Summary Module 1 CSCP
Summary Module 1 CSCP
Summary Module 1 CSCP
Strategic Focus
Latest SC: Implementing SC solutions that requires collaborations among business partners up stream as
well as down stream
You must be prepared and ready to handle these power full forces
Global expansion
Increased project complexity and scope (project size and complexity increasing.. team size..
national and international.. communication and other issues)
Greater market volatility (demand is more volatile and unpredictable due to increasing power
and speed of information’s available to consumer and competitors )
Supply Chain: SC is a global network used to deliver products and services from raw materials to end
consumers through an engineered flow of information, physical distribution and cash.
Supply Chain
Supplier vs Vendor: A supplier, a provider of goods or services or a seller with whom buyer does the
business as opposed to vendor which is generic term referring to all suppliers in market place
Structure:
Companies require SC to guarantee steady flow while at same time reducing SC cost
SC structures vary based on demand history, business focus and needs for connectivity, technology and
equipment.
1. Stable
a. Predictable Supply & demand
b. Cost are low due to predictable demand and minor changes
c. Production runs are long with fewer changes
2. Reactive
a. Fulfil demand but without much concern to cost
b. Is perceived as cost center
c. Need minimal competitive or connectivity technologies & capital assets to respond to
demand
3. Reactive efficient
a. Support competitive positioning by serving as an efficient, low cost and integrated unit
b. Focuses efficiency and cost management on the total delivery cost of the finished goods
c. Place greater importance on connectivity technology and new equipment to automate
functions to reduce labor cost and improve capacity and through put
4. Proactive efficient
a. Recommend new raw materials and product design to reduce complexity and cost
b. Instigate changes to product design for greater efficiencies
c. Invest in integrate information system to facilitates sharing of information across
functions
5. Strategic driven
a. Demand generation and fulfilment are fully integrated
b. SC contributes to development of the organizations overall strategy
c. Forecasting, planning and replenishment are fully integrated
d. Technological improvements, knowledge and real time information’s are shared with SC
partners
Flows in SC
Flow of information
Primary product flow
Primary flow of cash
Reverse flow of products (repairs, recycling, remanufacturing or disposal)
Supply chains can double back themselves. May be you sale one product to someone and then after
passing through different entities you may purchase that back. Like Coal Company and mining
equipment
SC can be viewed in terms of processes such as gathering and processing of marketing data, distribution
and payment of invoices, fulfilment of orders and shipping of materials
1st tier suppliers / Customers can be internal or external but 2nd tier suppliers / customers always
external
SC Processes:
Plan
Source
Make
Deliver
Return
Enable
Entities at each end of SC (raw material supplier and a retailer outlet only perform two processes,
suppliers supplier handle only delivery and retunes and suppliers supplier manage only sourcing and
returns) – See Score model page 14 - Important
SCORE Apply to which activities and doesn’t not apply to which processes –Page 15
SCORE model assumes that product is already designed and tested for production
Gain in Scale, Scope and focus vs lose in ability to see and understand the large SC process or to care
about them
Stages of SC evolutions:
Stage 1: Multiple dysfunction
Stage 2: Semi functional enterprise (within department / silo)
Stage 3: integrated enterprise (inter departments)
Stage 4: extended enterprise (well integrated)
Value stream mapping – Flow and collaboration of processes to reduce waste and time
Value
Utility
Price
Availability
Attractiveness
Stakeholder value:
Financial benefits: Profit and profit margin (Triple bottom line – Social, environment and economic)
Measuring value for each stake holder and impact of each decision on all stake holders (primary stake
holder – business itself & External stake holders like customers, SC partners, investors, communities,
government etc)
Cut cost to yield net gains at bottom line (see broader impact of cost cut decisions)
Customer value:
Social Value
Creating positive good by delivering social desirable and useful product or service
Avoiding or reducing environmental side effects (reverse SC)
Integrating sustainability into the SC (plan, source, make, deliver, return & enable)
Right product, right amount, and right time to right customer – outward focus, customer needs and
wants while still meeting cost objectives
Inward focus, how SC processes can be done less expensively, in less time and fewer resources
5- Leverage partner
Flow of funds
Spend Management
Standard costing (target cost of operation)
o Cost of goods sold
o Current price
o Usage variance
o Cost variance
Financial statement (balance sheet, income statement and statement if cash flow)
Tax saving & Supply chain
Net working capital is current assets of a firm minus its current liabilities
Period cost: all cost that can not be linked to unit produced / sold
Strategy, originally a military term, is how generals marshal all available resources in pursuit of victory
Strategic plan: How to marshal and determine actions to support mission, goals and objectives of an
organization
Competitive advantage:
Safety stock: extra stock planned in inventory to protect against fluctuations in demand or supply
Provide access to real demand data along the SC for greater visibility of end customer
Establish trust and promote collaboration among supply chain partners
Increase agility of trade partners (ability to respond to variability in the flow of orders based on
sales)
Functional product:
Little change
Long life cycle (more than 2 years)
Relatively low CM
Little variety
Innovative product:
Note: Same type of product can be innovative and functional so company might have more than one SC.
