Jnu Supply Chain Management
Jnu Supply Chain Management
Jnu Supply Chain Management
1.1 Introduction
The global market faces a fierce competition today. The introduction of products with shorter life cycles and the
heightened expectations of customers have forced business enterprises to invest in, and focus attention on, their
supply chains. This, together with continuing advances in communications and transportation technologies (e.g.,
mobile communication, internet, and overnight delivery), has motivated the continuous evolution of the supply
chain and of the techniques to manage it effectively. Recently, the pressure of the competitive market and new
information technologies has affected the structures of the production systems, calling for:
• reduction of time to market
• higher flexibility of the systems
• drastic reduction of costs
• extended quality concept
• The supply chain, which is also referred to as the logistics network, consists of suppliers, manufacturing
centres, warehouses, distribution centres, and retail outlets, as well as raw materials, work-in-process
inventory, and finished products that flow between the facilities.
Supply Chain Management
Suppliers Manufacturers
Warehouses and distribution centers
Customers
Manufacturing costs
Transportation costs
Inventory costs
• A supply chain strategy refers to how the supply chain should operate in order to compete in the market. The
strategy evaluates the benefits and costs relating to the operation. The supply chain strategy focuses on the
actual operations of the organisation and the supply chain that will be used to meet a specific goal.
• The supply chain integrates, coordinates and monitors the flow of materials, information, and funds.
• Supply chain management (SCM) is the oversight of materials, information, and finances distributed from
supplier to consumer. The supply chain also includes all the necessary stops between the supplier and the
consumer. Supply chain management involves coordinating this flow of materials within a company and to
the end consumer.
• The Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals defines supply chain management as follows:
“Supply chain management encompasses the planning and management of all activities involved in sourcing
and procurement, conversion, and all logistics management activities”. Importantly, it also includes
coordination and collaboration with channel partners, which can be suppliers, intermediaries, third-party
service providers, and customers. In essence, supply chain management integrates supply and demand
management within and across companies.
• Supply chain management is an integrating function with primary responsibility for linking major business
functions and business processes within and across companies into a cohesive and high-performing business
model. It includes all of the logistics management activities noted above, as well as manufacturing
operations, and it drives coordination of processes and activities with and across marketing, sales, product
design, and finance and information technology.
• SCM is also called the art of management of providing the right product, at the right time, right place and at
the right cost to the customer.
• Supply chain management can be divided into three main flows:
The Product flow includes moving goods from supplier to consumer, as well as dealing with customer
service needs.
The Information flow includes order information and delivery status.
The Financial flow includes payment schedules, credit terms, and additional arrangements.
• Supply chain management is a set of approaches utilised to efficiently integrate suppliers, manufacturers,
warehouses, and stores, so that merchandise is produced and distributed at the right quantities, to the right
locations, and at the right time, in order to minimise system-wide costs while satisfying service level
requirements.
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1.4 Objective of Supply Chain Management
• A supply chain is a global network of organisations that cooperate to improve the flows of material and
information between suppliers and customers at the lowest cost and the highest speed. The final objective of
a supply chain is customer satisfaction.
• The supply chain management takes into consideration every facility that has an impact on cost and plays a
role in making the product match to customer requirements: from supplier and manufacturing facilities
through warehouses and distribution centres to retailers and stores.
• The main purpose of the supply chain is to maximise overall value generated. Value is the difference
between what the cost supply chain incurs and the worth end product has to the customer. Value of the
commercial supply chain is correlated with its profitability generally known as supply chain surplus.
• For example, A customer purchase a personal computer from IBM at $2,000, which indicates the revenue
supply chain achieved. All the stages incur costs to make sure the efficient transfer of funds, information,
storage of the product, transportation to the final consumer etc. The difference between the supply chain cost
and revenue generated from personal computer represent the supply chain surplus or profitability.
• Supply chain surplus can be defined as the total profit shared by all the stages and intermediaries of a supply
chain. The greater the supply chain surplus the more successful is supply chain. But, Supply chain success is
measured by its overall surplus not by the profit at each stage.
• The supply chain management has to be efficient and cost-effective across the entire system; from
transportation and distribution to inventories of raw materials, work in process, and finished goods, are to be
minimized. The emphasis is not on simply to minimise transportation cost or reducing inventories but, rather,
on taking a systems approach to supply chain management.
• The objectives of supply chain management can be listed below:
enhancing customer service
expanding sales revenue
reducing inventory cost
improving on-time delivery
reducing order to delivery cycle time
reducing lead time
reducing transportation cost
reducing warehouse cost
reducing supplier base
expanding depth of distribution
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Supply Chain Management
IS Strategy
Shared Understanding
IS Department Business Department
IS executives
IS team - Business executive
Operational
Level
Communication
IS Users
Individual Level
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1.7 Decision Phases in a Supply Chain
Successful supply chain management requires many decisions relating to the flow of information, product, and
funds. These decisions fall into three categories or phases, depending on the frequency of each decision and the
time frame over which a decision phase has an impact. The design, planning, and operation of a supply chain
have a strong impact on overall profitability and success.
i. Supply chain strategy or design
• During this phase, the supply chain is structured and configured.
• It is designed that, how resources will be allocated, and what processes each stage will perform.
• Strategic decisions made by companies include:
location and capacities of production and warehouse facilities
products to be manufactured or stored at various locations
modes of transportation to be made available along different shipping legs
type of information system to be utilized
•
Supply chain design decisions are typically made for the long term (in years) and can be expensive to alter on
short notice. Consequently, when a company makes these decisions, they must take into account uncertainty
in anticipated market conditions over the next few years.
ii.
Supply chain planning
•
During this phase, the time frame considered is a quarter to a year. It starts with a forecast of demand in the
coming year.
•
As a result, the supply chain’s configuration determined in the strategic phase is fixed. The configuration
establishes constraints within which planning must be done. Planning establishes parameters within which a
supply chain will function over a specified period of time. Companies start the planning phase with a forecast
for the coming year of demand in different markets.
•
Planning decisions include those regarding markets to which a given production facility will supply and
target production quantities at different locations.
•
The companies must include uncertainty in demand, exchange rates, and competition over this time horizon in
their decisions.
•
Given a shorter time horizon and better forecasts than the design phase, companies in the planning phase
try to incorporate any flexibility built into the supply chain in the design phase and exploit it to optimise
performance.
•
As a result, companies define a set of operating policies that govern short-term operations.
•
Following are the planning decisions undertaken in supply chain:
which markets will be supplied from which locations
planned buildup of inventories
subcontracting, backup locations
inventory policies
timing and size of market promotions
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Customer
Retailer
Replenishement Cycle
Distributor
Manufacturing Cycle
Manucacturer
Procurement Cycle
Supplier
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Procurement Customer Order
Manufacturing and Cycles
Replenishment cycles
Customer
Order Arrives
Fig. 1.7 Push/pull view of supply chain
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Supply Chain Management
New Product
Marketing
Strategy Supply Chain Strategy
Strate
New
Marketing
Product
and Operations Distribution Service
Development
Sales
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How to achieve
Efficiency Responsiveness
Supply chain structure
Drivers
(Source: http://www.clt.astate.edu/asyamil/SCM_Chopra/chopra3_ppt_ch02.ppt)
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Product Price
target market
Place Promotion
Marketing Mix
Fig. 1.10 Elements of marketing mix
(Source: http://www.designersplus.co.uk/unit1/elements_of_the_e_business_domain/level3.html)
The Marketspace Model (de Meyer et al) is a useful model that identifies three key features of e-business
that are enabled through technology, as an extension of the traditional ‘4 P’s’ marketing model. Customer
relationship is rightly placed at the centre, because the customer is uniquely identified. The on-line nature
of the internet, relationships between organisations and customers are becoming more interactive.
