Title: European CPFR Insights
1European CPFR Insights
- 23th April 2002, Barcelona
2Introduction
3Agenda
- ECR Europe CPFR Project
- Pilot Experience
- Status of CPFR in Europe
- Lessons learned
- Outlook
4What is Collaborative Planning, Forecasting and
Replenishment?
- Initiative to improve supply chain efficiency
through - Information exchange on planning, forecasting and
replenishment data - Development of a single forecast
- Collaborative exception management
5How CPFR contributes to Optimal Shelve
Availability
Value
- More accurate and reliable forecasts shared by
the trading partners - Joint forecast is the basis for replenishment
- Demand forecasting at Point-of-Sales
Consumer Loyalty
Optimal Shelf Availability
Other ECR Concepts
Shrinkage
CPFR
6Focus areas of the ECR Europe CPFR project
- Pilot insights
- Results of European pilot projects
- CPFR Knowledge transfer
- Spread CPFR in Europe
- European CPFR landscape
- Recommendations on scaling after pilot stage
7Take guidance to CPFR success
- CPFR Introduction
- CPFR Status in Europe
- European Focus Areas
- Implementation Guide
- Business Architecture
- CPFR in Action
2001 A Guide to CPFR Implementation
8Take guidance to CPFR success
2002 European CPFR Insights
9European CPFR Insights
- Current Status of CPFR in Europe
- Survey results
- Pilot Descriptions
- Detailed descriptions from seven European pilots
- CPFR beyond Pilot Stage
- What are the next steps?
- Future Outlook on CPFR
10ECR Europe CPFR pilots
11Agenda
- ECR Europe CPFR Project
- Pilot Experience
- Status of CPFR in Europe
- Lessons learned
- Outlook
12CPFR pilot speaker
Joan Ametller
Commercial/Logistics Director
13Piloting companies Retailer
- Spanish regional retailer headquartered in
Catalonia - Established in 1961
- Founded by Condal brothers
- Largest supermarket network in Catalonia
- Over 350 outlets in Spain
- 500 million turnover
- 2,900 employees
- Two brand names Condis and Distop
14CPFR pilot speaker
Enric Holzbacher
Vice-President Detergents Henkel Ibérica
15Piloting companies Manufacturer
- International chemical company headquartered in
Germany - 70 subsidiaries worldwide
- 45,000 employees and 13,100 million turnover
- 4 business sectors
- Laundry Home Care
- Cosmetics - Schwarzkopf
- Consumer Adhesives
- Henkel Technologies
16Thoughts on CPFR
- In Europe, nearly 35 of the total sales are
promotional products...
...In Spain, this figure rises to 50 !
17Thoughts on CPFR
- Point of Sale
- Out-of-Stocks on the shelves
- Retailer Distribution Centre
- High administrative costs
- Obsoletes, high inventories
- Manufacturer
- Forecast deviations, production changeovers
- Supplier
- Low visibility, costs of transportation
- ...but...how are we managing this complexity?
18Thoughts on CPFR
How can CPFR help?
What are the opportunities that CPFR has to
offer to the companies in this context?
19Piloting companies
Retailer
Supplier
Manufacturer
Downstream
Instream
Upstream
SUÑER
20CPFR pilot environment
- The pilot is located in Spain
- Laundry home care products
- Collaboration on all SKUs
- Focusing on promotional items
Downstream
- Packaging used for customised promotions
- Large packages
Upstream
21Pilot overview
Future
Pilot
Diagnosis
Roll-Out
Category Mgmt.
