Monday 11 December 2017

CHAPTER 10 : EXTENDING THE ORGANIZATION – SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT

CHAPTER 10 : EXTENDING THE ORGANIZATION – SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT

Supply Chain Management has three main links;
1.Materials flow from suppliers and their “upstream” suppliers at all levels

2.Transformation of materials into semifinished and finished products through the organization’s own production process

3.Distribution of products to customers and their “downstream” customers at all levels




BASIC SUPPLY CHAIN 

 Organizations must embrace technologies that can effectively manage supply chains

















1. Plan ⇒ A company must have a plan for managing all the resources that go toward meeting customer demand for products or services.


2. Source ⇒ Companies must carefully choose reliable suppliers that will deliver goods and services required for making products.


3.Make ⇒ This is the step where companies manufacture their products or services. This can include scheduling the
activities necessary for production, testing, packaging, and preparing for delivery.


4.Deliver (Logistic)  ⇒ Companies must be able to receive orders from customers, fulfill the orders via a network of warehouses, pick transportation companies to deliver the products, and implement a billing and invoicing system to facilitate payments.


5.Return  ⇒  This is typically the most problematic step in the supply chain. Companies must create a network for receiving defective and excess products and support customers who have problems with delivered products.





INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY’S ROLE IN THE SUPPLY CHAIN 









visibility Supply Chain Visibility  more visible models of different ways to do things in the supply chain have emerged. High visibility in the supply chain is changing industries, as Wal-Mart demonstrated


Supply Chain Visibility Bullwhip Effect – the ability to view all areas up and down the supply chain



Bullwhip Effect – occurs when distorted product demand information passes from one entity to the next throughout the supply chain



VISIBILITY
Supply chain visibility allows organizations to eliminate the bullwhip effect

⇒ To explain the bullwhip effect to your students discuss a product that demand does not change, such as diapers. The need for diapers is constant, it does not increase at Christmas or in the summer, diapers are in demand all year long. The number of newborn babies determines diaper demand, and that
number is constant.


Retailers order diapers from distributors when their inventory level falls below a certain level, they might order a few extra just to be safe.

⇒Distributors order diapers from manufacturers when their inventory level falls below a certain level, they might order a few extra just to be safe


⇒Manufacturers order diapers from suppliers when their inventory level falls below a certain level, they might order a few extra just to be safe


⇒Eventually the one or two extra boxes ordered from a few retailers becomes several thousand boxes for the manufacturer. This is the bullwhip effect, a small ripple at one end makes a large wave at the other end of the whip.




CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
Companies can respond faster and more effectively to consumer demands through supply chain enhances


Once an organization understands customer demand and its effect on the supply chain it can begin to estimate the impact that its supply chain will have on its customers and ultimately the organizations performance


Demand planning software – generates demand forecasts using statistical tools and forecasting techniques






COMPETITION 
Supply chain planning (SCP) software– uses advanced mathematical algorithms to improve the flow and efficiency of the supply chain

Supply chain execution (SCE) software – automates the different steps and stages of the supply chain

SCP and SCE both increase a company’s ability to compete

SCP depends entirely on information for its accuracy

SCE can be as simple as electronically routing orders from a manufacturer to a supplier


COMPETITION
SCP and SCE in the supply chain










SPEED 

Three factors fostering speed








SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT SUCCESS FACTORS








Supply Chain Management industry best practices include:


Make the sale to suppliers

Wean employees off traditional business
practices

Ensure the SCM system supports the
organizational goals

Deploy in incremental phases and measure
and communicate success

Be future oriented










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