Interactivity is the two-way exchange of information and ideas with the customer through an on-line
interface, which enhances the richness of customer relationships and gives rise to new paradigms of
product design and customer service, such as internet forums.
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Product Price
Internet www
Customer
Connectivity
Interactivity
Relationships
Promotion Placement
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Chapter II
Designing the Supply Chain Network
Aim
The aim of this chapter is to:
Objectives
The objectives of this chapter are to:
Learning outcome
At the end of this chapter, the students will be able to:
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2.1 Introduction
The supply chain network consists of suppliers, manufacturing centres, warehouses, distribution centres, and
retail outlets, as well as raw materials, work-in-process inventory, and finished products that flow between the
facilities. It is the collection of physical locations, transportation vehicles and supporting systems through which
the products and services the firm markets are managed and ultimately delivered. All organisations have or can
purchase the components to build a supply chain network.
Physical locations included in a supply chain network can be manufacturing plants, storage warehouses, major
distribution centres, ports, etc. Transportation modes that operate within a supply chain network can include the
many different types of trucks, trains, container ships or cargo planes. The many systems which can be utilised to
manage and improve a supply chain network include order management systems, warehouse management
system, transportation management systems, strategic logistics modelling, inventory management systems,
replenishment systems, supply chain visibility, optimisation tools and more. Emerging technologies and standards
are now making it possible to automate these supply chain networks in a real time mode making them more
efficient than the simple traditional supply chain.
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Total
Facilities
Inventory
Transportation
Number of Facilities
Fig. 2.1 Relationship between number of facilities and logistics cost
• Changing the distribution network design affects the following supply chain costs:
inventories
transportation
facilities and handling
information
• As the number of facilities in a supply chain increases, the inventory and resulting inventory costs also
increase as shown in the above figure. As long as inbound transportation economies of scale are maintained,
increasing the number of facilities decreases total transportation cost.
• A distribution network with more than one warehouse allows reduction of transportation cost relative to a
network with a single warehouse. Facility costs decrease as the number of facilities is reduced, because a
consolidation of facilities allows a firm to exploit economies of scale. Total logistics costs are the sum of
inventory, transportation, and facility costs for a supply chain network.
• Distribution network design options must therefore be compared according to their impact on customer
service and the cost to provide this level of service.
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manufacturer can aggregate demand and provide a high level of product availability with lower levels of
inventory than individual retailers.
The benefits from such sort of centralisation are highest for high value, low volume items with
unpredictable demand and vice verse. Thus, drop shipping would not offer a significant inventory
advantage to an online grocer selling a staple item like detergent.
Transportation costs are high with drop shipping because the average outbound distance to the end
consumer is large and package carriers must be used to ship the product that have high shipping costs per
unit compared to truckload carriers.
With drop shipping, a customer order with items from several manufacturers will involve multiple
shipments to the customer. This loss in aggregation in outbound transportation further increases cost.
Supply chains save on the fixed cost of storage facilities when using drop shipping because all inventories
are centralised at the manufacturer.
There can be some savings of handling costs too because the transfer from manufacturer to retailer no
longer occurs. Handling costs can be significantly reduced if the manufacturer has the capability to ship
orders directly from the production line.
A good information infrastructure is needed so that the retailer can provide product availability
information to the customer even though the inventory is located at the manufacturer.
The information infrastructure requirement is simpler for direct sellers like Dell because two stages
(retailer and manufacturer) do not need to be integrated.
Response times tend to be large when drop shipping is used because the order has to be transmitted from
the retailer to the manufacturer and shipping distances are on average longer from the manufacturer’s
centralised site. Also, the response time need not be identical for every manufacturer that is part of a
customer order.
Manufacturer storage with drop shipping allows a high level of product variety to be made available to
the customer.
Drop shipping provides a good customer experience in the form of delivery to the customer location. The
experience, however, suffers when a single order containing products from several manufacturers is
delivered in partial shipments.
Manufacturer
Retailer
Customers
Product Flow
Information Flow
Fig. 2.2 Manufacturer storage with direct shipping
(Source: http://www1.ximb.ac.in/users/fac/visiting/vfac.nsf/23e5e39594c064ee852564ae004fa010/89b99a7daf20
080665257086002ecac4/$FILE/Facility%20Decisions%20and%20Network%20Design.ppt)
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Factories
Customers
Product Flow
Information Flow
Fig. 2.3 Manufacturer storage with direct shipping and in-transit merge
(Source: http://www1.ximb.ac.in/users/fac/visiting/vfac.nsf/23e5e39594c064ee852564ae004fa010/89b99a7daf20
080665257086002ecac4/$FILE/Facility%20Decisions%20and%20Network%20Design.ppt)
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• Distributor storage with package carrier delivery
Under this option, inventory is not held by manufacturers at the factories but is held by distributors or
retailers in intermediate warehouses and package carriers are used to transport products from the
intermediate location to the final customer. Information and product flows when using distributor storage
with delivery by a package carrier.
Transportation costs are somewhat lower for distributor storage compared to manufacturer storage because
an economic mode of transportation (e.g. truckload) can be employed for inbound shipments to the
warehouse, which is closer to the customer.
Unlike manufacturer storage where multiple shipments may need to go out for a single customer order
with multiple items, distributor storage allows outbound orders to the customer to be bundled into a
single shipment further reducing transportation cost.
For faster moving items, transportation savings from distributor storage relative to manufacturer storage
increase.
Compared to manufacturer storage, facility costs are somewhat higher with distributor storage because of
a lack of aggregation. From a facility cost perspective, distributor storage is not good for extremely slow
moving items.
The information infrastructure needed with distributor storage is significantly less complex than the
manufacturer storage.
Response time with distributor storage is better than with manufacturer storage because distributor
warehouses are closer to customers and the entire order is aggregated at the warehouse on shipping.
Distributor storage can handle somewhat lower variety than manufacturer storage.
Factories
Warehouse Distributor
Storage by
/ Retailer
Customers
Product Flow
Information Flow
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Distributor storage with last mile delivery requires higher levels of inventory because it has a lower level
of aggregation.
Transportation costs are highest using last mile delivery. This is because package carriers aggregate
delivery across many retailers and are able to obtain better economies of scale than available to a
distributor or retailer attempting last mile delivery.
Last mile delivery is cheaper in dense cities.
Transportation costs are reasonable for bulky products where the customer is willing to pay for home
delivery. For example, home delivery for water and large bags of rice has proved quite successful in
China, where the high population density has helped decrease delivery costs.
Facility and processing costs are very high using this option given the large number of facilities required.
For example, a grocery store doing last mile delivery performs all the processing until the product is
delivered to the customer’s home unlike a supermarket where there is much more customer participation.
The information infrastructure with last mile delivery requires the additional capability of scheduling
deliveries.
