1 / 23

FCPC Symposium

FCPC Symposium. Supply Chain Think Tank Summaries April 19, 2012. What action can you take?. Let’s continue the discussion! Visit www.gpsqtc.com/fcpc Summary of common issues across Supply Chain functions (across all Think Tank groups) Summary of Collaborative Opportunities

tegan
Download Presentation

FCPC Symposium

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. FCPC Symposium Supply Chain Think Tank Summaries April 19, 2012

  2. What action can you take? Let’s continue the discussion! Visit www.gpsqtc.com/fcpc • Summary of common issues across Supply Chain functions (across all Think Tank groups) • Summary of Collaborative Opportunities • Examples of actions and results in various Food and Consumer Products companies

  3. Common Issues across all groups • Cost management • Impacts to cost and/or financial productivity • Information visibility and demand anticipation • Access to upstream and downstream information that helps anticipate and absorb demand changes • Supply chain strategy and planning • Supply chain structure and planning decisions that match supply to demand • Performance measurement and information standardization • Understanding of performance and key supply chain information through existence (or lack) of Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) or information standards • Supply chain execution conflicts/mismatches • Anything that prevents the smooth flow of products/transactions within and between functions

  4. Collaborative Opportunities • Effort to share planning data (especially downstream sales and demand data) to anticipate demand spikes and improve planning accuracy • Cooperative effort to jointly understand and improve supplier/customer factories – will lead to win/win savings, aligned expectations, KPI commonality, information standardization, etc. • Jointly examine failures in supply chain execution processes to catch and solve defects within and across departments/functions • Supply chain strategy sessions in which supplier/customer jointly make decisions on site locations, manufacturing and inventory strategies, use of third parties, etc. • Define cross-supply chain KPIs and performance management to optimize the extended supply chain

  5. Colour coded affinity of common issues across all bullet points

  6. Common Issues across all groups • Cost management in a productivity-focused environment • Information visibility and demand anticipation • Supply chain strategy and planning • Performance measurement and information standardization • Supply chain execution conflicts/mismatches

  7. Logistics • Order Size, Frequency, Supplier Mgmt. Relationships, Velocity, Lead Time, Customer Expectations • Lack of Visibility to Forward Demand • Cost of Fuel • Labour • Driver Shortages • Regulations

  8. Logistics cont. • Truck Capacity • Asset Availability • Cost of Real Estate • Core Business Hours – Now 24/7 • Network Design Challenges • Ability to Respond – 3PL • OTR vs. Intermodal • Delivery Performance/Carrier Metrics • Accessorial Charges

  9. Logistics cont. • Customer Base Expansion • Customer Fleet Mgmt. – Cost • Push vs. Pull – Over Production from Plants • In-Bound Unloading Schedules • Food Safety • Emergency Response Plan • Food Security • Cross-Border Regulations & Inspections • Package Design

  10. Manufacturing • Forecast accuracy • Inventory Carrying Cost • Production Costs • Procurement • Transportation • Capitol expenditures for capacity • Cost of poor Quality • Scrap • Rework • Downtime • Maintenance costs and overhead

  11. Manufacturing cont. • Throughput Efficiency • Lack of common production metrics across the supply chain • Skilled labour shortage • Packaging costs • Design costs • Especially running design changes

  12. Warehouse • Retail Ready Packaging • What is the true definition • How will this affect our future • Forecasting models Vs Plant batch/run sizes • Basic fact we are always in the middle between sales and production • Increasing demand in Customer freshness requirements • SKU rationalization opportunities

  13. Warehouse cont. • Lack of Industry Standards in Retail Demands • Pack size • Order size • ASN requirements • Compliance fees • 24/7 coverage • Labeling • Box Coding • Complex shipping specs and delivery requirements • Customer Pick-up

  14. “Inside the Warehouse” • Skilled labour • Automate vs. Manual vs. Flexibility vs. Cost • How do we determine the best solution • Operational efficiency • Temperature controlled cost optimization • Maintenance costs • Cases per hour • Cost per case • Pick accuracy • Damage • LIFO , FIFO and FEFO (First Expired First Out) how to organize

  15. “Inside the Warehouse” cont. • Destruction Costs • Basic understanding that Warehousing is moving from a “cost of doing business” to “need to optimize” • Consolidating opportunities, when and how. • Distribution Network Optimization • Possibilities to share resources • Cost and over head is shouldered individually • Owning vs Partnering vs Multi-partner vs 3rd Party

  16. Customer Service #1 • Anything that prevents the smooth flow of products/orders • Outcome of any discrepancies caused by interruptions in product/order flow (i.e. fines) • *Data integrity (general) • *Retailer fines process more aggressive and starting to involve customer service – requires new skills in customer service • Pricing mismatches (internal and external) • Mismatch of information between sales, category managers, and customers regarding pricing, timelines, new product introductions * High importance

  17. Customer Service #1 cont. • Product availability and availability date – mix of attendees have ATP. One-offs and small shortages particular issue. Often don’t know when product is short until after should have shipped • Differences between customer forecasts and what was ordered leads to product allocations • Booking customer appointments to deliver at customer. Some companies leave that task to carriers

  18. Customer Service #1 cont. • Expediting due to: • Customer replenishment setup • Forecasting errors • Deduction management (difference between what’s received vs. what was ordered • Reconciliation of all returns (store, distributor/DC) for various reasons (discontinuation, past shelf life, seasonal, quality, damage, pick error) • Trade funds deduction vs. payment by check for invoices • Productivity major focus area

  19. Customer Service #2 • Scope of the discussion: • Order-to-Delivery • Who is the customer? • Retailers • With respect to the above, what are manufacturers biggest pain points?

  20. Customer Service #2 con’t • Brainstorm output unfiltered: • Lack of technology at retailers • i.e. Dock Scheduling Softward • Warehouse capacity • Number of doors • Warehouse space • Incremental charges • Off-loading • Detention

  21. Customer Service #2 con’t • Brainstorm output unfiltered (Con’t): • Preferred carriers • Lack of communicationwithin and across retailer functions • i.e. Supply Chain vs. Merchandising • Lack of communication across manufacturer functions • i.e. Sales vs. Supply Chain • Manufacturers SC resources act as brokers, can influence but have no authority

  22. Customer Service #2 con’t • Brainstorm output unfiltered (Con’t): • Within manufacturers organization: • Lack of Sales visibility/accountability to Supply Chain needs • Conflicting reward systems across functions (Sales vs. Supply Chain) • Reactive efforts saps time of SC resources • Prevents value-add customer service • Lack of common measures of success across trading partners (Sales/Marketing/Manufacturing/Distribution)

  23. Customer Service #2 con’t • Summary • Lack of common success measures across trading partners (functions) • Lack of alignment of reward systems across functions • Lack of communication • Across manufacturers functions • Across and within retailer functions • Leads to inefficient use of manufacturer resources and less effective processes to serve the customer (retailer)

More Related