No one size fits all strategy now a days
Types of products:
Store type
Time in season
Product cycle( infrequent demand in start, stable demand at maturity and falling demand at
end of cycle)
1. Add value
2. Improve market access
3. Strength operations
Organizational Capabilities
1. Organizational design
a. Creations of Org structure to support strategic business plan and goals of an enterprise
b. Communications
c. Automation
d. Responsibilities
e. Financial management
f. Job hierarchy
g. Job description
2. Processes
3. System and technology
4. Human resource (horizontally organized SC typically have no unified ownership or management
structure like vertically integrated org
5. Metrics (measurement techniques)
a. Past performance
b. Future desired performance
c. A competitors performance
d. Industry average performance
e. World class or best in class
Stages of SC evolutions:
1st Stage – Adhoc basis (formal communications limited to technical jobs, meetings scattered
and poorly organized, training may not exist
2nd Stage (communications flows upwards and through the chain of command – no or little
communication between silos, focus on departmental goals, soft skills training)
3rd Stage (cross functional team, continuous improvement initiatives, formal communications)
4th Stage (integrated operations, outsourcing to focus on core competencies)
Knowing your market, customer, competitors and produce can heavily influence how you design your
supply chain to meet long term objectives
Finance
Engineering
Operations
Marketing
o Market Plan
o Current market position – Market research
o Opportunity and issue analysis SWOT (external: market forces, demographic changes,
emerging technologies, new taxes, laws, changing customer needs, competitor prices
and offering, social, economic and political conditions)
o Objectives, strategies and action plans
o Programs and projects
o Pro forma P&L statements
o Management controls
1. Market analysis (size, location, nature and characteristics of markets “product potential”
2. Sales Analysis (sales comparison, market share)
3. Consumer research (consumer attitudes, reactions and preferences)
Customer surveys
Interviews
Focus groups
Direct mail questionnaire
Web sites providing opportunities for user feedback
Market reports sold by research companies
Balance efficiency with responsiveness (make to stock, make to order and assemble to order)
Network configuration
o No, location and capacity of warehouses
o Location of plant and production level of each product
o Transportation between all facilities
Inventory level and locations
Product design (as per customer needs, cheaper to build, easier to transport and store, & easier
on environment)
Information technology
Support systems (decision support system)
Components of quality
Customer responsiveness
Perfect customer orders
Performance improvement
Increased productivity
Strategic and financial alignment
Asset management
System infrastructure
Demand planning
Logistic
Professional development of employees
Velocity, variability, visibility, trust, customer focus, collaboration, Flexibility and Security “risk” and
compliance with all regulations
Customer perspective
Business process perspective
Financial perspective
Innovation and learning perspective
Note: Score model Table 1-33 performance attributes and matrix on page 1-138 is very important
*****
1. Process mapping
2. Pattern identification
3. Control chart analysis
4. Defect measurement
5. Pareto analysis
6. Cause and effect diagram
7. Root cause analysis
8. Benchmarking
a. Competitive Benchmarking
b. Best in class
c. Process benchmarking
Inventory Management
Inventory: Items / Stock to support
Inventory can be seen as asset or strategic asset and helps to cope up with variability and also helps to
