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Global Supply Chain Management

Global Supply Chain Management. The Stories Under the Veil of Slogan: Framework & Details. Xilong Liu. 2004.5. Contents. Why choose the title for the presentation? intention What will be discussed? framework Which will be offered in each part? details.

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Global Supply Chain Management

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  1. Global Supply Chain Management The Stories Under the Veil of Slogan: Framework & Details Xilong Liu 2004.5

  2. Contents • Why choose the title for the presentation? intention • What will be discussed? framework • Which will be offered in each part? details

  3. Intention • Academic researches • Eli Broad Graduate School of Management • The Stanford Global Supply Chain Management Forum • European Forum on Global Supply Chain management at Eindhoven University (Holland) • Hong Kong Logistics and Supply Chain Forum • Managerial Applications • 2004 Boao Forum for Asia — BFA

  4. Framework • Integrating the two areas of international business and supply chain management. • Consists of four main areas: • Supply management • Logistics • Operations management • Marketing

  5. Framework The hexagon of global supply chain management

  6. A global supply chain framework • The 21st Century Logistics framework • Designed by department of marketing and supply chain management, Eli Broad college of business, Michigan State University. ——2004 U.S. News ranking had MSU’s supply chain management program No. 1 for undergraduates and No.2 for graduates after MIT. • Studying the relationship between supply chain competencies and performance

  7. The 21st Century Logistics framework

  8. continued

  9. A measurement model for both firm and supply chain performance • 13 logistics and supply chain variables representing fivekey performance areas. • Customer service Customer satisfaction; product flexibility; delivery speed • Cost management Functional and integrated logistics and supply chain cost • Quality Delivery dependability; responsiveness; order flexibility; delivery flexibility • Productivity Information systems support; order fill capacity; shipment notification • Asset management Fixed assets; working capital

  10. application • Dada gathered from U.S., ANZ for different business environments. • Using regression models • Managers need to understand the relative importance of the various competencies in particular operating arena to enhance performance. • From an academic standpoint, the model appears to be robust across size and business scale differences. • Future research will be to further refine and clarify the model and its measures so as to provide clearer insights into the competency relational across more operation and cultural settings.

  11. Supply managementglobal sourcing strategy and competitive advantage • Managing your supply chain for global competitiveness • Stanford graduate school of business • 2004 august 22-27 • Led by the world’s leading experts in global supply chain integration • Hau L. Lee & Seungjun Whang Come to Stanford, in the heart of Silicon Valley, and gain the tools and insights to mobilize your whole organization in building supply chain excellence.

  12. Sourcing importance • Peter Drucker • Sourcing and logistics would remain the darkest continent of business—the least exploited area of business for competitive advantage. • Global sourcing strategy • Logistics identifying which production units will serve which particular markets and how components will be supplied for production. • The interfaces among R&D, manufacturing and marketing on a global basis. • Global sourcing as a business practice • Toyota is a good case

  13. Sourcing • Intrafirm sourcing • 34% of world trade is managed by multinational companies on an intrafirm basis • outsourcing—contractual basis • Problems • Manufacturing costs • The costs of various resources • Exchange rate fluctuations • Availability of infrastructure (transportation, communication, energy) • Industrial and cultural environments • Working with foreign host government • Operational problems

  14. Long-term consequences Outsourcing base on an arm’s-length or a strategic partnership basis. • Benefits of virtual network Easy option to access the world markets Reducing investment requirement improve ROE • Dependence Operating in an uncertain business environment Dependence on independent suppliers IBM is a vivid case declining for this • Gradual loss of design and manufacturing abilities

  15. Global sourcing in an unstable world economy • 1997 the financial crisis in Asia • 2001 the terrorist attack on America • 2002 Argentina's financial crisis • 2003 SARS spreading • Localized procurement—localization strategy • Shifting production and procurement abroad to match revenues in foreign currency • A number of new questions beg for answers

  16. Summary and solutions • Global sourcing strategy requires close coordination of R&D, manufacturing, and marketing activities on a global basis • Modular production Easy technology transfer making decentralized/localized production feasible without losing the benefits of global integration • Attain strategic flexibility in sourcing Company structure including a combination of quasi-hierarchical and a pure hierarchical governance structure for different activities or operations. (Teede et al. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management)

  17. Global sourcing using online reverse auctions • B2B E-business • It became a key method for both globally sourcing engineered components and as a tool to bargain with suppliers. • Key theoretical foundations supporting the use of online reverse auctions include: • Lower purchase prices result in reduced costs. • ‘‘Total cost’’ RFQs represent actual total costs. • Qualified suppliers are interchangeable. • Costs are external to the buyer, rather than internally generated • Suppliers benefit from participating in online reverse auctions.

