Title: ERP and Supply Chain Management
1ERP and Supply Chain Management
2Case Dell Reengineering Supply Chain
- 1993, Compaq cuts prices to drive Dell out of
market. Dell experiences 65 million loss. - business process reengineering
- pioneered mail order approach to selling PCs
- re-engineering strategies
- mass customisation
- JIT e-orders shipments
- e-collaboration with major buyers
- reduction in testing period
- monitoring of productivity returns on
investments
3Dell and Reengineering Supply Chain
- Results
- 2001, gt 4 million in computer web sales/ day.
- leader in Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
- online tracking of orders shipments
- user approved configurations pricing
- customized home pages for clients
- Intelligent Agents used in production process
- increased communication with suppliers.
- 1999, Dell becomes No. 2 PC seller
4Lessons
- new business model
- change how business is done.
- large scale implementation
- improved logistics system along entire supply
chain. - improved communications and customer service
- CRM programme
- B2B e-Comm with business partners
5Aims of SCM
increased competitive advantage profitability
positive affect on inventory levels,
response/cycle times, business processes
customer service quality
collaborate, analyse, develop systems, reduce
uncertainty risks in supply chain.
6Components of Supply Chain
7The Supply Chain
- life of a product from birth to death.
- movement of tangible intangible inputs.
- all shapes and sizes
- can be
- complex bi-directional i.e. return of products
(reverse logistics) - flow of goods/services, info. investment must
? added-value - Michael Porter - value-added analysis
- Problems with SCM ? military re-supply,
litigation company losses e.g. ?????
8Supply Chain Problems
- UNCERTAINTY
- in demand forecast
- in delivery times production delays
- POOR COORDINATION
- with internal units business partners
- poor customer service
- high inventory costs,
- loss of revenue
- extra cost for expediting services.
- Bull Whip Effect
- persistent SCM problem.
- erratic orders up/down supply chain.
- distributor orders fluctuate poor demand
forecast, price changes, order batching
rationing e.g. Porter Gambles distortion in
SCM for disposable diapers. - avoidable with Intranet/Extranet eComm groupware
9Traditional Solutions
- Vertical Integration
- acquire own suppliers - the supply source
- problem - not "sticking to the knitting"
- Stock holding
- Insurance against shortages.
- difficult to determine inventory level for each
product part - holdling costs and ordering costs
10CASE Littlewoods improved its SCM
- clothing retailer - 136 stores in UK Ireland.
- overstocking problems in SCM
- Solution
- data-mining
- WWW-based reporting system.
- merchandising staff better stock, sales
supplier decisions. - 1997 1.2 million saved with strategic price
merchandising
- Use IT for measuring working on e.g.
- delivery on time
- quality at unloading area
- cost performance
- lead time for procurement
11Other Solutions
- peak times, outsource rather than DIY
- Buy gt make production when appropriate.
- configure optimal shipping plans.
- strategic partnerships with suppliers.
- just-in-time approach to purchasing.
- reduce the lead time for buying and selling.
- fewer suppliers.
- improve supplier-buyer relationships.
- manufacture only after orders are in.
- accurate demand - work closely with suppliers.
12IT Systems SCM
- 1950s - 60s the first software to support supply
chain - 1970s
- Material Requirement Protocol (MRP) enhanced to
become MRP - Material Resource Planning - local area networks integrated systems sales
order processing, stock control, purchase order
processing etc - 1990s
- systems interconnectivity through accessible
databases - Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) integrate
transaction processing activities - WWW and eCommerce
- Extended ERP/SCM software.
13IT Systems SCM
14Systems Integration - Sandoe Saharia (2001)
- Other
- unformation visibility
- customer satisfaction
- modularisation standardization
- lean and flexibility
- globalization business performance
- Tangibles
- reduced
- inventory
- staff
- procurement cost
- improved
- productivity business processes
- order mgt
- financial cycle
- innovation
- IT cost? Increase?
- Revenue/profit increases etc
- sourcing of requirements
15Value Chain Integration
16Warner-Lambert - Integrated Supply Chain
- Problem
- WL needs to improve demand forecast of products.
- How
- bought a Demand Planning Information System
- to analyse manufacturing, distribution, sales
data. - anticipate seasonal or production line problems
- increases shelf fill rate from 87 to 98
- 8 million/year additional sales.
17Enterprise Resource Planning
- ERP Process of planning managing all
resources their use in the entire enterprise. - Software producers
- SAP, Oracle, J.D. Edwards, Computer Associates,
People Soft
- single interface for managing routine
manufacturing logistics activities. - aid customer interaction manage supplier
relationships - force business coordination discipline
- support admin. activities.
- ?
- integrate all company departments functions
onto one computer system with accessible,
"mine-able" databases and reporting
182nd Generation ERP
- late 1990s, some benefits of ERPs being
exploited. - need for planning systems oriented towards
decision-making. - SCM systems start to complement ERP systems.
