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Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002

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Page 1: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Management

Team 223 EMBA 2002

Page 2: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Introduction

• Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations

• May be simple or complex

• Made up of various organizations

– inherent conflicts may exist between them

– Ideally a well-balanced, well-practiced relay team, positioned for “hand-offs”

Team 223 EMBA 2002 2

Supply Chain Management

Cover Graphic From Internet, ORACLE Website, Oracle Supply Chain applications

Page 3: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

A Brief History*

• Multicommodity Logistics Network Model

• “PLANETS”

• Stochastic Sub-Models

• Normative Model

• Comprehensive Deterministic Model

• “OPTIMIZER” Model

* Ganeshan, Ram and Harrison, Terry P. An Introduction to Supply Chain Management. Internet, Penn State University website

Supply Chain Management

Team 223 EMBA 2002 3

Page 4: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Management

A Brief History (continued)

• Current Research– Shows promise in reducing inventories, increasing customer service

– Several limitations:

• Focus is on the inventory system only; largely ignores the

production side of the supply chain

• Assumes re-supply from only one site

• Restricted to well-known forms of demand and lead-time

Team 223 EMBA 2002 4

Page 5: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Decisions*

• Two broad categories: – Strategic

• longer horizon

• linked with corporate strategy

• guide supply chain policies from a design perspective

– Operational

• shorter term

• focus of effort is on effective, efficient management of product flow

• Four major decision areas: Location, Production, Inventory and Transportation. Each has strategic and operational elements.

*Ganeshan, Ram and Harrison, Terry P. An Introduction to Supply Chain Management. Internet, Penn State University website

Supply Chain Management

Team 223 EMBA 2002 5

Page 6: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain ManagementSupply Chain Decisions

• Location: largely strategic– Involves commitment to a long term plan

– Decisions regarding size, number, location represent the basic strategy for accessing customer markets

– Considerable impact on revenue, cost and levels of service

• Production– Strategic:

• Product Path(s): these decisions determine the exact path(s) the product will take to and from a facility

• Facility capacity: this decision will depend primarily upon the degree of vertical integration within the firm

– Operational:

• The focus is on detailed production schedulingTeam 223 EMBA 2002 6

Page 7: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Decisions

• Inventory– Strategic: top management goals

– Operational: the primary approach to inventory management

• Push vs. Pull

• Optimal order quantities and reorder points

• safety stock levels

• Transportation – Primarily strategic

– Closely linked with inventory decisions

– Customer service levels & geographic location play key role

• Shipment size

• Routing

• Scheduling

Supply Chain Management

Team 223 EMBA 2002 7

Page 8: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Management Tools

• Strategy Tools for SCM– Broad decision scope

– Requires lots of data

– Provide approximate solutions

– Focus is on design

• Operational Tools for SCM– Address day-to-day SCM operation

– Models have a narrower scope, consider detail and provide optimal solutions

– Focus is on inventory control policies (usually multi-level)

Supply Chain Management

Team 223 EMBA 2002 8

Page 9: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Management

Supply Chain Flow - Manufacturing

• Advance Planning, Scheduling and Logistics Techniques

Team 223 EMBA 2002 9

Graphic from: Internet, ORACLE Website, Oracle Supply Chain applications

Page 10: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Management

Supply Chain Flow - Manufacturing

• Procurement - Vendor/Supplier Management

Team 223 EMBA 2002 10

Graphic from: Internet, ORACLE Website, Oracle Supply Chain applications

Page 11: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Flow - Manufacturing*

• Manufacturing– Workflow technologies enable trading partners to:

• Collaborate on new product development

• Shorten time-to-market

– Detailed product information can be collected and distributed to various partners to expedite collaboration

– New product design timelines and objectives can be synchronized to achieve shared goals

• Distribution– Impacts inventory level, cost and customer service level

– Push vs. Pull Inventory

– The Role of Warehouse and Distribution Managers

*Internet, ORACLE Website, Oracle Supply Chain applications

Supply Chain Management

Team 223 EMBA 2002 11

Page 12: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Team 223 EMBA 2002 12

Supply Chain Management

Supply Chain Flow - Manufacturing

• Customers– Customization becoming standard to order fulfillment

– Synchronized operations, global visibility and large-scale reductions in inventory across the extended supply chain grant trading partners the agility and flexibility necessary for participation in a mass customization model

Page 13: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Management

Supply Chain Flow - A Service Industry ExampleAirborne Logistics Services

Team 223 EMBA 2002 13

From: Airborne Express: WebMethods at Work with Airborne Logistics Services

Page 14: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Management

Driving Forces

• With the Internet Age:– Traditional barriers to market entry have disappeared

– Global markets can be reached overnight

– Customers are more informed, demanding

• Forrester Research forecasts that inter-company trade over the Internet will double every year over the next 5 years - from $43B last year to $1.3T by 2003*

• The Bottom Line: ROI. A recent Benchmarking Partners, Inc. study revealed that 90% of surveyed companies benefited from integration through electronic commerce.

*Internet, WebMethods website, Whitepapers, B2B Integration: The Drive to Gain and Maintain Competitive Advantage

Team 223 EMBA 2002 14

Page 15: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Management

Supply Chain Synchronization: B2B & SCM*

• B2B: the automated exchange of information between different organizations– Crosses corporate boundaries (firewalls)

– Accomplished over the Internet or VAN’s (Value-Added Networks)

– Increasingly uses open standards such as XML and HTTP

– Has spawned dedicated organizations to develop the software solutions

*Internet, WebMethods website, Whitepapers, B2B Integration: The Drive to Gain and Maintain Competitive Advantage

Team 223 EMBA 2002 15

Page 16: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Management

Considerations for SCM Development & Deployment

• Learning Costs of new tools and data

• Supplier information needs

• Optimize the entire system

• Implement in stages

• System flexibility and capability for customization*

• Impact on employees (jobs, assignments, responsibilities, compensation structure)

*Managing and Using Information Systems, Keri E. Pearlson, John Wiley & Sons, 2001, pg 100

Team 223 EMBA 2002 16Co

Page 17: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Management

Examples: Success Stories

Team 223 EMBA 2002 17

Page 18: Supply Chain Management Team 223 EMBA 2002. Introduction Supply chains exist in both service and manufacturing organizations May be simple or complex

Supply Chain Management

Examples: Success Stories

• IBM– Supplier relationships moved to web beginning in 1998

– Links 20,000 IBM suppliers

– 94% of invoices handled electronically

– 400,000 e-invoices/month via IBM’s private exchange

– Estimated savings: $400M/year

• Kimberly Clark– Implemented an Automated Replenishment Program with

44 retailers

– Estimated savings: $200M/2 years

Team 223 EMBA 2002 18