increase flexibility
Aggregate inventory Management: (long term decision to centralize / decentralize inventory mgt)
a. Demand patterns
b. Production processes (men or women running shoes)
c. Stage of production flow (RM / PM / WIP)
d. Relative value to organization (ABC)
e. Product or SKU family or Type (models, colors, styles)
f. Distribution pattern (to be delivered to same location/ geographic)
Types of inventory:
1. Anticipation inventory (to cover projected trends of additional sales, planned sales promotions,
seasonal fluctuations, plant shutdown and vacations
2. Safety stock – Fluctuation inventory (variability, forecast error, fluctuations in demand)
3. Lot size inventory or cycle stock (MOQ / Full truck load / batch sizes)
4. Hedge inventory (manage risk by building, buying, contractually guaranteeing additional
quantity at a set price – for weather , labor strikes, civil strife, economy, political event – against
speculations)
5. Buffer inventory (maintained behind work center)
6. Decoupling (creating independence between supply and use of materials)
Inventory cost:
Acquisition cost (product cost / purchase cost / order quantity unit cost)
Landed cost (product cost + transportation + WH+ handling+ customs+ insurance). Internal
landed cost – Direct labor + direct material + FOH)
Carrying cist / holding cost (sometimes 40% of total value of inventory and not less than 15%–
increase with increase in inventory Level)
o Storage cost (charge to individual material based on volume, density and weight)
o Capital cost
o Risk cost (perishability, obsolesce, likelihood of theft)
Ordering cost (all costs that don’t very due to quantities but due to frequency of orders)
Backorder (unfilled customer order / commitment), lost sales and lost customer costs
Capacity variation costs (smoothening vs inventory cost – Plant shutdown vs over time)
Set up cost: All expenses incurred when preparing machines and processes to manufacture an
order include labor for machine cleaning, and making any necessary adjustments or
modification
IN Direct method: accrual accounting method – measure performance taking in account economic
events regardless of when a cash transaction occurs
Getting
Right Product
Right quantity
Right condition
Right place
Right customer
Right time
Right price
Order processing
Warehousing
Transportation
Material handling
Packaging
*SCM is logistic taken to higher level of sophistication… *SCM is obtain, produce and distribute in other
terms
* Inventory and forecasting must be considered while designing and managing effective and efficient
system for moving goods from one place to other
Logistic functions:
Transportation
o Delivery cost
o Speed of delivery
o Reducing damages
Warehousing
Third party and 4th Part logistic
Reverse logistic
1. Service (any service level can be achieved if company is willing to pay – so technology is not the
limiting factor here, it is economies)
2. Cost minimization (integrated cost. Not cost of one head like lower transportation cost or
storage cost)
1. Coordinating functions
Loss of control
Potential for inefficiency
Outsourcing caveats:
Motivating factors:
Competitive edge
Reduce
Re use
Recover
*Reverse logistic in product life cycle not in last phase … start from design phase to product
introduction, maturity and decline & returns
* Primary reason to identify and understand market segmentation is to increase the organizational
profit over the long term
*Cross selling (when customer buys additional products after initial purchase )
Gender
Geography
Age
5W;s:
When
Where
What
Why
How
Historically segmentation was based on preconceptions about the behaviors or desires of certain group
or in the best case research into small representative of group.
