1 / 35

University Of Finance & Administration LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [ NA_LS ]

University Of Finance & Administration LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [ NA_LS ]. Jiri Amler, M.A. 19447@mail.vsfs.cz. LECTURE FRAMEWORK. ENGLISH programme (winter term 2013) Integrated logistics Logistics chains in manufacturing Suply chain, decoupling points

reece
Download Presentation

University Of Finance & Administration LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [ NA_LS ]

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. University Of Finance & Administration LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS] Jiri Amler, M.A. 19447@mail.vsfs.cz

  2. LECTURE FRAMEWORK ENGLISH programme (winter term 2013) • Integrated logistics • Logistics chains in manufacturing • Suply chain, decoupling points • Logistics in new product development • Production systems and their support • Logistics in innovation, Gemba Kaizen Within consultation: practical discussions on topical economical issues INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  3. LITERATURE Alan Rushton, Phil Croucher, Peter Baker The Handbook of Logistics and Distribution Kogan Page Ltd., London 2010 ISBN: 0-74974669-2 Andre Langevin, Diane Riopel Logistics System: Design and Optimization Springer Science+Business Media, New York, 2010 ISBN: 0-38724971-0 Martin Christopher Logistics and Suply Chain Management 3-rd Edition, Pearson education Ltd., London, 2005 ISBN-13: 978-0-273-68176-2 3. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  4. INTEGRATED LOGISTICS • Internal integration – integration of procurement and supply with the production sequences and final product distribution • External integration – subsequent linkage with suppliers and distribution network up to the final customer =Horizontal dimension of integration 4. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS] INTERNATIONAL

  5. INTEGRATED LOGISTICS • Integration and logistic harmonization of production with development (R&D), strategy making and marketing • Interlinkage of enterprize functions from operational to strategic level =Vertical dimension of integration Successfull accord of both levels with effect of time, quality and cost improvement = World Class Logistics 5. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS] INTERNATIONAL

  6. INTEGRATED LOGISTICS CHAIN Main objective: • ultimate utilization of synergic effects that could be possibly acquired within integrated management • leads to even more linked vertical and horizontal integration of material flow management 6. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGIOSTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  7. INTEGRATED LOGISTICS CHAIN • = Development & evolutional stages of integrated logistics Traditional with discontinual flow – „push“ Conventional with continual flow – „pull“ Conventional with synchronised flow – „balanced“ 7. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  8. INTEGRATED LOGISTICS - PUSH • Traditional principle with discontinual flows of material – PUSH principle – the demand is satisfied from the FG warehouse, through the serial flow of information • Large order quantity of RM and materials – savings through price volatility or quantity rabate • Large lots production • The sending party provides the quantity it made in time that suites itself =Pushes the whole lot 8. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS] INTERNATIONAL

  9. INTEGRATED LOGISTICS - PULL • Principle with continual flows of material – PULL principle – flexibility is secured by the production itself, through serial flow of information • Lack of FG warehouse, the warehouse just replenishes the immediate demand (JIT or JIC) • The sending party is supplying only after the receiving party indicates its readiness to use the supply =Pulls only the needed quantity Neccessity to insert the consolidation and sortation in order to make transport effective. 9. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS] INTERNATIONAL

  10. INTEGRATED LOGISTICS - SYNCRO • Principle enabling the syncronization of flows through external balancing element – balanced – the synchronizing element perceives the real-time information of the material and FG • Simulation methods of prediction • The output of production is managed through the paralel flow of information 10. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS] INTERNATIONAL

