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Coordinated Product

Coordinated Product. Designing & Managing The Supply Chain Chapter 9 Jay Kang arrival123 @gmail.com. CASE: HP - DeskJet Printer Supply Chain. Introduction Hewlett-Packard was founded in 1939 with headquarters in Palo Alto, California

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Coordinated Product

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  1. Coordinated Product Designing & Managing The Supply Chain Chapter 9 Jay Kang arrival123@gmail.com

  2. CASE: HP - DeskJet Printer Supply Chain • Introduction • Hewlett-Packard was founded in 1939 with headquarters in Palo Alto, California • Hewlett-Packard introduced the DeskJet Printer in 1988 and it had become one of HP’s most successful products. • Inventory growth has tracked sales growth closely • European branches state that inventory levels needed to be raised even further to maintain satisfactory product availability

  3. CASE: HP - DeskJet Printer Supply Chain • Meet customer needs with less inventory • Find the best way to satisfy customer needs in terms of product availability while minimizing inventory • Arrange an agreement among the various parties that they had the right level of inventory • European Distribution Center shows a dip in product availability level, but loads of DeskJets had been shipped to Europe in the past months and European DC was telling Vancouver that is had run out of space its products

  4. CASE: HP - DeskJet Printer Supply Chain • The Retail Printer Market • In 1990, worldwide sales of personal printers were 17 million units, amounting to $10 billion • Sales fueled as customers discovered the superior quality of the Ink Jet printers • More and more sales through superstores such as Kmart and Price Club • The Vancouver division and its quest for zero inventory • Established in 1979 to consolidated personal printer activities from four divisions to the Vancouver site • Vancouver introduces kanban process and converts the factory to stockless production just-in-time

  5. CASE: HP - DeskJet Printer Supply Chain • The DeskJet Supply Chain • Manufacturing done by Vancouver, two key stages: • Printed circuit board assembly and test (PCAT) • Final assembly and test (FAT) • “Localization” is the process of meeting the required customization of the printer to meet language and power supply requirements of the local countries • Total factory cycle time though the PCAT and FAT stages was about a week • Transportation time to the US was a day • Transportation time to Europe and Asia was four to five weeks

  6. CASE: HP - DeskJet Printer Supply Chain • The Distribution Process • DeskJet printers are a high-volume product and the major performance measures for a typical DC included line item fill rate (LIFR) and order fill rate (OFR). • DC had four simple, straight-line process steps: • Receive (complete) products from various suppliers and stock them • Pick the various products needed to fill a customer order • Shrink-wrap the complete order and label it • Ship the order by the appropriate carrier

  7. Design For Logistics • Concept of product and process design to help control logistics cost and increase customer service levels • Economic packaging and transportation • Concurrent and parallel processing • Standardization

  8. Economic packaging and transportation • Design products efficiently packed and stored to produce the minimal amount of space allocation • Products that can be stored more compactly can be transported less expensively • Retailer favor products that take less storage space and stack easily • Advantages of Superior Packaging • Reduces inventory cost by decreasing the handling cost • Space per product (rent per product) decreases • Revenue per square foot can increase

  9. Concurrent and Parallel Processing • Modifying the product design and manufacturing process • Reduce lead time • Lower inventory cost through better forecasting • Reduce safety stock requirements • Decoupling: A key concept for keeping the manufacturing process parallel • Able to design different inventory strategies for the various decoupled components • Higher inventory level can be held for signal component

  10. Standardization • Effective use of aggregated demand information to yield better forecast outcome: • Delay decision for specific product manufacturing until the purchase decision has been made • Decision based on aggregated level, insuring a more accurate aggregated forecast • Professor Swaminathan’s standardization framework • A Modular Product: Product assembled from various modules such that for each module there are a number of options • A Modular Process: A process of discrete operations so that inventory can be stored in partially manufactured forms between operations