Response times are faster than the use of package carriers.
Product variety is generally lower than distributor storage with carrier delivery.
Factories
Distributor / Retailer
Warehouse
Customers
Product Flow
Information Flow
Fig. 2.5 Distributor storage with last mile delivery
(Source: http://www1.ximb.ac.in/users/fac/visiting/vfac.nsf/23e5e39594c064ee852564ae004fa010/89b99a7daf20
080665257086002ecac4/$FILE/Facility%20Decisions%20and%20Network%20Design.ppt)
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Facility costs are high if new pickup sites have to be built.
A significant information infrastructure is needed. A good coordination is needed between the retailer, the
storage location, and the pickup location.
The main advantage of a network with consumer pickup sites is that it can lower delivery cost, thus
expanding the set of products sold as well as customers served online.
The major hurdle is the increased handling cost at the pickup site.
Factories
Pickup Sites
Customers
Customer Flow
Product Flow
Information Flow
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stage of e-business which involves collecting payments for the goods sold by the business firm.
• Wherein, commerce constitutes the exchange of products and services between businesses and groups and
individuals, electronic commerce focuses on the use of information and communication technologies to
enable the external activities and relationships of the business with individuals, groups and other businesses.
• An e-business may also use the internet to acquire wholesale products or supplies for in-house production.
This facet of e-business is sometimes referred to as e-procurement.
• Using email and private websites as a method for dispensing internal memos and white sheets is another use
of the internet by e-business.
• A central server or email list can serve as an efficient method for distributing necessary information. The trend
continues with new technologies, such as internet-enabled cell phones and laptops.
• It can be used for buying and selling of products. The electronic chat is widely in use nowadays which saves
time. The technical support operators can remotely access a customer’s computer and assist them in
correcting a problem.
• Organisations are finding that their ability to respond to unpredicted changes in the market is becoming a key
factor in survival. The ability to adjust e-business processes to customer references (flexibility) has become a
necessity for online systems.
E-Business Environment
Electronic Business Electronic Commerce
Community
Supply Chain
Organisation Customer
Supplier Customer
Chain
Chain
Intr-Business
Infrastructure
Social
Technical
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B2B = Business to Business
B2C = Business to Consumer
C2C = Consumer to Consumer
Customer Management
E-BUSINESS
Advantages of E-business
The advantages of e-business are described below:
• Worldwide presence
This is the biggest advantage of conducting business online. A firm engaging in e-business can have a
nationwide or a worldwide presence.
There are many examples which had the advantage by the use of e-business. IBM was one of the first
companies to use the term e-business for servicing customers and collaborating with business partners
from all over the world. Dell Inc. is another success story which too had a blooming business selling
personal computers throughout the United States, only via telephone and the internet till the year 2007.
Hence, worldwide presence is ensured if companies rethink their business in terms of the Internet.
• Cost effective marketing and promotions
Nowadays, the web is used to market products guarantees worldwide.
Advertising techniques like pay per click advertising ensure that the advertiser only pays for the
advertisements that are actually viewed.
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Affiliate marketing is a sort of marketing where customers are directed to a business portal because of
the efforts of the affiliate who in turn receive a compensation for their efforts meeting with success.
Affiliate marketing has helped both the business and the affiliates. The cost effective online advertising
strategies are used in e-business.
• Developing a competitive strategy
In order to ensure a competitive advantage, an effective strategy should be there to maintain the advantage
and earn profits.
It can be a cost strategy or a differentiation strategy.
For example, till the year 2007, Dell Inc. was selling computers only via the internet and the phone. It
adopted a differentiation strategy by selling its computers online and customizing its laptops to suit the
requirements of the clients. Thus, e-business resulted in Dell Inc. managing to capture a vast market
using the differentiation strategy.
• Better customer service
Customer services help in encouraging the customer to know more about the product or service.
For example, on visiting a website, the customer is greeted by a pop-up chat window. Moreover, payments
can be made online; home-delivery of products can be done.
Disadvantages of E-business
The disadvantages of e-business are described below:
• Sectoral limitations
Lack of growth in some of the sectors can be on the account of product or sector limitations.
For instance, food sector has not experienced growth of sales and revenue generation because of a number
of practical reasons like food products being perishable items. Also, consumers do not look for food
products on the internet since they prefer going to the supermarket to buy the necessary items as and
when the need arises.
• Costly e-business solutions for optimisation
Substantial resources are required for redefining product lines in order to sell online.
Upgrading the computer systems, training personnel, and updating websites require substantial resources.
Moreover, electronic data management and enterprise resource planning is necessary for ensuring
optimal internal business processes.
From the above discussion, it is observed that the advantages clearly overshadow the disadvantages of
e-business.
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• How much inventory should be stocked at each distribution centre?
• What customers should be serviced by each distribution centre?
• How should the customer `order` from the distribution centre?
• How the distribution should centres `order` from vendors?
• How frequently should shipments be made to each customer?
• What should the service levels be?
• What transportation methods should be utilised?
• How to measure the balance between logistic costs and customer service correlation?
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international shipping paperwork should be done. Operations should be designed in a manner that
product re-labelling or special packaging for international customers can be done easily.
Facilities may be needed to accommodate inbound or outbound airfreight or ocean freight containers.
Customer service functions may need to operate in 24-hour mode to assist customers in all time zones.
• Government involvement
The involvement of government has an impact on distribution.
The distribution system should be aware of legislation that involves their industry.
Many decisions are made daily at a local, state, and federal level that impact distribution operations.
Taxes, labour regulations, transportation restrictions and infrastructure decisions are continually up for
review and discussion at every level of government.
• Information systems
In today’s e-world, timely and accurate information is needed. The days of daily distribution activity and
nightly updates to financial systems are done.
Today distribution execution systems must be:
i. Real-time: Customer requirements are moving toward being able to instantly track an order
through every step of the fulfilment process to delivery. The information is linked to internet
where a customer can easily log in and see the exact status of their order. Real-time interfaces and
host system updates enable the customer.
ii. Paperless: Language and educational barriers result in error-prone paper documents that are
often misinterpreted, at best resulting in loss within the distribution operation or, worse still, lost
customers due to fulfilment issues. The solution is paperless systems requiring operator
validation.
iii. Standardised: Standardised, industry-tailored software is now the rule.
• Modularity
As companies in the distribution space move, their business will typically jump to a new distributor or
distributors.
The ability to quickly take on significant business volumes dictates that modularity is a necessity for a
thriving distribution organisation.
Modularity must be evident in:
i. Assets: Distribution assets must be modular, providing the ability to easily expand facilities,
capacities and equipment to meet increasing demands and diverse products. Many companies
design this into a facility.
ii. Work assignments: The workforce must be able to handle new work assignments and transfer
knowledge to new employees effectively.
iii. Labour management systems: These systems must be able to handle the addition of new
operations quickly and economically so that performance can be measured and costs can be kept
under control.
• Off-highway vehicles
In many countries, issues regarding the environment and air quality continue.
These issues for stringent air-quality regulations will impact the warehouse.
Electric vehicles will take over as the preferred models in the warehouse.
• Pace
Access to a web site can now order product, specify their service requirements, pay for their order on-
line, and track the order right to their doorstep.
