1 / 14

Planning Demand and Supply in a Supply Chain

Planning Demand and Supply in a Supply Chain. Manipulating the Demand Chapter 9. Matching Demand and Supply. Supply = Demand Supply < Demand => Lost revenue opportunity Supply > Demand => Inventory Manage Supply – Productions Management Manage Demand – Marketing.

Download Presentation

Planning Demand and Supply in a Supply Chain

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. Planning Demand and Supply in a Supply Chain Manipulating the Demand Chapter 9

  2. Matching Demand and Supply • Supply = Demand • Supply < Demand => Lost revenue opportunity • Supply > Demand => Inventory • Manage Supply – Productions Management • Manage Demand – Marketing

  3. Managing Predictable Variability with Supply Manage capacity • Time flexibility from workforce (OT and otherwise) • Seasonal workforce, agriculture workers • Subcontracting • Counter cyclical products: complementary products • Similar products with negatively correlated demands • Snow blowers and Lawn Mowers • AC pumps and Heater pumps • Flexible capacities/processes: Dedicated vs. flexible a d d a a,b, c,d c c b b Similar capabilities One super facility

  4. Managing Predictable Variability with Inventory • Component commonality • Remember fast food restaurant menus • Component commonality increase the benefit of postponement. • More on this later • Build seasonal inventory of predictable products in preseason • Nothing can be learnt by procrastinating • Keep inventory of predictable products in the downstream supply chain

  5. Managing Predictable Variability with PricingRevisit Red Tomato Tools • Manage demand with pricing • Original pricing: • Cost = $422,275, Revenue = $640,000, Profit=$217,725 • Demand increases from discounting • Market growth • Stealing market share from competitors • Forward buying • stealing your own market share from the future Discount of $1 in a period increases that period’s demand by 10% (market and market share growth) and moves 20% of next two months demand forward Can you gather this information –price sensitivity of the demand- easily? Does your company have this information?

  6. Off-Peak (January) Discount from $40 to $39 Cost = $421,915, Revenue = $643,400, Profit = $221,485

  7. Peak (April) Discount from $40 to $39 • Cost = $438,857, Revenue = $650,140, Profit = $211,283 • Discounting during peak increases the revenue • but decreases the profit!

  8. Demand Management • Pricing and Aggregate Planning must be done jointly • Factors affecting discount timing and their new values • Consumption: 100% increase in consumption instead of 10% increase • Forward buy, still 20% of the next two months • Product Margin: Impact of higher margin. What if discount from $31 to $30 instead of from $40 to $39.)

  9. January Discount: 100% increase in consumption, sale price = $40 ($39) Off peak discount: Cost = $456,750, Revenue = $699,560 Profit=$242,810

  10. Peak (April) Discount: 100% increase in consumption, sale price = $40 ($39) • Peak discount: Cost = $536,200, Revenue = $783,520 • Profit=$247,320

  11. Performance Under Different Scenarios Use rows in bold to explain Xmas discounts. The product, with less (forward buying/market growth) ratio, is discounted more. What gift should you buy on the special days (peak demand) when retailers supposedly give discounts? E.g.Think of flowers on valentine’s day. How about diamonds? For flowers, what is (forward buying/market growth) due to discounting? How about for diamonds? Needempirical data. What is available?

  12. Empirical Data: Who spends / How much on Valentine’s day • The average consumer spends $122.98 on 2008 Valentine’s Day, similar to $119.67 of 2007. Total US spending on Valentine’s Day is $17.02 B by 18+. • Spending • by gender • Men again dishes out the most in 2008, spending an average of $163.37 on gifts and cards, compared to an average of $84.72 spent by women. • by age • Adults: 25-34 spend $160.37. • Young adults: 18-24 spend $145.59. • Upper Middle age: 45-54 spend $117.91. • Lower Middle age: 35-44 spend $116.35. • Elderly: 55-64 spend $110.97. • Gifts • 56.8% of all consumers give a greeting card. • 48.2% plan a special night out. • 48.0% buy candy. • 35.9% buy flowers. • 12.3% give a gift card. • 11.8% buy clothing. • ??.?% buy diamonds • Source: National Retail Federation www.nrf.com Where is forward buy or market growth due to discounting?

  13. Factors Affecting Promotion Timing

  14. Summary • Optimality of peak vs. off-peak discounting depends on • Forward buy vs. Market growth

More Related