  11. SUPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT - definition • What is Suply Chain Management? = integration of corporate value adding processes from end user to the initial supplier • Integrated follow-up of material flows, logistics and acquisition information, financial means and legal rights in entire adding value chain • Search for those relationships in horizontal dimension that provide highest possible values with lowest possible costs 11. MEZINÁRODNÍ OBCHODNÍ VZTAHY [MOV] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  12. Logistics – strategic management of integrated chainsSCM – process management of logistics and value-creating chains SUPPLY CHAIN MNGMNT – interfunctional process SC configuration – strtg planning, optimization SC planning – supl.mngm, prod. plan, dispon. SC operating – procuremnt, prod. transp. mngm 12. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  13. SCM – „Planning Rope“ • Chain effects may cause excesses – long lead time require sales predictions – more frequent predictions drag time and become less accurate – appearance of chaotic occurances = longer lead time • Solution – shorten time between demand indication and order fulfillment – speed-up of all parts of chain • Or speed-up of turn-over, assuming the faster payments, improved cash flow 13. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  14. SCM – „Bull Whip“ • Enforcement effect – sales increase by 10% = production capacity increase by 40% and subsequent 30% reduction = mid-term volatility • Reason? chain delay in information provision on each echelon - retail, wholesale, distribution center etc. • Seasonal sales disproportions • Solution – speed-up of all informational flows, max simplification, max reduction of assets and reserves, complex management and goal orientation 14. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  15. SCM – Support Systems • Material requirements planning (MRP) and Manufacturing resources planning (MRPII) - push principle • MRP – master production schedule, bill of reqirements, opening stock • MRPII – extention by maintanance, cost account, stock and sales orders, procurement and personal level • DRP and DRPII – analogic counterpart on distribution part • ERP – Enterprise Resources Planning – SAP R/3 15. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  16. SCM – Software requirements • SCM system – mid / long term planning, decision simulation, on horizontal structure • Supply Chain Collaboration – full enclosure of supplier and sub-suppliers processes, from predictions to delivery • Suply Chain Event Management – management of unpredictable factors, based on tracing and tracking, databasis of price change factors etc. virtual stock creation • In general – SW with realistic view in real-time 16. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  17. DECOUPLING POINTS • Ideal: logistics chain managed as one unit • More often: chain is managed acc. to specifics and rules of particular sectors • Usual division to inbound (procurement and production) and outbound (distribution) sectors • Decoupling point is located on the frontier of the two sectors 17. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  18. DECOUPLING POINTS • Division: according to the type of management – ruled by the orders or by the plans and predictions • Place where the inventory necessary for order fulfilment is located – keypoint of flexibilty and customization of service • Movement of the point changes the immediate risk • Place where independent demand turns dependent 18. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  19. DECOUPLING POINTS - Location • Distribution center, FG stock: on-stock production • Production, assembly stock: individualon-demand production or assembly • Supplier echelon: individualon-demand procurement and production • General – the stronger customer pressure and the shorter product life cycle, the deeper into chain decoupling point moves – the phases of „question marks, stars, milking cows and barking dogs“ 19. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  20. MAKE or BUY STRATEGY • Decision whether fulfil order from own capacity or using external supplier • Make: price is higher than costs, lack of transport feature, low risk in delivery, spare capacity, better quality, lack of offer • Buy: price is lower than costs, exhausted capacity, lack of rights and patents, lack of know-how, own production risks 20. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  21. PURCHASING / PROCUREMENT • Logistics function are integrated in purchasing market survey, dealing with suppliers and tangible operations • Creation of strategic alliance with supplier – long term stable relation, pro-active orientation of both, integration of key functions, clear price framework, mutual profit efficiency • Method: Collaborative planning, forecastind and replenishment (CPFR) 21. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  22. SUPPLIER TYPOLOGY • Rescuer • Solver • The one that knows better • Copycat • Statist • Allrounder • Diver • Lean 22. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  23. PURCHASE STRATEGY • Matching the company power with the supplier power (market strenght) • acc. to material classification (strategic, shortcoming, substitutional, conventional) • acc. to market analysis • acc. to portfolio matrix – active game, alernative search, consideration 23. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  24. PURCHASE STRATEGY continue • Synchronizing – pure direct JIT • Emancipative – JIT carried out through warehouse or DC on direct call • Consignment stock - at the buyer´s premises 24. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  25. LOGISTICS AND PRODUCTION Production typology • Continual – bulk producrion of one single or similar product, without stock • Linear – divided on product groups • Custom-made - individual low series 25. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  26. PRODUCTION SYSTEM • Factors determining the typology of units within the production system • arrangement of units • organization of their activity • complexity of the procedures • extent of production • level of mechanization and automation 26. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  27. PRODUCTION SYSTEM LAYOUT • Physical movement of materials is given by technological procedure and layout of particularproduction units • direction of movement • intensity of movement • frequency of movement 27. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  28. SANKEY DIAGRAM Inventory stock Wastes stock Finished goods stock Assembly 1 Assembly4 Assembly 3 Assembly 2 28. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  29. PRODUCTION MODEL • Workplace – cell – basic organizational unit • Production sector – set of cells, producing defined part of final product • Production unit – set of sectors, assembly line Workplace layout • Technological – group – similar technological character of equipment • Subject – concentration of all technologies needed to finish the product 29. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  30. LOGISTICS IN PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT Time compression, system adjustment along with product development • Concurrent Engineering • Sequential Engineering 30. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  31. SEQUENTIAL ENGINEERING • Main focus on individual performance • Each phase is planned and projected separately • Oneway dosage of information – heuristic attitude • Failure visible in phase of prototype • Time consuming preparation 31. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  32. CONCURRENT ENGINEERING • Multilayer paralel arrangement of activities • Overlaping sequences of planning • Multichannel communication • Failure elimination in preparatory phase • Many changes = risk • Time efficiency and time compression 32. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  33. INNOVATION & LOGISTICS • Innovation – any change in existing production system, product itself or equipment • Stages: rationalization, qualitative innovation, technological break-through – 9 grades with variable impact on the nature of product 33. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  34. INNOVATION & NEW PRODUCT • Material – the limiting factor in product development and enhancement • Aprox 100 000 materials of any nature – metals, glass & ceramics, polymers & elastomers, composites • Newly developed or invented material generates new product line almost automatically • Substitution of material in existing product – technological consideration, price, ecology, systemization of choice 34. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS [B_IB] LOGISTICS SYSTEMS [NA_LS]

  35. Thank you for your attention LOGISTICS SYSTEMS[NA_LS]

More Related