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Lecture 3. Supply Chain Management

Lecture 3. Supply Chain Management. Informatics in Logistics Management. Lecturer: Prof. Anatoly Sachenko. Lecture Overview. Definitions SCM Evolution - Six major movements Problems and Activities/functions SCM Operations – General and Functional Structure

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Lecture 3. Supply Chain Management

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  1. Lecture 3. Supply Chain Management Informatics in Logistics Management Lecturer: Prof. Anatoly Sachenko

  2. Lecture Overview • Definitions • SCM Evolution - Six major movements • Problems and Activities/functions • SCM Operations – General and Functional Structure • Supply Chain business process integration • Key critical supply business processes • Supply chain sustainability • Supply chain value and improving

  3. Definition • Harland, 1996-Supply chain management (SCM) is the management of a network of interconnected businesses involved in the ultimate provision of product and service packages required by customers • It’s includes all activities associated with the flow and transformation of goods and services from raw materials stage to the end user (the customer), • as well as the associated information flows

  4. Definitions • According to the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals(CSCMP), SCM encompasses the planning and management of all activities involved in sourcing, procurement, conversion, and logistics management • It also includes the crucial components of coordination and collaboration with channel partners, which can be suppliers, intermediaries, third-party service providers, and customers • In essence, SCM integrates supply and demand management within and across companies • More recently, the loosely coupled, self-organizing network of businesses that cooperate to provide product and service offerings has been called the Extended Enterprise

  5. Information Distributors Producers Suppliers Customers Finished goods, end products and services Package and delivery Materials, parts, sub-assemblies, and services Total satisfaction with quality, price, delivery, and service Products and Services Products and Services Products and Services Inventory Inventory Inventory Cash SCM - Structure

  6. SCM Evolution – Creation and Integration Eras • 1. creation era • early 1980s - a term SCM was first coined in U.S. industry • SCM concept was of great importance in early 20th century, especially with the creation of assembly line • 2. integration era • It highlighted with the development of EDI in the 1960s • developed through the 1990s by ERP introduction • developed into the 21st century with the expansion of internet-based collaborative systems • This era is characterized by both increasing value-adding and cost reductions through integration

  7. SCM Evolution – Globalization and Specialization(Phase 1) Eras • 3. globalization era • In the late 1980s many organizations started to integrate global sources into its core business, and • Expand the SC over national boundaries with the goal of increasing competitive advantage, value-adding, and reducing costs through global sourcing • 4. specialization era— phase one: outsourced manufacturing and distribution • In the 1990s, industries began to focus on “core competencies” and adopted a specialization model • Companies abandoned vertical integration, sold off non-core operations, and outsourced those functions to other companies distributing management across specialized supply chain partnerships

  8. SCM Evolution – Specialization and SCM 2.0 Eras • 5. specialization era-phase2: SCM as a service • Outsourced technology hosting for SC solutions debuted in late 1990s and used in transportation and collaboration • It progressed from Application Service Provider from ‘98 through ‘03 to On-Demand,2003-06 to the currently in focus today SW as a Service (SaaS) model • 6. supply chain management 2.0 (SCM 2.0) • It was coined to describe globalization and specialization as well as the evolution of processes & methods • Web 2.0 is a trend in of WWW use to increase creativity, info sharing, and collaboration among users, and help navigate the vast amount of info available on the Web

  9. Problems addressed by SCM • Distribution Network Configuration: number, location of suppliers, production facilities, distribution centers, warehouses and customers • Distribution Strategy: questions of operating control, delivery scheme, mode and control of transportation • Trade-Offs in Logistical Activities: The above logistical activities must be well planned(using a system approach) and coordinated to achieve the lowest total logistics cost • Information: Integration of processes through SC to share valuable info • Inventory Management: Quantity and location of inventory • Cash-Flow: Arranging the payment terms and methodologies for exchanging funds

  10. Activities/functions • Supply chain management is a cross-function approach including managing the movement of raw materials into an organization, certain aspects of the internal processing of materials into finished goods, and the movement of finished goods out of the organization and toward the end-consumer • As organizations strive to focus on core competencies and becoming more flexible, they reduce their ownership of raw materials sources and distribution channels • These functions are increasingly being outsourced to other entities that can perform the activities better or more cost effectively

  11. Activities/functions (cont-d) • Several models have been proposed for understanding the activities required to manage material movements across organizational and functional boundaries • The most common is the SCM Model proposed by the Global Supply Chain Forum (GSCF) • Supply chain activities can be grouped into strategic, tactical, and operationallevels ( see next four slides)

  12. Activities/functions - Strategic level • Strategic network optimization • Strategic partnerships with suppliers, distributors, and customers, creating communication channels for critical info and operational improvements • Product life cycle management, so that new and existing products can be optimally integrated into SC • Information technology chain operations • Where-to-make and make-buy decisions • Aligning overall organizational strategy with supply strategy • It is for long term and needs resource commitment