Transaction records
Sales representative
Service representative
Distribution points
Purchase data
Traditional forecasting: Assuming increase over period and even inaccurate record keeping as they
ignore return and failure at baseline
Principals of Forecast:
Components of demand:
1. Trend
2. Seasonality
3. Random variation
4. Cycle
Qualitative forecasting:
It is used when data are scarce, not available or no longer relevant. When product is nnew
Personal insight (based on insight of most experienced, most knowledgeable and most senior
person available)
Sales force estimate (sales force should check forecast either it is consistent with their
knowledge of market place or not)
Management consensus (panel of management experts)
o Pyramid Forecasting (prepare forecast at aggregate level and then balance it to item
level) Like annual budget.
o Historical analogy (study past pattern of similar product/ product family)
Market research
o Market analysis (size, location, nature of market)
o Sales analysis
o Consumer analysis (consumer attitude, preferences and reactions through focus group,
questionnaire, motivational research)
o Test marketing
Dolphi method (panel of experts in field not in company) good for long term forecast as this is
time consuming, human judgement
o Maintenance of anonymity
o Reduce defensiveness
o Reduce group think
Quantitative forecasting:
Extrinsic (used for aggregations like company sales instead of item sales – cause & effect relationship –
more effect if relate to very recent events and trends and less effective the more time has passed to
events) vs intrinsic forecasting (based on internal patterns like past sales – short term forecast)
1. Naïve approach (rules out all kind of variation – one alternate approach that counts seasonality
like taking last year same month number for current month)
2. Moving Average
a. When demand is fairly stable from period to period
b. Mitigate the effects of random variation
c. Don’t over react to one month’s random variation but smooth out for short term
d. Cannot handle seasonality
e. Cannot handle upward / down ward trend
3. Weighted moving average
4. Exponential smoothing
5. Seasonal index
1. Forecast error
a. Abs (actual – forecast) / Actual
2. Forecast accuracy
a. 1 minus forecast error
3. Bias and random variation
a. Bias (cumulative Actual demand – cumulative forecast demand) – for change in trend or
seasonality.
4. Mean absolute deviation
a. Sum of Abs Actual – forecast / total no of periods
b. Can be used as basis for safety stock
c. It tells magnitude of deviation
d. Service Level / Factor X MAD = Safety stock
5. Tracking signal
a. Sum of forecast errors (not absolute) / MAD
b. Used to signal when validity of forecasting might be in doubt
6. Standard deviation
a. MAD X 1.25
7. Means absolute square deviation
a. Sum of Square of all forecast errors / N
b. More sensitive and used when numbers are very close and reduction of error is
important
8. Mean absolute % error
a. Sum (Actual – forecast / Actual)% / N
Elements of demand management process: (demand management balance the customer demand and
company capabilities)
CRM includes:
Accounting management
Catalog
Order processing payment processing
Credits and adjustments
* Retaining customer is more profitable than finding new one – life time customers
*CRM is both broad (cover every interaction with customer) and deep (long term relationship)
*CRM is philosophy not a technique because it focus on long term relationship building
1. Sales operation
a. Optimize customer experience
b. Collecting and storing data of each transaction
2. Analysis
3. Customer information dissemination
4. Relationship building (life time customer)
a. Life time customer lower marketing cost
b. It is easy to satisfy life time customer
c. Life time customer increase revenue and profit (cross selling)
Implementing CRM:
Total cost of ownership: Cost of all activities in SC not only acquisition which is often a very small portion
of total cost of ownership
TCO = Landed cost + transportation cost + storage / WH cost + maintenance cost+ handling cost+
durability etc
TCO can be used: to select supply chain strategy, performance measurement and high level control
Landed Cost:
Includes the cost for evaluating choices and implementing the change to SC
Ongoing cost:
Benefits of outsourcing:
Economies of scale
Risk reduction
Increased capital available for investment
Clearer focus
Access to new technologies
Faster development cycle time
Market growth
Additional sourcing options
Streamlining and efficiency
Offshoring complexities:
Language differences
Culture
Country specific process
Tax, legal / regulatory issues
1. Risk:
Factors to be considered:
Cost
Capacity availability
Specialized knowledge
Quality consideration
Skill requirement
Volume and training
1. Transactional relationship
a. Buy on the market
b. Ongoing relationship
2. Strategic relationship
Plan Finalization:
Flexibility
Ability to accommodate growth
Service level vs system cost trade off
Alignment with mission and culture
Transactional to collaborative
Visibility of entire SC