Downstream
Instream
Upstream
In-Store Operations
OOS
22Scope of the pilot
SUÑER
Upstream
Instream
Downstream
- Shared Requirement Planning
- Collaborative Demand Planning
- Event Plan
- CRP with RDCs
- Shared forecast
- OOS analysis
Process
- Collaboration on all SKUs
- Focus on Promotions
- Packaging
- Critical promotions
Products
23CPFR
- Collaborative
- Planning
- Forecasting
- Replenishment
24Planning - Activities
CPFR
- Joint evaluation of promotional impact
- Collaborative definition of Event Management
processes - Definition of the horizon of communication
Downstream
- Demand planning
- Internal definition of the promotional workflow
- New procedures between internal departments
Instream
- Joint definition of the data to share
- Integrate planning with critical suppliers
- Joint evaluation of potential benefits
Upstream
25Forecasting - Activities
CPFR
- Joint forecasting by email
- Customer services involvement
- Focus on promotional SKUs
Downstream
- Production based on the shared forecast
- Forecast at a weekly level for the promotions
Instream
- Shared forecast by Internet
- Joint definition of the reliable horizon of
visibility
Upstream
26Replenishment - Activities
CPFR
- CRP with two Distribution Centres
- Replenishment based on the joint forecast
- Increase information sharing
Downstream
- Lots ordering improvement
- Increase the visibility in transportation
planning - More adjustment of warehousing needs
Upstream
27CPFR success relies on the people
- Key account manager
- Customer Services
- Purchasing
- Logistics
- Sales
Downstream
Instream
Upstream
28Planning - Results
- Increased the communication and confirmation
horizon from 3 weeks to 7 weeks
- Reduction in the number ofmodifications in the
promotional planning of 40
Downstream
29Planning - Results
- Longer communication and confirmation horizon for
promotion planning
- Greater respect to service dates and management
dates for the promotional products
Downstream
- Significant reduction in the time spent on
promotion planning
- Administrative costs reduction
30Planning - Results
- Increased Production planning reliability
Instream
- Increased the horizon of visibility for the
suppliers
Upstream
2 days
7 days
31Forecasting - Results
- Shared Forecast Henkel Condis
- Significant improvement in the percentage of
formats with a deviation between the Forecast and
the actual salesless than 20
Downstream
32Forecasting - Results
- Increased internal forecast accuracy through the
involvement of customer service in the forecast
generation
- Forecast communication from Demand Planning to
Production
Instream
- Changeovers and inventory reductions due to
forecast exchange
33Forecasting - Results
- Optimised lots ordering through the improvement
of the forecast accuracy
Upstream
- Streamlined production cycles at suppliers
- Higher visibility of the supply chain
34Replenishment - Results
- Increased the service level from Henkel to Condis
Downstream
- Condis inventory reduction of
25
35Replenishment - Results
- Reduction in days of packaging stocks due to the
replenishment by shifts
- Cost savings of warehousing, handling and
transportation
Upstream
58.5
- Reduction of the number of incidences due to
replenishment
33
36CPFR - Results
- Out-of-Stock at POS analysis
- First analysis May/June 2001
- Second analysis February/March 2002
Downstream
Increase of sales due to OOS reduction
37Lessons learned
- Promotions and New Product Introductions are the
big gain - Higher visibility helps to improve forecast
reliability - CPFR requires internal and external collaboration
- Internal workflow redefinition precedes external
one - Higher forecast accuracy improves production
efficiency - Gaps in capabilities between the trading partners
are easily overcome.
38Pitfalls
- Involving other retailers and suppliers to
achieve critical mass requires specific CPFR
tools
The evaluation of upstream results through CPFR
is more difficult than downstream results
CPFR means important cultural changes towards
Collaboration
39Key success factors
- Commitment of business and technological
resources - Identifying opportunities together
- Clear definition of roles and responsibilities
- Sharing goals and measurement
- Good definition of the information flows
- Management by exception criteria
Willingness to Collaborate
40Agenda
- ECR Europe CPFR Project
- Pilot Experience
- Status of CPFR in Europe
- Lessons learned
- Outlook
4151 European companies piloting CPFR
Starting 8
- 36 pilot initiatives from eight European
countries
Completed 17
Ongoing 75
Source Accenture CPFR Survey
42Both demand and supply planning are being piloted
- All pilots collaborate on Sales and/or Order
Forecast
CPFR Steps
Business Planning
1 and 2
70
Sales Forecast
3 to 5
78
Order Forecast
6 to 8
64
Replenishment
9
70
Source Accenture CPFR Survey
43Surveyed pilots achieved respectable results
Smoothed 80 range considered
Source Accenture CPFR Survey
44CPFR business case partially verified
Scaling of CPFR required
Optimise Production
Reduce Capital Invested
Scaling of CPFR required
Inventory
Up to 28
18 - 44 decreasein obsoletes 1)
Wastage
Decrease Costs
Benefits
Up to 58 reduction in unplanned overtime
Overtime
Not verifiedin Pilot stage
Up to 33 reductionin Rush Orders
Transportation Cost
Promising resultsachieved
Better Availability
Between 2 - 9
Significant benefits realised
Increase Revenue
Consumer Satisfaction
1) Forrester Research CPG Online CPFR Pays,
2001
45Agenda
- ECR Europe CPFR Project
- Pilot Experience
- Status of CPFR in Europe
- Lessons learned
- Outlook
46Key learnings
Strategy
Implemen-tation
Process
People
Technology
47Strategy issues (I)
- Selecting the right trading partners to
collaborate with - Some companies are willing to collaborate
strategically, some less and some are not! - Defining the right approach for piloting and
scaling CPFR - Limited piloting vs. early roll-out
- Limited processes vs. end to end
48Strategy issues (II)
- Setting realistic and manageable objectives is
key - Scope of SKUs
- Stores
- DCs
- Service improvement supply chain cost reduction
targets - Benefit sharing model and metrics are important
49Strategy challenge
Innovators
Followers
Attain competitive advantage but risk investing
too early
Loss of competitive advantage but minimize
mistakes
- Preparation of solid CPFR implementation strategy
with business case is advisable - Realistic internal readiness assessment and
trading partner segmentation verified
50Process issues
- Today limited number of pilots are using POS data
- Most initiatives relay on DC-level data
- CPFR imposes demands on internal processes and
not only at the interface with the trading
partner (eg. Demand Supply Planning) - External collaboration process requires breaking
barriers (eg. Sharing POS, exceptions management
for promotions and new products...)