  11. Standardization • Swaminathan identifies four different approaches to standardization: • Part Standardization: Uses of common parts across multiple product lines • Process Standardization: Standardizing as much of the process as possible for different products and then customizing the products as late as possible • In some cases resequencing and commonality allows the final manufacturing steps to be completed at the distribution center • Product Standardization: A large variety of products may be offered, but only a few kept in inventory • Downward substitution: An order is filled by a product that offers a superset of the feature required by a customer • Procurement Standardization: Involves standardizing process equipment and approaches, even when the product itself is no standardized

  12. Selecting a Standardization Stragety • The firm’s success rate of standardization is based on its ability to modularize its product and processes • Important Considerations • The various strategies are designed to deal with inaccurate forecasts and product variety • It may not be possible or cost effective to implement these strategies in the context of a particular product or a specific supply chain • Value of these types of changes is higher at the start of the product life cycle • Customizing the products as late as possible, the per unit cost of inventory will rise • Some cases, semifinished products pay lower tariffs

  13. The Push-Pull Boundary • In push-based system, the production decisions are based on long-term forecasts, while the pull-based supply chains, production is demand driven • Pull-based system typically lead to reduction in supply chain lead time, inventory levels and system cost, and easier to manage system resources • Push-pull boundary: the point where the system changes from push-based system to a pull-based system • Example) Sweaters remain uncolored and are dyed to meet customer demand

  14. Case Analysis • The lead time is around four to five weeks from its product ion facility in Vancouver to Europe • HP is concerned with high inventory levels and inventory imbalance in European Distribution center • Localization is done in Vancouver many weeks before the products arrive in Europe • European DC often find that it has too much inventory of printers customized for certain markets, and not enough inventory of printers customized for others • To address this for the long term the following solutions were proposed: • Switch to air shipments of printers from Vancouver • Build a European factory • Hold more inventory at the European DC • Improve forecasting practices

  15. Case Analysis • An alternative option is Process Standardization (postponement) • Ship “unlocalized” printers to the European DC and localizing them after observing local demand • Calculate required safety stock for each of the customized products • Lead time is five weeks • Require a 98 percent service level • HP needs over three-and-a-half weeks of safety stock on hand • European DC only keeps safety stock of generic printers, customizing the printers as demand is realized

  16. The Spectrum of Supplier Integration • Develop the notion that a spectrum of supplier integration is used and that there is no single “appropriate level” of supplier integration • None: The supplier is not involved in design. Material and subassemblies are supplied according to customer specification and design • White Box: This level of integration is informal. The buyers “consults” with the supplier informally when designing products and specifications, although there is no formal collaboration • Grey Box: This represents formal supplier integration. Collaborative teams are formed between the buyer's and the supplier’s engineers, and joint development occurs • Black Box: The buyer gives the supplier at set of interface requirements and the suppliers independently design and develops the required components

  17. Keys to Effective Supplier Integration • To achieve an effective supplier integration, hard work has to be undertaken for the relationship to be a success • Select suppliers and build relationships with them • Align objective with selected suppliers

  18. What is Mass Customization • Mass customization has evolved from two prevailing manufacturing paradigms • Craft Production: Highly skilled and flexible workers, who governed by personal or procession standards, and motivated by the desire to create unique and interesting products or services • Mass Production: Efficient production of large quantity of a small variety of goods • Mass customization captures many of the advantages of both the mass production and craft production • Delivery of a wide variety of customized goods or service quickly and efficiently at lost cost

  19. Making Mass Customization Work • The key to making mass customization work is highly skilled and autonomous workers, processes, and modular units • A module’s success depends on how effectively, quickly and efficiently it completes its task and how good it is at expanding its capabilities • Managers determine these link between modules “fit together” harmoniously in different links between modules to meet customer requests

  20. Making Mass Customization Work • There are several key attributes that a system within a company that links different modules must possess • Instantaneousness • Costless • Seamless • Frictionless

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