- intelligent decision support capabilities.
- overlay existing system pull data from every
step of supply chain.
- break large ERP systems into individual
components that work together. - easier for ERP vendors to enhance solutions and
for customers to upgrade software. - vendors extend core ERP with supply chain, sales
automation customer relationship management
(CRM)
19ERP Implementation
- To avoid failure consider
- customer expectations.
- ERP product capabilities, and gaps.
- level of change the customer has face to make the
system fit. - level of commitment within customer organization
to see the project thru
- customer organization culture.
- risks politics within customer organization
- consultants capabilities, responsibilities and
role
20Application Service Providers ERP Outsourcing
- option for businesses wanting ERP functions is to
lease applications gt build - ASP software vendor that leases ERP-based
applications to other businesses - ERP projects are
- expensive to install
- take long time to implement
- staffing is a major problem
21Global Supply Chains
- Issues
- legal regulation, customs fees, taxes
- language cultural differences
- exchange rates fluctuations
- political instabilities
- Global Supply Chains involve suppliers and/or
customers in other countries.
22LEGO Case
- rushed to get its "e-product to market
- Inexperience ? problems with
- supporting distribution service system
- merging offline online operations
- warehouses could not handle distribution to
individuals - handling returns from overseas
- invoicing must comply "national" regulations
- Outcome
- Lego closed WWW site.
- One year to solve global eComm-related issues
23How EC contributes to SCM
- digital products (software) - flow of materials
is expedited - replaces paper documents with e-documents e.g.
order copies, invoices - replaces fax, phone with e-messaging
- support network organisations collaboration
information sharing e.g. seller and distributor
- nature and structure of supply chain moves from
linear to hub. - shorter supply chain and minimum stock
- aids sales response customer service
- buying sales efficiencies thru. e-marketplaces.
24Buying Selling along the Supply Chain
- aim of eComm is to facilitate buying and selling
along the supply chain. Activities are - upstream
- internal SCM
- downstream
- combined upstream / downstream
25Integration of eComm with ERP
- most medium/large companies have ERP systems
- eComm needs to interface with ERP so -
interconnect them - extending existing ERP to support e-Comm means
- more investment in ERP
- rapid development of eComm applications.
- but ERP software is complex to construct/modify
- need expertise or to buy it in .... expensive
- easy, smooth integration easily hits problems
26Order Fulfillment in eComm
- When selling direct to customers - note
- pick pack the products to be shipped quickly
- arrange for prompt and relable delivering to the
door - process payment, in advance (money transfer), COD
or invoice - handle returns - unwanted or defective goods
- knotty operational activities that require
effective, efficient systems. They bring problems
to supply chains.
27Online Order Fulfilment Logistics
- order fulfillment is part of back-office
operations but strongly related to front-office
operations - e-Tailors faced problems in order fulfillment,
especially at holiday periods - Amazon needed physical warehouses to expedite
deliveries and reduce order fulfillment costs. - eComm relies on JIT pull operations - the order
(even a customised order) pulls the stuff from
the supply change - reliance on pull involves difficult
forecasting and stocks to meet demand. - in B2C pull, goods need be delivered to
customers door.
28Innovation and Supply Chain
- Galleryfurniture.com
- Webcams to demonstrate product inventory
- Garden.com proprietary software to
collaborate with suppliers efficiently/effectively
.
Porter - product differenitation and cost
leadeship
Mail Boxes Etc. Return.com logistics system
that determines whether a customer is entitled to
a return refund.
Rightfreight.com Manages a
marketplace. Helps companies with goods to find
"forwarders" who prepare goods for shipping.
29Automated order processing and despatch
- Traditional warehouses
- deliver large quantities to a stores and plants.
- B2C eComm
- send small quantities to many individuals.
- large-volume eComm fulfillment
- needs special automated warehouses with robots
"pick and pack" devices - Most B2C is shipped via
- outsourcers who handle the logistics mail orders
(incl. online orders).
30Dealing with Returns
- Return items to where they were bought
- works for a small number of returns.
- Customer returns go to an independent unit
(within the company or outsourced) that handles
matters separately - more efficient, but buyer still unhappy.
- customer physically drops the returned items at
collection points - e.g. a local shop/Post Office
31Managerial Issues
- Ethical SCM project may ? lay-offs transfers
of work to other countries - matters of
employment contracts. Are they ethical matters? - Data sharing data programs - intellectual
property - may be shared - a matter of trust - Do we integrate or hold ourselves in reserve?
Total integration thru. ERP, SCM, and
e-commerce, makes us vulnerable to partner
failure - big risk. Do we keeping matters under
our own control? - IT complexity major SCM projects exploit
advanced IT. We need to know that - we have the capability (expertise)
- the systems are reliable and there is a fail-safe
- we can sustain the systems and up-grade them