For distributors, this means that the pace of distribution must increase significantly to account for the
reduced times, shorter product lives, increased inventory turnover and greater customer expectations that
is considered standard in the modern business-to-business and business-to-consumer marketplace.
For example, if a customer places an order today with next-day delivery, a company picks and ships the
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order the next day. This won’t be competitive and the entire supply chain needs to keep pace, from vendor
compliance to information and execution systems in order to support the new economy.
• People
Team-based, participatory organisational culture and a total dedication to customer satisfaction are the
components of success in supply chain distribution network.
For example, employee celebration days, employee suggestion programs, revised organisational designs,
compensation or incentive or bonus plans, and other processes that directly tie the distribution associate.
• Price
The service and quality are key factors in selecting a distribution partner.
Modern free enterprise demands efficient, effective and low-cost distribution.
The goal of a successful distribution operation should be to operate within their core values at the lowest
cost possible. The path to competitive pricing is to operate efficiently and flexibly at low cost.
• Accountability
A successful distribution operation must have accountability.
Accountability is made possible by effective leadership, clear communications and efficient systems and
equipment to enable productive operations and a fulfilling work environment. Effective leadership make
difficult decisions while maintaining the commitment of the organisation. Accountability requires
establishing standards, identifying improvement opportunities and measuring performance.
• Reverse logistics
The challenge is the question of handling the products that are coming back into the operation.
The decision on whether to accept the product, whether a refused shipment, an authorized customer return,
or an unexpected return must be planned for and communicated with the distribution operation.
• Third party logistics
A growing number of companies are turning to third party logistics organisations to handle the customer
fulfilment in the supply chain.
Companies that are accustomed to true partnering with customers and suppliers have less trouble moving
to the third party logistics and achieving the potential cost savings.
The key steps are to conduct a complete search for the right third party logistics vendor, thoroughly review
cost proposals and contracts to ensure there is financial benefit, and work with the third party logistics.
• Variety
Special packaging, pricing, labelling and delivery requirements are becoming the norm and must be
addressed in any distribution plan. These tasks should be designed into the operation.
Many companies invest large amounts of capital setting up specialised packing or value-added services
to gain competitive advantages.
Properly planned, these services can give profits, providing differentiation in a competitive marketplace.
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Source - Processes that procure goods and services to meet planned or actual demand.
Make - Processes that transform product to a finished state to meet planned or actual demand.
Deliver - Processes that provide finished goods and services to meet planned or actual demand, typically
including order management, transportation management, and distribution management.
Return - Processes associated with returning or receiving returned products for any reason. These
processes extend into post-delivery customer support.
Plan
Customer
Supplier
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3.1 Introduction
The importance of supply chain management has been growing in various areas because of the trend of
nationalisation and globalisation in recent decades. For industries, it helps to optimise the existing production and
distribution processes based on the same resources through management techniques for promoting the efficiency
and competitiveness of enterprises. Transportation system is the key element in a supply chain. It joins the
separated activities. Transportation occupies one-third of the amount in the supply chain costs and transportation
systems influence the performance of supply chain system enormously. Transporting is required in the whole
production procedures, from manufacturing to delivery to the final consumers and returns. A good coordination
between each component can give the maximum benefits.
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supply to ship its computers from the factory to the customer, ABC is the shipper & uninterruptible power
supply is the carrier.
• The management of the supply chain requires a coordinated approach to manage all activities to provide the
greatest value to the customer.
Row
Material Finished Goods
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• Transport infrastructure services are critical for diversification and modernisation of production and distribution
process.
• Transport is the key factor to link dispersed areas. Transport increases the economic efficiency of resources.
The economic efficiency of resources of various countries is increased with the growth of different mode of
transportation.
• Transport reduces the cost of production and distribution by effective, planned, integrated and co-ordinated
network.
• Developed or developing nations depend largely on transport development for better utilisation of resources.
• The adequacy of transport infrastructure is a key factor in the ability of countries to compete in international
trade. Competition for new exports and location of global industries largely depends on the quality of
transport infrastructure. Increased globalisation of world trade in many countries arouses not only from the
liberalisation of trade policies but also from advances in transportation.
• Transport helps to stabilise prices. Goods can be transported to places, where there is scarcity for it. By this
the consumers can get their desired products or commodities at a reasonable price. Similarly, by transporting
goods to the market, the producer gets fair price on their products.
• Transport curbs monopoly of the trader. Facilities for quick transport of commodities from one place to
another, restricts the traders to charge high price to the consumers. The demand for a product increases
because of non- availability of a product in the market.
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Trains run on a more consistent time schedule than trucks or airlines. They are often able to travel in
weather that would slow or stop trucks and airplanes.
Disadvantages include inflexibility, potential damage of goods and ineffectiveness with small shipments.
• Pipelines
Pipeline routes are practically unlimited as they can be laid on land or under water.
They are used for transport of homogenous materials.
The costs are lower than other transportation modes. Pipeline construction costs vary according to the
diameter and increase proportionally with the distance and with the viscosity of fluids. Pipeline terminals
are very important since they correspond to refineries and harbors.
Pipelines are ideal for materials such as water, oil, and gas. Pipelines have high initial costs since they
must be built but once they are constructed transportation costs are much lower than other modes.
They are unable to transport a variety of materials.
• Maritime transportation
Ships are one of the oldest methods of transporting goods and they are virtually the only way to transport
large volumes of good over-seas. Although this method is slower than shipping by air, a ship can carry
much more cargo than an airplane. Costs are reduced significantly by choosing ships over air transport.
Because of the physical properties of water such as buoyancy and limited friction, maritime
transportation is the most effective mode to move large quantities of cargo over long distances.
Main maritime routes are composed of oceans, coasts, seas, lakes, rivers and channels.
However, due to the location of economic activities maritime circulation takes place on specific parts of
the maritime space. The construction of channels and dredging are attempts to facilitate maritime
circulation by reducing discontinuity. Comprehensive inland waterway systems are there.
Maritime transportation has high terminal costs, since port infrastructures are among the most expensive
to build, maintain and improve and also high inventory costs.
Maritime transportation is linked to heavy industries, such as steel and petrochemical facilities adjacent
to port sites.
• Air transportation
Air is considered a premium mode of transportation because of the speed of delivery and the low impact
on the cargo (items are less likely to be broken than those shipped by rail or truck).
Airplanes are also able to cover much longer distances in a short time.
Savings resulting in speed of delivery are greater than extra costs.
Air transport constraints can be the site, the climate, fog and aerial currents. For instance, a commercial
plane needs about 3,300 meters of runway for landing and for take off.
Air activities are linked to sectors like finance and tourism, which lean on the long distance mobility of
people.
The mode of transportation has been accommodating growing quantities of high value goods and is
playing a growing role in global supply chain management.
• Intermodal transportation
Intermodal transport refers to a variety of modes that is used in combination so that the respective
advantages of each mode are better exploited.
The intermodal transportation applies for passenger movements, such as the usage of the different, but
interconnected modes of a public transit system,
Containerisation has been a powerful vector of intermodal integration, enabling maritime and land
transportation modes to more effectively interconnect.
• Telecommunications
Telecommunications are structured networks with a practically unlimited capacity. They have very low
constraints that include the physiographic and oceanic masses that may impair the setting of cables.
