1 / 31

Lecture 21 Overview of Supply Chain Management

Lecture 21 Overview of Supply Chain Management. Reasons for which you might consider a supply chain management career. A typical box of cereal spends ____ days getting from factory to supermarket. A typical new car spends ___ days traveling from the factory to the dealership.

honora
Télécharger la présentation

Lecture 21 Overview of Supply Chain Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 21Overview of Supply Chain Management

  2. Reasons for which you might consider a supply chain management career • A typical box of cereal spends ____ days getting from factory to supermarket. • A typical new car spends ___ days traveling from the factory to the dealership. • Cisco’s $____ dollar write-off of inventories in 2001-2002.

  3. The Goal of SCM:Matching Supply with Demand! Material Flow Suppliers Customers Inventory Management RM FG Manufacturer Supply Contracts Yield Management Internal Supply Chains Information Flow Value of Information

  4. Outline • Why is a Supply Chain Important? • What comprises a Supply Chain? • Supply Chain Optimization • Managing Uncertainty • Supply Chain Network Design

  5. Supply Chain: The Magnitude • In 1998, American companies spent $898 billion in supply-related activities (or 10.6% of gross domestic product). - Transportation __% - Inventory __%, - Management __% • Third party logistics services grew in 1998 by 15% to nearly $40 billion • It is estimated that the grocery industry could save $______(10% of operating cost) by using effective logistics strategies. • Compaq computer estimates it lost $500 million to $1 billion in sales in 1995 because its laptops and desktops were not available when and where customers were ready to buy them. • Boeing aircraft, one of America's leading capital goods producers, was forced to announce write downs of $_______ in October 1997, due to “Raw material shortages, internal and supplier parts shortages…”.

  6. Progression of Logistics Costs Total U.S. logistics costs between 1984 and 2005

  7. Magnitude of Supply Chain Costs – A $25 book

  8. Supply Chain: The Potential • Dell Computer has outperformed the competition in terms of shareholder value growth over the eight years period, 1988-1996, by over 3,000% using • Direct business model • Build-to-order strategy • Procter & Gamble estimates that it saved retail customers $65 million through logistics gains over the past 18 months. “According to P&G, the essence of its approach lies in manufacturers and suppliers working closely together …. jointly creating business plans to eliminate the source of wasteful practices across the entire supply chain”.

  9. Guess Who?

  10. Critical Success Factors • EDLP Strategy • Channel Master • EDI-INT, IT Strategy _______’s level of supply chain management is so efficient that there is almost no need for warehouses. Inventory is moved from one location to another quickly and efficiently, thereby cutting costs.

  11. What Is a Supply Chain? • Flow of products and services from: • Raw materials manufacturers • Intermediate products manufacturers • End product manufacturers • Wholesalers and distributors and • Retailers • Connected by transportation and storage activities • Integrated through information, planning, and integration activities

  12. The Supply Chain Network Price & product availability

  13. What Is the Goal of Supply Chain Management? • Supply chain management is concerned with the efficient integration of suppliers, factories, warehouses and stores so that merchandise is produced and distributed: • In the right quantities • At the right price • To the right locations • At the right time • In order to: • Minimize total system cost • Maximize total system revenue • Satisfy customer service requirements Supply chain management is to match supply and demand better!

  14. Flows in a Supply Chain Products/Services Customer Funds Information Source: Supply Chain Management (Chopra and Meindl)

  15. Why supply chain management is difficult? • Supply chain strategy linked to the Development Chain • Challenging to minimize system costs and maximize system service levels globally (Global Optimization) • Inherent presence of uncertainty and risk • All of the advanced strategies, techniques, and approaches for Supply Chain Management focus on: • - Global Optimization • - Managing Uncertainty

  16. The Development Chain The enterprise development and supply chain

  17. Global Optimization is Hard • The supply chain is a geographically dispersed complex network • Different facilities have conflicting objectives • The supply chain is a dynamic system • The system varies over time

  18. Global Optimization - Complex Network National Semiconductors • Production: • Produces chips in six different locations in the US, Britain and Israel • Chips are shipped to seven assembly locations in Southeast Asia • Distribution • The final product is shipped to hundreds of facilities all over the world • 20,000 different routes • 12 different airlines are involved • 95% of the products are delivered within 45 days • 5% are delivered within 90 days.

  19. Conflicting Objectives in the Supply Chain 1. Purchasing • Stable volume requirements • Flexible delivery time • Little variation in mix • Large quantities 2. Manufacturing • Long run production • High quality • High productivity • Low production cost 3. Warehousing • Low inventory • Reduced transportation costs • Quick replenishment capability 4. Customers • Short order lead time • Enormous variety of products • Low prices

  20. Tools and Approaches for Global Optimization • Everything for optimization, plus… • Strategic Alliances/Supplier Partnerships • Supply Contracts/Incentive Schemes

  21. Uncertainty and Risk Factors • Demand is not the only source of uncertainty • Lead times • Capacity • Transportation times • Natural disasters • Component availability • Forecasting does not solve the problem • Forecasting is always wrong • The longer the forecast horizon the worse the forecast • Recent trends make things more uncertain • Lean manufacturing • Outsourcing • Off-shoring

  22. Uncertainty and Risk Factors • August 2005 – Hurricane Katrina • P&G coffee supplies from sites around New Orleans • Six month impact • 2002 West Coast port strike • Losses of $1B/day • Store stock-outs, factory shutdowns • 1999 Taiwan earthquake • Supply interruptions of HP, Dell • 2001 India (Gujarat state) earthquake • Supply interruptions for apparel manufacturers

  23. Dealing with Uncertainty • Pull Systems • Centralization • Postponement • Strategic Alliances • Collaborative Forecasting

  24. Supply Chain Variability Manufacturer Forecast of Sales Retailer Orders to Warehouse Actual Consumer Demand Warehouse Orders Production Plan Volumes Time Source: Tom Mc Guffry, Electronic Commerce and Value Chain Management, 1998

  25. What Management Gets... Consumer Demand Production Plan Volumes Time Source: Tom Mc Guffry, Electronic Commerce and Value Chain Management, 1998

  26. Production Plan What Management Wants… Consumer Demand Volumes Time Source: Tom Mc Guffry, Electronic Commerce and Value Chain Management, 1998

  27. Supply Chain Network Design: Key Issues • Pick the optimal number, location, and size of warehouses and/or plants • Determine optimal sourcing strategy • Which plant/vendor should produce which product • Determine best distribution channels • Which warehouses should service which customers • The objective is to balance service level against • Production and purchasing costs • Inventory carrying costs • Facility costs (handling and fixed costs) • Transportation costs That is, we would like to find a minimal-annual-cost configuration of the distribution network that satisfies product demands at specified customer service levels.

  28. Mapping Allows You to Visualize Your Supply Chain

  29. Cost Buildup as a Function of Facilities Total Costs Service Level Within Promised Time Cost of Operations Facilities Inventory Transportation Labor Number of Facilities 5-30

  30. Supply Chain — A Contemporary ViewNetwork Perspective End Customer Retailers Distributors Manufacturers Suppliers Products, Information, and Finances Flow Across All Process and Supply Chain Players Functional SC View Product Life Cycle View Design Product, Process, and Supply Chain Introduce Product Promote, Price, and Merchandise Product Fulfill Product Demand Recycle, Reuse, or Dispose of Product Source: “The Supply Chain Management Effect” (Kopczak and Johnson)

More Related