  13. Activities/functions - Tactical level • Sourcing contracts and other purchasing decisions • Production decisions, including contracting, scheduling, and planning process definition • Inventory decisions, including quantity, location, and quality of inventory • Transportation strategy, including frequency, routes, and contracting • Benchmarking of all operations against competitors and implementation of best practices throughout the enterprise • Milestone payments • Focus on customer demand and Habits

  14. Activities/functions - Operational level • Daily production and distribution planning, including all nodes in the supply chain. • Production scheduling for each manufacturing facility in the supply chain (minute by minute). • Demand planning and forecasting, coordinating the demand forecast of all customers and sharing the forecast with all suppliers. • Sourcing planning, including current inventory and forecast demand, in collaboration with all suppliers. • Inbound operations, including transportation from suppliers and receiving inventory.

  15. Operational level (cont-d) • Production operations, including the consumption of materials and flow of finished goods • Outbound operations, including all fulfillment activities, warehousing and transportation to customers • Order promising, accounting for all constraints in the supply chain, including all suppliers, manufacturing facilities, distribution centers, and other customers • From production level to supply level accounting all transit damage cases & arrange to settlement at customer level by maintaining company loss through insurance company

  16. SCM Operations – Inbound and Outbound Logistics

  17. SCM Operations – Functional Structure

  18. Supply Chain business process integration • Successful SCM requires a change from managing individual functions to integrating activities into key supply chain processes • Example scenario: the purchasing department places orders as requirements become known • The marketing department, responding to customer demand, communicates with several distributors and retailers as it attempts to determine ways to satisfy this demand • Info shared between supply chain partners can only be fully leveraged through process integration

  19. Supply Chain business process integration • Supply chain business process integration involves collaborative work between buyers and suppliers, joint product development, common systems and shared information • Operating an integrated supply chain requires a continuous information flow • However, in many companies, management has reached the conclusion that optimizing the product flows cannot be accomplished without implementing a process approach to the business

  20. Key Supply Chain processes • Customer relationship management • Customer service management • Demand management style • Order fulfillment • Manufacturing flow management • Supplier relationship management • Product development and commercialization • Returns management

  21. Key critical supply business processes • Customer service management • Procurement • Product development and commercialization • Manufacturing flow management/support • Physical distribution • Outsourcing/partnerships • Performance measurement • Warehousing management

  22. a) Customer service management process • Customer Relationship Management concerns the relationship between the organization and its customers • Customer service is the source of customer info • It also provides the customer with real-time info on scheduling and product availability through interfaces with company's production and distribution operations • Successful organizations use the following steps • determine mutually satisfying goals for organization and customers • establish and maintain customer rapport • produce positive feelings in the organization and the customers

  23. b) Procurement process • Strategic plans are drawn up with suppliers to support the manufacturing flow management process and the development of new products • In firms where operations extend globally, sourcing should be managed on a global basis • The desired outcome is a win-win relationship where both parties benefit, and a reduction in time required for the design cycle and product development • Purchasing function develops rapid communication systems, such as EDI and Internet linkage to convey possible requirements more rapidly • Activities related to obtaining products and materials from outside suppliers involve resource planning, supply sourcing, negotiation, order placement, inbound transportation, storage, handling and quality assurance

  24. c) Product development and commercialization • Customers and suppliers must be integrated into the product development process to reduce time to market • As product life cycles shorten, the appropriate products must be developed and successfully launched with ever shorter time-schedules to remain competitive • Managers of the product development and commercialization process must: • coordinate with customer relationship management to identify customer-articulated needs; • select materials and suppliers in conjunction with procurement, and • develop production technology in manufacturing flow to manufacture and integrate into the best supply chain flow for the product/market combination.

  25. d) Manufacturing flow management process • The manufacturing process produces and supplies products to the distributors based on past forecasts • Manufacturing processes must be flexible to respond to market changes and accommodate mass customization • Orders are processes operating on a JIT basis • Changes in manufacturing flow process lead to shorter cycle and improved efficiency to meet customer demand • Activities related to planning, scheduling and supporting manufacturing operations, such as work-in-process storage, handling, transportation, and max flexibility

  26. e) Physical distribution • This concerns movement of a finished product/service to customers • In physical distribution, the customer is the final destination of a marketing channel, and • the availability of the product/service is a vital part of each channel participant's marketing effort • It is also through the physical distribution process that the time and space of customer service become an integral part of marketing, • thus it links a marketing channel with its customers

  27. f) Outsourcing/partnerships • It’s also outsourcing of services that traditionally have been provided in-house • Logic of this trend is that the company will increasingly focus on those activities in the value chain where it has a distinctive advantage, and outsource everything else • This movement has been particularly evident in logistics where the provision of transport, warehousing and inventory control is increasingly subcontracted to specialists • Also, managing and controlling this network of partners and suppliers requires a blend of both central and local involvement • Hence, strategic decisions need to be taken centrally, with the monitoring and control of supplier performance and day-to-day liaison with logistics partners

