
- Efficient funds transfer
4Potential Revenue Disadvantages from E-Business
- Longer time to satisfy except for downloadable
products - Payment security
- Feeling
- Mindset
5Potential Cost Opportunities from E-Business
- Direct customer contact for manufacturers
- Coordination in the supply chain
- Customer participation
- Postpone product differentiation to after order
is placed - Downloadable product decrease delivery time and
cost - Reduce facility costs
- Geographical centralization and resulting
reduction in inventories (when most?)
6Potential Cost Disadvantages from E-Business
- Increased transportation cost
- Increased handling cost
- Large initial investment in information
infrastructure
7Impact of E-Business on Cost of Supply Chain
Drivers
- Impact of E-Business on Cost
- Decline
- Increase
- Decline
- Improve coordination and reduce costs through
information sharing - Large initial investment with lower processing
costs
- Supply Chain Driver
- Inventory
- Transportation
- Facility
- Information
8Basic Evaluation Framework
- How does going on line impact revenues?
- How does going on line impact costs?
- Facility (site personnel)
- Inventory
- Transportation
- Information
- How should the e-commerce channel position, e.g.,
for efficiency or responsiveness? - Who in the supply chain can extract most value?
- Is the value to existing players or entrants?
9The Computer Industry Dell on-line
Customer Order and Manufacturing Cycle
Procurement Cycle
Customer Order and Manufacturing Cycle
Procurement Cycle
Push Processes
Pull Processes
Dell Supply Chain Cycle
Customer Order Arrives
10Potential Opportunities Exploited by Dell
- Revenue opportunities
- 24 hour access for order placement
- Direct sales
- Providing customization and large selection
information - Flexibility on pricing and promotion
- Faster time to market
- Efficient funds transfer
- Revenue negatives
- Longer response time than store and no help with
selection
11Potential Opportunities Exploited by Dell
- Cost opportunities
- Direct sales eliminating intermediary
- Customer participation Call center catalog
costs - Information sharing in supply chain
- Reduce facility costs
- Geographical Centralization and reduced
inventories - Postpone product differentiation to after order
is placed using product platforms and common
components - Cost Increases
- Outbound transportation costs increase
12Impact of E-Business on Dell Performance
- Impact
- Increase
- Decrease
- Decrease
- Increase
- Factor
- Revenue
- Inventory costs
- Facility costs
- Transportation costs
- Primary Causes
- Direct Sales to customer
- Flexible pricing
- Large variety and customization
- Faster new production introduction
- Fast delivery of customer order
- Aggregation using postponement and component
commonality - Geographical aggregation
- Information sharing
- No retail outlets
- Customer participation in order placement
- Higher outbound transportation cost
13Opportunities
- Significant, but must be combined with component
commonality, and build to order. Must move
product customization to pull phase of supply
chain and hold inventories as common components
during the push phase - Opportunity most significant for new, hard to
forecast products - Complements strength of existing retail channels
14Retailing Amazon.com
Customer
Customer
Pull
Pull
Amazon
Retail Store
Distributor
Warehouse (?)
Publisher
Publisher
Amazon Supply Chain
Bookstore Supply Chain
15Potential Opportunities Exploited by Amazon
- Revenue opportunities
- 24 hour access for order placement
- Providing large selection and other information
- Attract customers who do not want to go to store
- Flexibility on pricing
- Efficient funds transfer
- Revenue negatives
- Intermediary (distributor) reduces margin
- Longer response time than bookstore
- Downward pressure on book prices
16Potential Opportunities Exploited by Amazon
- Cost opportunities
- Reduce facility costs
- Geographical centralization and reduced
inventories Most effective for low volume, hard
to forecast books, least effective for high
volume best sellers - Cost increases
- Outbound transportation costs increase
- Handling cost increase
17Impact of E-Business on Amazon.com Performance
- Impact
- Increase
- Decrease
- Decrease
- Decrease
- Increase
- Increase
- Primary Causes
- Convenience
- Large variety of books
- Customer specific recommendations
- Distributor margins
- Downward price pressure
- Inability to browse
- Geographical aggregation (major benefit is for
low-volume books) - No retail outlets, only warehouses
- No cashiers required
- Each customer order is picked and packed
- Higher outbound transportation costs
- Factor
- Revenue
- Inventory cost
- Facility costs
- Transportation cost
18Opportunities
- Going on-line, by itself, offers lower cost
advantages (may be some disadvantages) than in
Dell model given current form of books - Cost and availability advantages are more
significant for low volume books - On-line channel has significant cost benefit if
books are downloadable
19How should bookstore chains react?
- An on line channel allows it to match Amazons
revenue advantages - Use a hybrid approach in stocking and pricing
- High volume books for local storage
- Low volume books for browsing and purchase on
line - Pricing varies by delivery and pick up option
20Grocery on-line
Customer
Customer
Supermarket
On-line Grocery
Warehouse (?)
Manufacturer
Manufacturer
On-line Supply Chain
Supermarket Supply Chain
21Potential Opportunities for on line grocer
- Revenue opportunities
- Attract customers who do not want to go to
supermarket - Out of town customers for specialty items
- Menus and other value added
- Cost opportunities
- Reduced facility costs (sites as well as checkout
clerks) - Inventory savings from centralization (primarily
for slow moving, specialty items)
22Added Costs for Online Grocer
- Additional outbound transportation cost Have to
cover the last mile to the customer - Additional picking and packing costs
23Impact of E-Business on Peapod Performance
- Impact
- Increase
- Marginal
- decrease
- Decrease
- Increase
- Large
- increase
- Primary Causes
- Convenience (benefit larger in urban areas and
for specialty foods) - Customization and personalization
- Sale and use of customer information
- Geographical aggregation (primarily for
low-volume items) - No retail outlets, only warehouses
- No checkout clerks needed
- Each customer order is picked
- Outbound transportation cost increases
- Factor
- Revenue
- Inventory cost
- Facility costs
- Transportation cost
24Opportunities
- Negligible opportunity to compete on cost, except
maybe for specialized low volume items - Competition has to be on convenience or some
other form of value added - To lower delivery cost disadvantage, must be more
than on-line grocery - Greatest opportunity may be for supermarket
chains to expand value offering
25B2B W.W. Grainger
- Revenue opportunities
- 24 hour access for order placement
- Large selection information with simple search
- Display of substitutable products
- Flexibility on pricing and promotion
- Ability to alert customer of order status
- Faster time to market
26B2B W.W. Grainger
- Cost opportunities
- Reduced order taking costs
- Reduced order placement costs for customers
- Reduced error because of multiple data entry
- Reduced catalog costs
27Impact of E-Business on Grainger Performance
- Impact
- Increase
- Decrease
- Decrease
- Unchanged
- Unchanged
- Primary Causes
- Larger product selection
- Some drop in prices
- Intermediary margin in on-line marketplaces
- Save on call center costs at Grainger
- Potential branch closings
- Save on administrative costs at customer
- Degree of aggregation similar to fulfillment of
phone orders - Marginal decrease if branches close
- Network similar to fulfillment of phone order
- Some increase if more shipments by package
carriers
- Factor
- Revenue
- Facility costs
- Inventory cost
- Transportation cost
28Key Messages
- Some supply chains are better suited to exploit
the cost benefits of going on-line - Ability to increase processes in pull phase
- Ability to delay product differentiation
- Big inventory benefit from geographical
centralization - Significant facility cost reduction on
centralization - Transport to customer is a small fraction of
product cost - All are achieved if product is downloadable