  18. 11 key issues in global supply base management 1. The importance of trust in buyer-supplier relationship • A detailed formal evaluation and selection of potential suppliers with a proven track record • B-S involved in a project team 2. Communication is key • Identifying information required and providing it 3. The personal aspect of supply base management 4. Maintaining positive B-S relationship in difficult economic times 5. One size does not fit all 6. Supply chain design: we are all in this together

  19. continued 7. Measuring supply base performance 8. Sharing accurate information: making sure that everyone is on the same page 9. Data represent different things at different times to different people 10. Reverse auctions: can your organization really afford them? 11. Do we have the right people to do the job? Human factor is important

  20. Logistics managementGlobal market segmentation for logistics services • Two research questions: • What logistics service factors account for in business customer satisfaction across national borders? • How do these differences reflect distinct segments in the global logistics services market?

  21. LSQ—logistics service quality • Unobservable but perceived customers’ value

  22. LSQ segmentation • Satisfaction levels differ across customer segments due to the customization of LSQ dimensions. • Three types of market segments • Horizontal segments that apply to all customers worldwide (global) • Horizontal segments that exist across national borders (for example, within a specific region) • Vertical segments that exist within a specific national market

  23. Research propositions • P1: Horizontal market segments exist such that different customer groups’ satisfaction level responses are driven by the same sets of LSQ dimensions of perception of order placement activities and perception of order receipt and in the same process manner. • P2: Horizontal market segments exist such that customers with similar organizational characteristics place similar emphasis on the LSQ dimensions of perception of order placement activities and perception of order receipt. • P3: Vertical market segments exist such that the effects of dimensions of LSQ on customers’ satisfaction level response are moderated by national and regional variables.

  24. Factors influencing customers’ preferences for global logistics services

  25. Benefits • First, costs can be reduced by avoiding redundant or superfluous logistics service offerings through the customization of logistics offerings for specific segments. • Second, this same customization of logistics models enhances firm revenue through increased customer satisfaction levels, which in turn increase lifetime customer value to the firm. • Third, firms can benchmark externally and internally on specific components of logistics services.

  26. understanding To benefit from these outcomes, global logistics providers must understand : • how customer preferences differ across LSQ elements. • how these elements influence satisfaction levels. • how these relationships are moderated by cultural and organizational differences.

  27. Operations managementdecision model in global supply chain management • Five models are discussed in managing buyer -supplier behavior, sourcing, integrated operations, marketing and logistics in global SCM. • We focus our attention on these models because they address the upstream and downstream aspects of SCM and illustrate different modeling approaches. • the models relate to (a) investment implications of innovation-based competition between buyer and supplier, (b) bidding by a prospective supplier of a product, (c) bid evaluation and supplier selection by a buyer dealing in multiple products, (d) integrated operations in a supply chain, (e) market integrated distribution.

  28. Where denotes the production rate at time t; denotes the price function of the buyer firm B; denotes the unit cost for production of the supplier S. Buyer-supplier behavior model • The objective functional of supplier S until the buyer B successfully innovates is given by:

  29. where, is the net gain in demand for firm B’s product; denotes the unit production cost of the firm B for achieving successful innovation; denotes the cost of the R&D effort of firm B; denotes the innovation rate by firm B. Buyer-supplier behavior model • The objective functional of buyer B is the expected gain from innovation, given by:

  30. An institutional analysis of supply chain innovations in global marketing channels • background What might account for the relative ease of implementing supply chain innovations among domestic U.S. partners and for the relative difficulty of deploying the same technology among global distribution partners?

  31. A model of supply chain innovation in global marketing channels

  32. Supply chain innovations • Supply chain innovations combine developments in information and related technologies with new logistics and marketing procedures to improve operational efficiency and enhance service effectiveness. • Innovations include ECR (efficient consumer response), CR (continuous replenishment), automated ordering utilizing scanner data, and many other technology-enhanced processes and procedures in the out-bound supply chain. • Point-of-sale (POS), CR system transform a traditional “push” distribution channel into a demand “pull” system.

  33. POS

  34. A model of supply chain innovation in global marketing channels

  35. Institutional arrangements • an efficient new IA enables the parties not only to maximize the economic value from an innovation but also to equitably share the joint profits that are generated. • Effective measurement is critical for contract feasibility since parties must be able to measure costs incurred and value received. • a distributor might own and operate the centralized warehouse while the retail chain might be the most logical owner–investor for a different problematic asset, such as the truck fleet, associated with the joint POS/CR system. • The IA utility of norms such as information sharing (willingness to exchange proprietary information), flexibility (willingness to adapt procedures), and solidarity (desire to maintain relationship)

  36. A model of supply chain innovation in global marketing channels

  37. Institutional environment • Regulative element refers to the demands of governments and regulatory bodies to comply with laws and other requirements. two basic mechanisms of imposition and inducement such as subsidies, tax, tariff, or other concessions. • Normative element refers to a society’s values and norms that direct behavior through social obligations and expectations through the mechanisms of authorizing and acquisition. Authorizing involves the development of socially appropriate codes of conduct while acquisition refers to mimicking the behaviors of other firms that are deemed legitimate.