  28. g) Performance measurement • Experts found a strong relationship from the largest arcs of supplier and customer integration to market share and profitability • Taking advantage of supplier capabilities and emphasizing a long-term SC perspective in customer relationships can both be correlated with firm performance • As logistics competency becomes a more critical factor in creating and maintaining competitive advantage, logistics measurement becomes increasingly important because the difference between profitable and unprofitable operations becomes more narrow

  29. g) Performance measurement • According to experts, internal measures are generally collected and analyzed by the firm including • Cost • Customer Service • Productivity measures • Asset measurement, and • Quality • External performance measurement is examined through customer perception measures and "best practice" benchmarking, and includes: • 1) customer perception measurement, and • 2) best practice benchmarking

  30. h) Warehousing management • As a case of reducing company cost & expenses, warehousing management is carrying the valuable role against operations • In case of perfect storing & office with all convenient facilities in company level, reducing manpower cost, dispatching authority, loading & unloading facilities with proper area, area for service station, stock management system etc. • Components of SCM are as follows: • 1. Standardization • 2. Postponement • 3.Customization

  31. Components of SCM management integration - Management Components • The SCM components are the third element of the four-square circulation framework • The level of integration and management of a business process link is a function of the number and level, ranging from low to high, of components added to the link • Consequently, adding more management components or increasing the level of each component can increase the level of integration of the business process link

  32. SCM Management Components • Planning and control • Work structure • Organization structure • Product flow facility structure • Information flow facility structure • Management methods • Power and leadership structure • Risk and reward structure • Culture and attitude

  33. Supply chain sustainability • SC sustainability is a business issue affecting an organization’s SC or logistics network and is frequently quantified by comparison with SECHratings • SECH ratings are defined as social, ethical, cultural and health footprint • Consumers have become more aware of the environmental impact of their purchases and companies’ SECH ratings and, along with non-governmental organizations(NGOs), are setting the agenda for transitions to organically-grown foods and locally-produced goods that support independent and small businesses

  34. Three Tiers of Sustainability • In 2008 a ranking system was produced for the different levels of sustainability being achieved by organizations • This was called the Three Tiers of Sustainability: • Tier 1: Getting the basics right • Tier 2: Learning to think sustainably • Tier 3: The science of sustainability

  35. Three Tiers of Sustainability • Tier 1: Getting the basics right • This is the base level and is the stage in which the majority of organizations are at • Companies employ simple measures such as switching lights and PCs off when left idle, recycling paper, and using greener forms of travel with the purpose of reducing the day-to-day carbon footprint • Some companies also employ self-service technologies such as centralized procurement and teleconferencing

  36. Three Tiers of Sustainability • Tier 2: Learning to think sustainably • This is the second level, where companies begin to realize the need to embed sustainability into supply chain operations • Companies tend to achieve this level when they assess their impact across a local range of operations • In terms of SC, this could involve supplier management, product design, manufacturing rationalization, and distribution optimization

  37. Three Tiers of Sustainability • Tier 3: The science of sustainability • It uses auditing and benchmarks to provide a framework for governing sustainable SC operations • This gives clarity around the environmental impact of adjustments to SC agility, flexibility, and cost in the SC network • Moving towards this level means being driven by the current climate (in which companies recognize cost savings through green operations as being significant) as well as pushing emerging regulations and standards at both an industry and governmental level

  38. Supply chain systems and value • Supply chain systems configure value for those that organize the networks • Value is the additional revenue over and above the costs of building the network • Co-creating value and sharing the benefits appropriately to encourage effective articipation is a key challenge for any supply system • Tony Hines defines value as follows: “Ultimately it is the customer who pays the price for service delivered that confirms value and not the producer who simply adds cost until that point”

  39. Improving the Supply Chain Through IT • Centralized coordination of information flows • Integration of transportation, distribution, ordering, and production • Direct access to domestic and global transportation and distribution channels • Locating and tracking the movement of every item in the supply chain

  40. Improving the Supply Chain Through IT • Consolidation of purchasing from all suppliers • Intercompany and intercompany information access • Data interchange • Data acquisition at the point of origin and point of sale • Instantaneous updating of inventory levels

  41. Global supply chain management • Global SC pose challenges regarding quantity and value: • Supply and value chain trends • Globalization • Increased cross border sourcing • Collaboration for parts of value chain with low-cost providers • Shared service centers for logistical and administrative functions • Increasingly global operations, which require increasingly global coordination and planning • Complex problems involve also midsized companies to an increasing degree

  42. References • Hines, T. 2004. Supply chain strategies: Customer driven and customer focused. Oxford: Elsevier.

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