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They provide for the instantaneous movement of information.
Wave transmissions, because of their limited coverage, often require substations, such as for cellular
phone networks.
Satellites use a geostationary orbit which is getting crowded.
High network costs and low distribution costs characterise many telecommunication networks.
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Whereas each mode has its specific cost and service attributes, the use of any or a particular combination
is important and on the terms of contract between the supplier and the firm for transportation.
The questions related to transport in supply chain are:
i. What are the transportation options?
ii. Which one to select? On what basis?
• Direct shipping network
In this case, the manufacturer ships directly go from the manufacturing plant to the retailer without using
a distribution centre or a warehouse.
It reduces costs associated with warehousing or intermediate distribution centres.
The time related to order processing is also reduced when goods are shipped directly to retail stores.
This is a valid approach, provided the supplier is able to respond quickly and cost effectively.
Using less than truck load carrier, the cost and transit time both increase.
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suppliers retail stores
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distribution center
receiving trucks
shipping trucks
to Y with A/B
to X with A/B from A, with
from B, with
goods for X, Y & Z
goods for A, Y & Z
Product
Customer
Services
Supply
Chain
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3.7 Tailored Transportation
• The use of different transportation networks and modes based on customer and product characteristics is
tailored transportation.
• The factors affecting tailoring are:
customer distance and density
product demand and value
customer order size
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AB AB
Customer X
AB AB
Customer Y
AB AB
Customer X Customer Y
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4.1 Introduction
Sourcing strategy deals with planning, designing and building a reliable and competitive supplier base, determining
the strategy for procurement, defining pricing strategies and supply chain requirements. The strategy involves
confirming to the objectives of stake holders in operations, finance, marketing and distribution. Some supply
chain managers favour “everyday low pricing” strategies to reduce demand distortion, improve customer service,
and lower costs. Others apply “high-low pricing” strategies to clear slow moving items and build retail traffic,
thereby increasing revenues.
4.2 Sourcing
• Sourcing is the entire set of business processes required to purchase goods and services.
• Sourcing processes include:
supplier scoring and assessment
supplier selection and contract negotiation
design collaboration
procurement
sourcing planning and analysis
• The most significant decision is either to outsource or perform in-house.
• In business, the term word sourcing refers to a number of procurement practices, aimed at finding, evaluating
and engaging suppliers of goods and services. The methodology involved in procuring the necessary
materials, supplies, and services necessary to sustain a supply chain system.
• A thorough understanding of a company’s business strategy, the resources required to deliver that strategy,
the market forces and the unique risks within the company associated with implementing specific approaches
is essential for success.
• To ensure the achievement of desired results and continued alignment with business objectives, a periodic
review of the sourcing strategy is needed.
• The sourcing strategies used in supply chain management includes:
Single sourcing: Single sourcing is a method whereby a purchased part is supplied by only one supplier.
A Just-in-time (JIT) manufacturer will frequently have only one supplier for a purchased part so that
close relationships can be established with a less number of suppliers. These close relationships and
mutual interdependence promote high quality, reliability, less time and cooperative action.
Multisourcing: Multi-sourcing is a method whereby procurement of a good or service is from more than
one independent supplier. It is used sometimes in a company to induce healthy competition between the
suppliers in order to achieve higher quality and lower price.
Outsourcing: Outsourcing is the process of having suppliers that provide goods and services previously
provided internally. Outsourcing involves the replacement of internal capacity and production by that of
the supplier. This third party can increase the supply chain surplus relative to performing the activity in
house. Outsourcing makes the sense only if it increases the supply chain surplus without increasing the
risks.
Insourcing: Insourcing is the process where the goods or services are developed internally.
chain for Toshiba. If a customer’s laptop at home needs repair, UPS will pick it up and fix it at the Toshiba/UPS
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Repair Centre and deliver it back to the customer. UPS is the in charge of delivering products for Toshiba.
• Organisations sometimes take such business decisions because it enables them to maintain a better control of
what they outsource. For example, organisations involved in production usually opt for insourcing in order to
cut down the cost of labor and taxes. (e.g., American labor is often cheaper than European labor),
transportation, etc. Since the year 2006, the trend towards insourcing has increased.
• According to recent studies, there is more wok insourced than outsourced in the U.S and U.K. These
countries are currently the largest outsourcers in the world. The U.S and U.K outsource and insource work
equally.
• Insourcing is loosely referred in call centers that are doing the work of the outsourcing companies. Some of
the companies that outsource include Dell, Wipro, and Symantec etc.
• Outsourcing (or contracting out, sub-servicing) refers to the process of contracting to a third-party.
• Outsourcing involves the contracting out of a business function - commonly one previously performed in-house
- to an external provider. The two organisations may enter into a contractual agreement involving an
exchange of services and payments.
• For example, BMW outsourced with Boss Sound System in a way that Boss does all the music for the BMW
cars. It is cheaper for BMW to make a deal with Boss sound system instead of opening a new factory to
produce speakers and subwoofers. Boss is the in charge of doing sound systems in BMW.
• The ability of businesses to outsource to suppliers outside the nation is referred to as off-shoring or offshore
outsourcing.
• Outsourcing has the following benefits:
Cost savings: Outsourcing lowers the overall cost of the service to the business, involving reducing the
scope, defining quality levels, re-pricing, re-negotiation, and cost re-structuring. Labour arbitrage is the
access to lower cost economies through off-shoring, which has generated by the wage gap between
industrialised and developing nations.
Focus on core business: Resources (for example, investment, people, and infrastructure) are focused
on developing the core business. Organisations outsource their IT support to specialised IT services
companies.
Cost restructuring: Operations leverage is a measure that compares fixed costs to variable costs.
Outsourcing changes the balance of this ratio by offering a move from fixed to variable cost and also by
making variable costs more predictable.
Improve quality: Contracting out the service with a new service level agreement achieves an improved
quality.
Knowledge: Outsourcing helps to access to intellectual property and wider experience and knowledge.
Contract: Services are provided to a legally binding contract with financial penalties.
Operational expertise: Access to operational best practice that would be too difficult or time consuming
to develop in-house.
Access to talent: Access to a larger talent pool and a sustainable source of skills, particularly in science
and engineering.
Capacity management: Services and technology where the risk in providing the excess capacity is
borne by the supplier needs capacity management.
Catalyst for change: Outsourcing can be used as a catalyst for major step change that cannot be
achieved alone and the outsourcer becomes a change agent in the process.
Enhance capacity for innovation: Companies increasingly use external knowledge service providers to
supplement limited in-house capacity for product innovation.
Reduce time to market: Outsourcing helps to accelerate the development or production of a product
through the additional capability brought by the supplier.
Commodification: Outsourcing enables to buy the product at the right price.
Risk management: An outsourcer is better able to provide the mitigation of risks.
Tax benefit: Countries offer tax incentives to move manufacturing operations to counter high corporate
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taxes within another country.
Scalability: The outsourced company is prepared to manage a temporary or permanent increase or
decrease in production.
Creating leisure time: It optimises the work-leisure balance.
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• Design collaboration can result in products that are easier to manufacture and distribute, finally resulting in
lower overall costs.
• Appropriate supplier contracts can allow for the risk sharing.
• By increasing competition through the use of auctions, the firms can achieve a lower purchase price.