  38. continued • Cultural–cognitive element refers to the socially mediated construction of a common framework of meaning that provides templates and scripts for action. two mechanisms, imprinting and bypassing . Imprinting is organizational inertia where past practices are sacrosanct . bypassing occurs where actors are so highly socialized into their role expectations that habitualized responses bypass formal organizational controls.

  39. Global exchange problems • The specific characteristics of a global exchange may require such new investments and activities that the partners will require substantial contract, ownership, and social safeguards before adopting the innovation. • a global channel may suffer from a fragile IE in terms of regulatory, normative, and cultural–cognitive elements that prohibit the parties from developing a new IA.

  40. Problems • Regulatory problems in global channels China underdeveloped infrastructure; government regulations; regional protectionism; FTZS ;tax • Normative problems in global channels Japan respect traditional practices; strong loyalty • Cognitive-cultural problems in global channels America individualism ;low-power; weak uncertainty avoidance Japan collectivist; high-power ;strong uncertainty avoidance China guanxi and personal connection WTO will make china’s IE become gradually more supportive of supply chain innovations.

  41. The intersection of research areas • Supply chain management • Strategy management • Marketing management • Institution • E-commerce • any other business and management areas MANAGEMENT SCIENCE SPECIAL ISSUES Marketing and Operations Management Interfaces and Coordination April, 2004 E-Business and Management Science October and November, 2003

  42. References • 1. Barney, J. B. (1991). Firm resources and sustained competitive advantage. Journal of Management, 17(1), 99– 120. • 2. Bowersox, D. J., Closs, D. J., & Stank, T. P. (1999). 21st century logistics: Making supply chain integration a reality. Oak Brook, IL: Council of Logistics Management. • 3. Carson, S., Devinney, T., Dowling, G., & John, G. (1999). Understanding institutional designs within marketing value systems. Journal of Marketing, 63, 115– 130 (special issue). • 4. Center for Lean Business Management (CLBM) (2003). Online Reverse Auctions: Be Careful! The Center for Lean Business Management, LLC web site. Available at http://www.theclbm.com/research.html and http:// www.theclbm.com/ora/ora_slides.pdf. • 5. Daniel C. Bello, Ritu Lohtia , & Viinta Sangtani. An institutional analysis of supply chain innovations in global marketing channels. Industrial Marketing Management. 33(1), 57-64. • 6. David J. Closs, Diane A. Mollenkopf, A global supply chain framework. Industrial Marketing Management. 33(1), 37-44. • 7. Dyer, J. H., Cho, D. S., & Chu, W. (1998). Strategic supplier segmentation: The next ‘‘best practice’’ in supply chain management. California Management Review, 40(2), 57– 77. • 8. Dyer, J., & Nobeoka, K. (2000). Creating and managing a high-performance knowledge sharing network: The Toyota case. Strategic Management Journal, 21, 345–367. • 9. Emiliani, M. (2000). Business-to-business online auctions: Key issues for purchasing process improvement. Supply Chain Management, 5(4), 176– 186. • 10. Gerard P. Cachon. (2002). Supply chain coordination with contracts. Available at http://opim. wharton. Upenn.edu/~cachon.

  43. Continued(1) • 11. Gerard P. Cachon. (2003). Game theory in supply chain analysis. Available at http://opim. wharton. Upenn.edu/~cachon. • 12.Grewal, R., & Dharwadkar, R. (2002, July). The role of institutional environment in marketing channels. Journal of Marketing, 66, 82–97. • 13. Hult, G. T. M. (1998). Managing the international strategic sourcing function as a market-driven organizational learning system. Decision Sciences, 29(1), 193–216. • 14. Hult, G. T. M., Hurley, R. F., Giunipero, L. C., & Nichols Jr., E. L. (2000). Organizational learning in global purchasing: A model and test of internal users and corporate buyers. Decision Sciences, 31(2), 293–325. • 15. Hult, G. T. M., & Ketchen Jr., D. J. (2001). Does market orientation matter?: A test of the relationship between positional advantage and performance. Strategic Management Journal, 22(9), 899– 906. • 16. Hult, G. T. M., Ketchen Jr., D. J., & Nichols Jr., E. L. (2002). An examination of cultural competitiveness and order fulfillment cycle time within supply chains. Academy of Management Journal, 45(3), 577– 586. • 17. Hult, G. T. M., Ketchen Jr., D. J., & Nichols Jr., E. L. (2003). Organizational learning as a strategic resource in supply management. Journal of Operations Management. • 18. Hult, G. T. M., Ketchen Jr., D. J., & Slater, S. F. (2003). Information processing, knowledge development, and strategic supply chain performance. Academy of Management Journal. • 19. Hult, G. T. M. (2004). Global supply chain management: An integration of scholarly thoughts. Industrial Marketing Management. 33(1), 3-5. • 20. Jiang, B. (2002). How international firms are coping with supply chain issues in China. Supply Chain Management: An International Journal, 7(4), 184–188.

