Title: Dell and Supply Chains
1Dell and Supply Chains
- MI021/CS021Computers in Management
2(No Transcript)
3Dells Business
- What are the characteristics of market segments
that Dell chooses to attack? - Markets ripe for commoditization where there are
established, common standards - What's special about Dell's value chain? How does
this differ from HP, Sony, Toshiba, Gateway,
etc.? - Dell only sells direct
4Disintermediation
Source Benjamin Wigand (SMR)
5Benefits of Disintermediation
- Can build product only when it's needed
- Avoid bullwhip effect
- PG and the beer game
- With no middleman it can eliminate the margin
others have to share with retailers - Lowering prices
- Selling more
- Boosting its own margins
6A lot can happen in 15 years
- About 15 years ago, dell had 20-25 days of
inventory spread across a network of warehouses. - How many warehouses does it have today?
- None
- How many hours of inventory does it hold in its
factories? - 72 hrs. average
- 2 hrs at weak link
- Why is eliminating inventory so important for
Dell? - Moore's Law product rapidly depreciates.
- Our official definition Processing power per
dollar doubles every 18 months.
7Processing power per dollar doubles every 18
months
Source Intel Corp.
8Processing power per dollar doubles every 18
months
9Floating Point Operationsper Second (FLOPS)
- Price Per GFLOPS
- 1997 about US 30,000
- May 2000 640
- August 2003 82
- May 2005 5
- February 2006 about 1
- March 2007 0.42
Reference PS3 20 GFLOPS, Fastest
Supercomputer 1 Petaflop
10Depreciation in Practice
- Depreciates a half to a full point each week1/2
to 1 percent. - Turn that into money
- Dell had 55B in revenues in 2006. How much do
you save if shave a week off of inventory
(roughly)? - 550M
- Cut 3 weeks in past 13 years 1.65B
- 2006 profits 3B. Over half profits come from
efficient supply chain. - It's like fish", "you can literally see it rot",
"it's a financial imperative"
11Technology is the key enabler.
- Dell's suppliers move their products into up to
110 Dell factory bays. - When does Dell take possession of product?
- When customer order has been made product is
pulled - And how is 'possession' recorded? Does someone
run out to the floor type this in? - Pallet moves across a white line in the factory,
it's tracked by a scanner, possession changes
hands.
12Cost of Inventory
- Typical PC maker, pays for parts 30 days before
sold. - That means typical manufacturer pays the marginal
cost for the product in advance of the product's
sale. - Once that computer is built it's sitting on a
shelf somewhere for 30 days before it's sold, is
it earning interest? - No
- Can you invest it?
- No
- Can you use it to hire people
- or expand your operations?
- No
- Thats why inventory death
- money is being wasted.
13Cash Conversion Cycle
- Cash conversion cycle the period of time
between an outlay of cash for parts and the
collection of payments for goods made from them - When does Dell have to pay suppliers for the
parts it used to build the product? - Not until 36 days (average) after it has received
payment from customers. - If inventory depreciates at 1/ week, how much is
that worth? - 2.75B
- What's Dell's cash conversion cycle?
- Negative 36 days (assumes credit cards clear
right away) - Why do you suppose Dell gets such good terms?
- When youre Dell, suppliers do what you want to
get your business.
14Negative Working Capital
- By collecting money from customers before it pays
its suppliers, its suppliers finance its
operations - Dell has a negative cash conversion cycle. It
sells product faster than it pays. - Inventory Turns
- Number of times go through whole inventory in a
year - Value of product sold in a year and divide it by
the value of product in inventory (on average) - What's Dell's inventory turns number?
- 107 times a year
- What are HPs IBMs inventory turns?
- 8.5 and 17.5 times a year
- If inventory death, low inventory
15Outsourcing?
- Do other firms manufacture PCs in the US?
- No
- Does Dell?
- Yes
- Why doesn't it outsource like everyone else?
- For Dell, manufacturing is a source of
competitive advantage
16A carefully orchestrated dance.
- Dell produces 700 PCs in an hour
- Eliminated screws so parts can be snapped
together in how short a time? - 3 minutes
- How long from start to finish to build a PC?
- 4-8 hrs. depending on configuration
- Software burning testing takes the most time,
several hours. - How long do suppliers have to truck inventory to
Dell's plants? - 90 minutes
- Can they do this from Singapore?
- No, they have to be in Austin, TX.
- Why do companies do it?
- Scale they want Dell's business. Big Dell can
dictate terms - How many Sushi restaurants in Bentonville, AK?