Scoring Suppliers
• The first part of supplier’s evaluation process is the scoring of suppliers. Performance in terms of delivery, lead
time, and the quality of items supplied, the price, service levels etc. can be done.
• It assesses all of the suppliers against the set standards.
• Some scoring systems offer the opportunity to utilise weighting according to the importance of certain
criteria. For example, if price is viewed as very important, then that will be given a greater importance than
something viewed as less important, which could be invoicing procedures etc.
• Often there are various sub-divisions within any one measure. For example, the price of the product is not
just about its cost. Other factors affecting price include the stability of the price, acceptability and accuracy
of the invoicing procedures and notice given about any changes to the price etc. So there are other hidden
factors that need to be taken into consideration.
Ranking Suppliers
• The analysis is complete when the supplier is ranked after scoring.
• This provides the customer with a real insight into who is performing well, who is average and who is weak
at the bottom of the association.
• The ability of ranking is that it can be used to share information with suppliers, so that those who are
performing poorly can work towards improving their performance. Often details of other suppliers may not
be shared, but individual suppliers will be furnished with details of their score and rank.
• The ranked suppliers can be grouped (typically into A, B, C groups). Specific groups may then result in targeted
action (often along the lines of develop, maintain or exit).
• A true picture finally emerges of the supplier performing well and the weakest link to some extent.
• The table below is the method for supplier’s scoring and ranking.
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Purchase Production
Inventory Transportation Introduction
Factors influencing total cost
Price of
Cycle Safety Cost Time
Component
Supply quality X X
Inbound transport cost X
Pricing terms X X
Information coordination X X
Design collaboration X X X X X
Exchange rates and taxes X
Supplier viability X X
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proposed positioning strategies
target group and willingness to pay
• Revenue management encompasses a wide range of opportunities to increase revenue. It predicts consumer
behaviour at the micro-market level and optimises product availability and price to maximise revenue
growth.
• The primary aim is selling the right product to the right customer at the right time for the right price. The
essence of this discipline is in understanding customer’s perception of product value and accurately aligning
product prices, placement and availability with each customer segment.
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Demand
Supply
Fig. 4.3 Pegging in SCM
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• The second problem is similar to first, except that the demand is assumed to increase as time proceeds.
• The third problem allows a specific number of integer orders during the planning horizon.
• The fourth problem allows the ordering cost to increase as time progresses.
• Warehousing refers to the activities involving storage of goods on a large-scale in a systematic and orderly
manner and making them available conveniently when needed.
• It refers to holding or preserving goods in huge quantities from the time of their purchase or production till
their actual use or sale.
• It creates time utility by bridging the time gap between production and consumption of goods.
• Warehousing arises due to the following reasons:
seasonal production of goods
seasonal demand
large-scale production
quick supply
continuous production
price stabilisation
• The functions of warehouses are:
storage of goods
protection of goods
risk bearing
financing
Shipping
Warehouse
Plant Plant
3 4
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5.1 Introduction
Information is said to be the glue that holds supply chains together. Without information, the managers will not
know the demand of the customers, the stock of inventory available with him and when to order, how much to
order and when it should be shipped. This is where the role of IT comes into the picture. Web-based technologies
continue to have significant impact on supply chain strategies. Web provides a virtual platform for eliminating
information delays and significantly reducing transaction costs. For effective supply chain coordination, there
should be a good coordination of material, information, and cash flows. The information technology involves
data recognition equipment, communication technologies, factory automation and other hardware and services
are included. Supply chain management (SCM) is concerned with the flow of products and information between
supply chain members’ organisations. In the integrated supply chain model, bi-directional arrow reflects the
accommodation of reverse materials and information feedback flows.
Customers
Retailers
Distribution Centres
Assembly Manufacturing
2nd Tier
Supplier
2nd Tier Suppliers
2nd Tier Suppliers
For example, Wal-Mart is very well known for its supply chain. The company’s cost of goods is 5% to 10% less
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than that of most of its competitors. Wal-Mart captures the information on sale of its products from all its stores,
analyses the demand and then determines that how much inventory it should hold in each store and how much
should be ordered. It sends the same information to all its key suppliers so as to ensure that the orders are
fulfilled in time and the time is reduced.
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Marketing
Customer Service
Customer Sales
IT
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The Right Product To the Right Customer
At the Right Time At the Right Place
In the Right Condition
Suppliers Customers
Purchasing Production Distribution
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customer relationship management
sales and marketing, commissions, service, customer contact, call center support
data services
self–service interfaces for customers, suppliers and employees
5.9 E-commerce
• Electronic commerce or e-commerce refers to a wide range of online business activities for products and
services. It refers to the business transaction in which the parties interact electronically. It creates a virtual
marketplace.
• It consists of the buying and selling of products or services over electronic systems such as the internet and
other computer networks.
• The amount of trade conducted electronically has grown extraordinarily with widespread internet usage.
• The e-commerce includes:
electronic funds transfer
supply chain management
internet marketing
online transaction processing
electronic data interchange
inventory management systems
automated data collection systems
• Modern electronic commerce typically uses the World Wide Web (www) in the transaction’s lifecycle. It can
encompass a wider range of technologies such as e-mail, mobile devices and telephones.
• While e-commerce and e-business terms are used interchangeably, they are distinct concepts. In e-commerce,
information and communications technology (ICT) is used in inter-business or inter-organisational
transactions and in business-to-consumer transactions.
• In e-business, on the other hand, ICT is used to enhance one’s business. It includes any process that a
business organisation conducts over a computer-mediated network.
• M-commerce (mobile commerce) is the buying and selling of goods and services through wireless
technology i.e., handheld devices such as cellular telephones and personal digital assistants (PDAs). Japan is
seen as a global leader in m-commerce.
• Content delivery over wireless devices is faster, more secure, and scalable. It is believe d that m-commerce
will surpass e-commerce as the method of choice for digital commerce transactions. This can be true for the
Asia-Pacific where there the number of mobile phone users is more than internet users.
• E-commerce has the following advantages:
E-commerce serves as an equaliser and enables start-up and small- and medium- sized enterprises to reach
the global market.
E-commerce makes mass customisation possible.
E-commerce allows network production.
• Amazon.com is a virtual bookstore. It does not have a single square foot of bricks and mortar retail floor
space. Nonetheless, Amazon.com is posting an annual sales rate of approximately $1.2 billion. Due to the
efficiencies of selling over the Web, Amazon has spent only $56 million on fixed assets. Thus, in many
industries doing business through e-commerce is cheaper than conducting business in a traditional brick-and-
mortar company.
• E-tailing (or electronic retailing) is the selling of retail goods on the Internet. It is the most common form of
business-to-consumer (B2C) transaction.
• Dell has been using e-tailing and recorded multimillion dollar orders taken at its web site in 1997.
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Product Advertisement
Product 1
1
Product 2
Inventory Process
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7.1 Introduction
Logistics in the 21st century touches every aspect of the company’s daily operations and has grown into a
business especially of its own. Strategic planning and resource management is a part of logistics management,
but logistics is also about how companies go about their day and its impact. As a business specialty, the explosion
of globalism has promulgated the practice of logistics. In the days of mostly domestic companies, shipping
departments in most companies were run by an experienced shipping clerk. Since, there were only few people
who could adequately understand how to get things done, it was a difficult task. Firms want their packages
shipped and delivered on time.