  44. Continued(2) • 21. Jap, S. (2001, July). The impact of online, reverse auctions on buyer –supplier relationships (Working Paper). Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA. Available at http://ecommerce.mit.edu/papers/ERF/ERF133.pdf. • 22. Jiang, B., & Prater, E. (2002). Distribution and logistics development in China: The revolution has begun. International Journal of Physical Distribution and Logistics Management, 32(9), 783–798. • 23. John T. Mentaer, Daniel J. Flint, & Tomas M. Hult. (2001). Logistics service quality as a segment-customized process. 65, 82-104. • 24. John T. Mentaer, Matthew B. Myers & Mee-Shew Cheung. Global market segmentation for logistics services. Industrial Marketing Management. 33(1), 15-20. • 25. Kristiaan Helsen, Kamel Jedidi, & Wayne S. desarbo. (1993). A new approach to country Segmentation Utilizing Multinational Diffusion Patterns. 57, 60-71. • 26. Kyj, L. S., & Kyj, M. J. (1994). Customer service: Product differentiation in international markets. International Journal of Physical Distribution and Logistics Management, 24(4), 41–50. • 27. Masaaki Kotabe, Janet Y. Murray. Global sourcing strategy and sustainable competitive advantage. Industrial Marketing Management. 33(1), 7-14. • 28. Mentzer, J. T., Flint, D. J., & Hult, G. T. M. (2001, October). Logistics service quality as a segment customized process. Journal of Marketing, 65, 82– 104. • 29. M. L. Emiliani. Sourcing in the global aerospace supply chain using online reverse auctions. Industrial Marketing Management. 33(1), 65-72. • 30. Morash, E. A., Droge, C. L. M., & Vickery, S. K. (1996). Strategic logistics capabilities for competitive advantage and firm success. Journal of Business Logistics, 17(1), 1 –22.

  45. Continued(3) • 31. Morash, E. A., & Lynch, D. F. (2002). Public policy and global supply chain capabilities and performance: A resource-based view. Journal of International Marketing, 10(1), 25–51. • 32. Murphy, P. R., & Daley, J. M. (1994). A framework for applying logistical segmentation. International Journal of Physical Distribution and Logistics Management, 24(10), 13– 20. • 33. Murray, J. Y., Kotabe, M., & Wildt, A. R. (1995). Strategic and financial performance implications of global sourcing strategy: A contingency analysis. Journal of International Business Studies, 26(First Quarter), 181– 202. • 34. Nix, N. W. (2001). Supply chain management in the global environment. In J. T. Mentzer (Ed.), Supply chain management ( pp. 27– 58). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. • 35. Ram Narasimhan, Santosh Mahapatra. Decision models in global supply chain management. Industrial Marketing Management. 33(1), 21-27. • 36. Rinehart, L. M., Bixby Cooper, M., & Wagenheim, G. D. (1989, Winter). Furthering the integration of marketing and logistics through customer service. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 17, 63– 72. • 37. Robert B. Handfield & Ernest L. Nichols Jr. Key issues in global supply base management. Industrial Marketing Management. 33(1), 29-35. • 38. Ruben Vrijhoef, Lauri Koskela. (2000). The four roles of supply chain management in construction. European Journal of Purchasing & Supply Management. 6, 169-178. • 39. Sanchez, R. (1999). Modular architecture in the marketing process. Journal of Marketing, 63, 92– 111 (Special Issue). • 40. Sharma, A., Grewal, D., & Levy, M. (1995). The customer satisfaction/logistics interface. Journal of Business Logistics, 16(2), 1 – 22. • 41. Simon Croom, Pietro Romano, &Mihalis Giannakis. (2000). Supply chain management: an analytical framework for critica literature review. European Journal of Purchasing & Supply Management. 6, 67-83. • 42. Stank, T. P., Keller, S. B., & Closs, D. J. (2001). Performance benefits of supply chain logistical integration. Transportation Journal, 41(2/3), 32– 46. • 43. Teece, D. J., Pisano, G., & Shuen, A. (1997). Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, 18(7), 509–533.

  46. Questions ? we can discuss and conquer them together!!!

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