17Return of the Value Chain
- Dell has squeezed inventory down to less than 4
days. Is it gone from value chain? - Not entirely, have to pay for it through
suppliers costs. - How much inventory do suppliers hold?
- Required to hold 8-10 days of stock in
multi-vendor warehouses within 90 minutes of the
factories. - So Dell's scale gives it bargaining power. How
do suppliers get more of Dell's business? - Suppliers are ranked against competitors
- Vendors compete on cost, technology, supply
predictability service - Rank determines the percentage of Dell's business
they earn
18Forecasting Demand Shaping
- So that's the back end of the system. How does
Dell help suppliers understand buying patterns? - It does forecasting
- Pays attention to customer buying upgrade
patterns - How accurate?
- 75
- What does Dell do during the times when Dell
guesses wrong is caught with low stocks in key
inventory (say 15" monitors)? - Runs a special on 17" monitors
- What do supply chain experts call this?
- Demand shaping
- It can leverage demand shaping more than rivals
- because it has a direct-to-customer model
19Hard to compete with Dell
- What's Dell's profit margin advantage over
rivals? - 8 points
- How much does HP make on a PC? What are its
profit margins? - Less than 1 margins
- So Dell cuts two points from its margins and it
buries HPs profits!
20Why dont competitors copy this?
- Why doesnt Gap copy Zara?
- It cant, because it would have to redo
everything. - Supply chaining is hard.
- More complex in Dells case
- Who doesnt like disintermediation?
- Retailers dont want to be cut out of the
process. - Channel Conflict.
21Channel Conflict
TraditionalRetailers (small)
Distributors
TraditionalRetailers (big box)
22Not just for technology.
- Companies cannot afford to do without retailers
in the short term, retailers wont let them move
gradually to disintermediate over long-term. - We recognize that a vendor has the right to sell
through whatever distribution channels it
desires. However, we too have the right to be
selective in regard to the vendors we select and
we trust that you can understand that a company
may be hesitant to do business with its
competitors. Home Depot memo to suppliers
23Not All is Rosy at Dell
- Dells been struggling lately. Why?
24Resource-based View (RBV)
- Company can develop sustainable competitive
advantage if its resources/ products have 4
characteristics - Valuable
- Rare
- Inimitable (not able to be copied easily)
- Non-substitutable (there arent any alternative
products available).
25Is Dells supply chain valuable?
- Yes, but not as valuable as it used to be.
- Why?
- Moores Law. Computer technology has gotten
cheaper. - Dells profit margin is 8.
- I paid 3500 (for my first computer out of
college) - 8 margins 280
- Lots of money, buy direct
- I paid 500 (for wifes computer moving to
Boston. Note also 80x more powerful than my
college computer) - 8 of 500 40
- Not so much, maybe want to see feel.
- As continued to cut, may have cut some things
that customers valuedservice and product
quality. - Trying to be like Wal-Mart cost before quality
only cut PC support so far.
26Is Dells product rare?
- Used to create rare product in that it could be
customized. - Configure computer for your particular needs
- As computing power has gotten greater, now the
standard computer is sufficient for most needs of
average user (save CAD). - Storagejust get an external hard drive.
- Processormost people never use all the
processing power they have. - New technologies (grid or utility computing)
beginning to take advantage and harness all the
extra computing power out there. - SETI, AIDS research, PS3 Network for molecular
folding.
27Is Dells product non-substitutable?
- Increased computing power introduced substitutes
to the desktop. - Name some
- Laptops not a huge price difference anymore.
- PDA/Smart Phone The PDAs today are as powerful
as computers 5-10 years ago. - Game Stations Carving off entertainment market.
- Does Dell make many of these products?
- Yes.
- Is their advantage as strong as in desktops
- No.
- May be a disadvantage for some (e.g. LCD)
28Is Dells supply chain inimitable?
- Supply chaining is hardbut not impossible.
- Others have begun to close The Gap here (pun
intended). - Article suggests that Dell is a one trick pony.
- Have not been able to innovate to counter
competitors that have begun to copy.
29Sustainable competitive advantage
- Goal of business strategy, give a long-term
edge that a company has over its competitors. - Dell has been able to sustain its competitive
advantage for 15 years (2006 25 on Fortune 500,
started 1984 in UTx dorm room). - No question that Dell has been one of the most
successful companies of past decade. - No question Dell still lean mean is doing
stuff as well as they always have. - Question is whether what Dell has built can
sustain to next 10 years? - Are Dells resources still VRIN?
30How is Dell responding?
- Selling in China
- Selling in WalMart