51Process challenges
CPFR as is
Manufacturer
Retailer
DC
Collaboration
DC
DC
52Process challenges
CPFR to be
Collaboration
Retailer
Manufacturer
POS
POS
POS
POS
POS
POS
Order Mgmt.
Inventory Mgmt.
Transport Mgmt
Order Mgmt.
Inventory Mgmt.
Transport Mgmt
53People challenges
Strategy
Implemen-tation
Process
People
Technology
- CPFR requires cultural changes towards a
collaborative organisation (Senior Management /
Board-Level Commitment first!)
Metrics for collaboration in reward systems
From functional to process orientation
(internal/external)
Open communication and willingness to share
data
Invest in change (train in new roles and skills)
Exchange of sensitive data requires trust
Relying on tradingpartners information
54Technology challenges
- IT Strategy needs to be consistent with your CPFR
roll-out strategy
Planning
Collaboration
Connectivity
ERP Transaction Management
Spreadsheet
One-to-one
One-to-one / Flat file
DC Repl.
Advanced Planning Tools
eMarkets
eAI via eMarkets
POS Repl.
55Technology issues
- Increasing data volume when scaling CPFR
- Variables
- Number of SKUs
- Number of Trading Partners
- Collaboration Frequency
- Collaboration level (e.g. POS)
- Number of technologies (e.g. backend systems)
Data Volume and Handling Complexity
Increase of Value of Variable
56Balance CPFR implementation
Process
Scope / Strategy
Technology
Organisation
57Agenda
- ECR Europe CPFR Project
- Pilot Experience
- Status of CPFR in Europe
- Lessons learned
- Outlook
58Do you conduct online CPFR today?Will you in
2003
2003
2001
Base 43 CPG Companies Source Adapted from
Forrester Research CPG Online CPFR Pays, 2001
59However, the real prize requires critical mass!
- Inventory Optimisation
- Dynamic parameter sizing based on POS and DC
data(eg. dynamic lot sizing, safety stocks, lead
times,...) - Optimised inventory allocation to customers and
stores based on POS and DC info (eg.
"intelligent allocation")
- Manufacturing Capacity Optimisation
- Benefits in production require demand
visibilityfor gt40-50 of capacity of facility
- Transportation Capacity Optimisation
- Optimised shiploads
- Collaborative backhauling
- Multi-modal planning
60CPFR is evolving and is here to stay!
CPFR is going to be a Standard-Operating Practice
in the FMCG Industry!
Collaborative Principles and processes will
replace current behaviour practices!
CPFR will become a key driver for process and
organisational change!
61CPFR on a global scale
- Combine resources from GCI, ECR Europe, VICS and
the exchanges to define a global recommendation.
Recommend a global CPFR process data standards
and define technical process requirements that
enable CPFR between companies and in an exchange
environment.
62European GCI involvement
- Co-Chairs / Team leads
- Project Co-Chair (R.Marzian/Metro)
- Process Sub-Group (E.Garriga/Henkel)
- Synchronisation Sub-Group (G. Wolfram/Metro)
- 25 Team members from Europe
63Focus areas GCI CPFR group
Global CPFR processes standards
Internal Organisation
From Forecast to Replenish- ment
Event Management
Automated Exception Resolution
64Seminar European CPFR Insights
- Insights from three European pilots
Tomorrow 9.00 10.30 Auditorium 2
65Thank you
- See you tomorrow at the CPFR
- Seminar!
Tomorrow 9.00 10.30 Auditorium 2