Logistics is essential for the company’s competitive strategy and survival. The buyer is not interested in the
promises of the seller that he can supply goods at competitive price. If the supplier fails to meet the terms with the
predetermined supply of period, the seller may not only get his sale amount back, but may also be legally
penalised, if the sales contract specifies so. The better delivery schedule is a good promotional strategy when
buyers are unwilling to invest in warehousing and keeping higher level of inventories. Similarly, better and
timely delivery helps in getting repeat orders through the goodwill created.
Effective logistics system contributes immensely to the achievements of the business and marketing objectives of
a firm. It creates time and place utilities in the products and thereby helps in maximising the value satisfaction to
consumers. By ensuring quick deliveries in minimum time and cost, it relieves the customers of holding excess
inventories. It also brings down the cost of carrying inventory, material handling, transportation and other related
activities of distribution. In nutshell, an efficient system of physical distribution/logistics has a great potential for
improving customer service and reducing costs.
Macro Dimension
The macro dimension of logistics are categorised as value added role and economic impacts.
Value-added role of logistics
The value-added role of logistics includes the form, place, time and possession utilities.
• Form utility (what)
Logistics provides form utility through manufacturing or assembly operations.
Logistics provides form utility through its impact on shipment size and packaging.
• Place utility (where)
Logistics provides place utility by moving goods from production surplus points to points where demand
exists.
Reducing logistics costs expands market area for firm.
• Time utility (when)
Logistics creates time utility by having goods and services available when demanded.
Logistics creates time utility by inventory management, transportation management, and strategic
location of goods and services.
• Possession utility (why)
Created through the basic marketing activities related to the products and services promotion
• These economic utilities are also referred to as the seven ‘R’s namely, Right product, Right quantity, Right
condition, Right place, Right time, Right customer, and Right cost as shown in fig. 5.3.
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Economic impacts of logistics
The economic impacts of logistics include the economic development and specialisation, variety of goods, prices
and land values.
• Economic development and specialisation
For economic development, investment in transportation is an essential part.
The extent of market can be determined by logistics.
• Variety of goods
Logistics capabilities enable the ability to provide a wide variety of goods.
• Prices
Logistics represents about 10% of gross domestic product.
It also represents a much larger percentage of the value of many products and services.
• Land values
If there is access to transportation service, it affects the economic potential of land.
Micro Dimensions
The micro dimensions of logistics are categorised as interfaces with operations or manufacturing and interfaces
with marketing.
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between seller and buyer. For example, if the seller makes his promotion by television or radio, it’s not
possible for the buyer to interact with. On the other hand, if the communication is made by phone or
internet, the buyer has possibilities to interact with the seller.
In the first case information is just “pushed” toward the buyer, while in the second case it is possible for the
buyer to demand the needed information according to his requirements.
In a “pull” system the consumer requests the product and “pulls” it through the delivery channel.
For example, a mobile manufacturing company assembles parts to produce mobile phone. The process
before production of the phone is push process but the process after production is pull process, as the
manufacturer is predicting that the product will be accepted. As the customer orders for mobile phone it
will become Pull Process.
Raw Material
Customers
Push Pull
• Seasonal demand
build-up of seasonal inventories to meet demand and to smooth production
• Supply-side interface
materials management
supplier relations is critical to efficient production and logistics
logisticians involved in production scheduling
• Protective packaging
most firms consider this a logistics activity
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The size, shape, weight (density), packaging, and other physical characteristics affect logistics. For
example, any product size and weight affects transportation and storage.
Industrial packaging is done because of product protection and security
• Promotion
The promotion campaigns need to be coordinated with logistics staff.
• Place
The logistics interfaces with marketing also refers to the distribution channels decisions (e.g., sell
through wholesalers or direct to retailers)
• Customer service is the output of logistics. It depends upon following factors:
time
dependability
communications
convenience
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• Purchasing
supply source selection
purchase timing
purchase quantities
• Inventory management: raw material and finished goods
stocking policies
short-term sales forecasting
product mix at stocking points
number, size and location of stocking points
just in time, push and pull strategies
• Customer service
• Site location
Business logistics
Source
of Plants/
Customer
operatio
• Transportation s
• Inventory maintenance • Transportation
• Order processing • Inventory maintenance
• Acquisition • Order processing
• Protective packaging • Product scheduling
• Warehousing • Protective packaging
• Materials handling • Warehousing
• Information • Materials handling
maintenance • Information maintenance
• For example, every month the Toyota distribution moves more than 8 million parts and accessories. It is a 30
year old distribution network. This resulted in two distribution centres, one in California, another in
Kentucky, feeding nine smaller distribution centres located around the country. Thus, the new network both
improved customer service and lowered costs.
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• Inbound Logistics involves the processes from the purchase of raw material till it reaches manufacturing unit.
The departments which are involved in-bound logistics are:
purchasing department
warehouse
manufacturing unit
• Outbound Logistics delivers the finished goods or product to the customer as per their requirement. It is their
responsibility to determine the shortest route through which transportation cost is the minimum.
• Usually the movement and storage of raw materials in a company is very different from the movement and
storage of finished products. For example, a steel company may move required raw materials of iron ore and
coal by large rail carload. Storage may require land where these items can be dumped and piled for future
use. On the other hand, the finished steel will very often be moved by motor carrier, and the storage will
require an enclosed facility for protection against the elements and, perhaps, elaborate materials handling
equipment.
Manufacturing unit
Supply
chain
• The movement and storage of raw materials is extremely different from the movement and storage of finished
goods.
• This classification is very useful to logistics management.
• From the inbound and outbound requirements perspective, there are four different classifications of logistics
system:
Balanced system: Companies receive supplies from various vendors in different locations and ship to
various customers in different locations, e.g., consumer products.
Heavy inbound: The process requires no warehousing, special transportation arrangements, or
packaging. In contrast, the inbound side requires detailed scheduling, coordination, and planning to
ensure that parts arrive in time. Aircraft companies use thousands of parts manufactured by hundreds of
vendors to assemble and produce a finished airplane. Once the airplane is finished and tested, the
company simply flies it to the customer e.g. aircraft, construction.
Heavy outbound: A wide variety of industrial and consumer products are produced that need storage,
packaging, and transportation to the final customer. Therefore, in a company with heavy outbound, the
physical distribution side of logistics system is more complex e.g. chemicals companies like Dow.
Reverse systems: Some companies have reverse flows on the outbound side of their logistics systems. In
the companies producing durable products that the customer may return for trade-in, for repairs, or for
disposal. Companies that produce computers, telephone equipment, and copy machines have these
characteristics. Increased concern with the environment will require more companies to develop reverse
logistics systems to dispose of packaging materials on used products e.g. returnable products.
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• Trade-offs
To make it easier to study cost trade-offs between the centres, logistics activities are treated as cost
centres.
Table 7.1 Analysis of total logistics cost with a change to higher cost mode of transport
(Source: http://www.swlearning.com/quant/coyle/seventh_edition/powerpoint/ch02.ppt)
System 1 System 2
Cost Centers
Three Warehouses Five Warehouses
Table 7.2 Analysis of total logistics cost with a change to more warehouses
(Source: http://www.swlearning.com/quant/coyle/seventh_edition/powerpoint/ch02.ppt)
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M
M
W M
P
M W
P
W
W P W
W
W = Warehouse
P = Plant W
P M
M = Market M
Fig. 7.5 Nodes and links in a logistics system
(Source: http://www.swlearning.com/quant/coyle/seventh_edition/powerpoint/ch02.ppt)
• Logistics channel
The network of intermediaries involved in the logistics system.
Supplier
Raw
Materials Manufacturing
Distribution
Customer
Consumer
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• Cost perspective
The most efficient systems are not always comprised of each system component operating at its lowest
possible cost.
The critical concern is to have the entire system operating at its lowest total cost.
• Level of optimality
Logistics systems must work in harmony with marketing, finance, production, etc.
This may result in sub-optimal logistics performance.
Packaging 0 500
Storage and handling 0 150
Inventory carrying 0 75
Administrative 0 75
Fixed cost 0 2,400
Total cost* $ 5,775 $5,950
*In thousands of dollars.
Table 7.3 Static analysis of C & B chemical company (50,000 pounds of output)
(Source: http://www.swlearning.com/quant/coyle/seventh_edition/powerpoint/ch02.ppt)
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• Long-run/dynamic analysis
This is a mathematical method to calculate the point of equality between the two systems.
For example, suppose there are two systems1 and 2, equal at about 70,500 pounds of output. If a graph is
used to determine the equality point, the accuracy is difficult.
The equation for a straight line (y = a + bx) is considered in mathematical solution, where
“a” = fixed costs
“b” = variable cost per unit
“ x”= output level
Since, the two systems are equal at some point, the two equations are set up as equal and the cost
information is used to solve these equations.
Known is the fact that at approximately 70,500 pounds, the two systems are equal, and a point of
indifference is seen between the two systems.
System 1
If, Total cost = fixed cost + variable cost/unit × number of units
Then, y = 4,200 + 0.0315x-------equation 1
System 2
y = 4,800 + 0.0230x----------equation 2
Trade-off point
4,800 + 0.0230x = 4,200 + 0.0315x (equation 1 = equation 2)
600 = 0.0085x
x = 70,588 pounds
Fig. 7.7 Relationship between required inventory and order cycle length
(Source: http://www.swlearning.com/quant/coyle/seventh_edition/powerpoint/ch02.ppt)
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The more substitutable product, the higher customer service level is required.
Increase in inventory reduces cost of lost sales.
TC
INV
Logistics
COLS
Flow
TC = Total cost
INV = Inventory cost
COLS = Cost of lost sales
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Inv
Logistics Tr
Pkg
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8.1 Introduction
A market is a group of buyers and sellers of a particular product or service. Supply and demand is the most useful
model for a competitive market, and shows how buyers and sellers interact in market. Whatever be the reasons,
one element that is always present is price. If the price is too low, sellers will not sell. If the price is too high,
buyers will not buy. Prices play a crucial role in our economic system. Demand management activities in any
global supply chain consist of three activities: demand management, demand planning, and sales forecasting
management. The Law of Demand states that “Quantity demanded varies inversely with (in the opposite direction
to) changes in price”. Thus, buyers will purchase more of an item at a lower price and less at a higher price.
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Product cost Income
Technology Price
Price Acceptability
No. of Buyer’ expectations
suppliers No. of buyers
Demand Supply
• In a competitive market, the unit price for a particular good varies until it settles at a point where the quantity
demanded by consumers (at current price) will equal the quantity supplied by producers (at current price),
resulting in an economic equilibrium of price and quantity.
• The four basic laws of supply and demand are:
If demand increases and supply remains unchanged, then it leads to higher equilibrium price and
quantity.
If demand decreases and supply remains unchanged, then it leads to lower equilibrium price and quantity.
If supply increases and demand remains unchanged, then it leads to lower equilibrium price and higher
quantity.
If supply decreases and demand remains unchanged, then it leads to higher price and lower quantity.
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Supply (s)
Price Equilibrium
P*
Demand (D)
Q* Quantity
Fig. 8.2 Supply and demand equilibrium
(Source: http://www.investopedia.com/university/economics/economics3.asp)
• Changes in supply and demand can be short run or long run in nature.
• Weather tends to influence market prices generally in the short run. Changes in consumer preferences can
have either a short run or long run effect on prices depending upon the goods or services. They are
categorised based on importance of product i.e., luxuries or necessities.
• A luxury good may enjoy a short term shift in demand due to changing styles or appeal while necessities tend
to have stable or long run demand curves.
• Another major factor influencing market prices is technology. A major effect of technology in agriculture is to
shift out the supply curve rapidly by reducing the costs of production on a per unit basis.
• Here is an example to illustrate the law of supply and demand. For a particular Saturday night, the
willingness of particular restaurants to supply a nice dinner for two and the willingness of couples to dine out
is observed, depending on the price of the dinner.
• There are five restaurants, each with a seating capacity of 30 couples. One restaurant is willing to supply a
nice dinner for $15 a couple, but the others require higher prices. If the price were $15, everyone would show
up at the one restaurant, so that it would have a very long line. Only 30 lucky couples would get to eat.
• There are 250 couples willing to go out for dinner, if the price were as low as $12 a couple. Twenty couples
would be willing to pay as much as $80, but everyone else requires lower prices. Here is the whole picture.
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Supply offered by
Price of Dinner for Two Demand from Consumers
Restaurants
$12 0 250
$15 $30 200
$25 $60 140
$35 $60 60
$45 $90 50
$65 $120 40
$80 $150 20
P
D1D2 S
P2
P1
Q1 Q2 Q
Fig. 8.3 Shift in demand
(Source: http://sustainabilitynz.blogspot.com/2009/05/economicssupply-and-demand.html)
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Know your Establish the Identify Develop Implement &
clients true costs Demand response evaluate
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Forecast Demand
Volu
Forecast Error
Actual Demand
Time
8.9 CPFR
• Collaborative Planning, Forecasting and Replenishment (CPFR) is a concept that aims to enhance supply
chain integration by supporting and assisting joint practices.
• CPFR was launched in 1995 by Wal-Mart with the pharmaceutical group Warner Lambert. It seeks
cooperative management of inventory through joint visibility and replenishment of products throughout the
supply chain.
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• Planning and satisfying customer demands occur through a supportive system of shared information between
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8.11 Cost of Stock-outs
• Stock-out is a situation where the demand or requirement for an item cannot be fulfilled from the current (on
hand) inventory.
• Stock-out costs are the costs associated with being unable to draw on a stock of raw material, work-in-progress
or finished goods inventory (loss of sales, profits and goodwill, production dislocation).
• The cost of a stock out is a critical to the implementation of any retail inventory model. Unless these costs
are known, retailers cannot balance the costs (and risk) of holding inventory with the inevitable profits when
an item is out of stock.
Manufacturer
Wholesaler
Retailer
Consumer
Fig. 8.8 Channels of distribution
(Source: http://www.mbaknol.com/marketing-management/concept-of-distribution-channels-in-marketing/)
• Therefore, the channel serves to bridge the gap between the point of production and the point of consumption
thereby creating time, place and possession utilities.
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Agent Retailer
Consumer Consumer
Wholesaler
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