Unit 3 Notes Supply Chain Management - Planning
Unit 3 Notes Supply Chain Management - Planning
Unit 3 Notes Supply Chain Management - Planning
Company to another. It may well just be a ‘distribution’ functional plan. It is most likely
that it will be necessary to incorporate elements from other functions (marketing, production,
etc) to represent the fully integrated nature of logistics or the supply chain. The third, and in
many ways most important, issue is whether or not a company has a structured logistics plan at
all. Many still don’t, so a first and major step may be to ensure that such a plan is developed,
based of course on the company’s business and competitive strategic plans. To achieve this, a
logistics planning framework, as outlined in Figure 3.1, can be used. As can be seen from the
figure, there are four key design elements that need to be considered. Traditionally, logistics
planning and design have evolved around the structure of the logistics network, such as depot
numbers and location, but it is now recognized that, as well as these physical logistics elements,
there are other factors that also need to be considered. These are the design of logistics processes,
logistics information systems and logistics organizational structure. Logistics process
design is concerned with ensuring that business methods are aligned and organized so that they
operate across the traditional company functions and become supply chain-oriented. Thus, they
should be streamlined and should not be affected or delayed because they cross functional
boundaries. A typical logistics process is order fulfillment, designed to ensure that customers’
order requirements are satisfied with the minimum of time and the maximum of accuracy. The
process should be designed as a seamless operation from.
• internal factors;
• A framework for a logistics design strategy is proposed. This incorporated the four key aspects
of logistics design:
1. process design;
2. network design;
4. organizational structure.
Some of the major factors that need to be considered when planning for logistics were
also considered. These included the product type, the product life cycle, packaging and unit
loads.
3. Select possible locations for the factories, DCs based on Investment climate
– Domain knowledge of the vertical & the companies: their products, capabilities & reputation
for quality delivery
– Soft skills for negotiation of acquisition of assets, Partner selection, Risk assessment and
Talent recruitment
In emerging markets, disputes over the asset acquisition can turn wicked involving long drawn
negotiations or abandoning the project.
Figure 3.2: Map the Supply Chain Ecosystem for the Industry Vertical
Decide the product you are selling: knowledge of the ecosystem (Traders), just the
product, Solutions. Innovations in product and process and other Ecosystem items to build a
blockbuster industry subject infrastructure
Identify the strategic areas for partnering or outsourcing in the value chain including the
risks of partnering – Make or Buy decisions; Local or Low cost Country Outsourcing, FDI or
Outsourcing.
– originally developed for emerging markets (the ECG device for rural India and the ultrasound
machine for rural China), now are being sold in US, pioneering new uses for such machines.
3.23: Select possible locations for the factories, DCs based on Investment:
For the industry vertical, – study the parameters that determine the investment climate of
nations and regions and rank order the regions – Identify the asset specific requirements from the
suppliers
3.231 Clusters: Clusters are geographic concentrations of interconnected companies,
specialized suppliers, service providers, and associated institutions (universities, vocational
training) present in a region. The proximity of companies and institutions in one location fosters
better coordination and trust lowering the transaction costs, minimizing the inventory, importing
costs and delays
Physical asset specificity refers to the mobile and physical features of assets such as specific
dies, molds, and tooling for the manufacture of a contracted product. Dedicated asset specificity
represents discrete and/or additional investment in generalized (as opposed to specific)
production capacity in the expectation of making a significant sale of a product to a particular
customer. Human asset specificity arises in a learning-by-doing fashion through long-standing
customer-specific operations. Site asset specificity refers to the successive stages that are
immobile and are located in close proximity to one another so as to economize on inventory and
transportation
All possible social, political & environmental risks that may affect the Supply Chain and
the goods, information and financial flows estimate the risk and identify what it takes for their
resolution.
Outsourcing: the loss of Intellectual Property, quality issues, transport delays, foreign exchange
fluctuations, energy costs escalation, loss of goods due to theft or piracy, etc.
In case of mergers or acquisitions: all the risks associated with their supply chain ecosystem
must also be considered..
Large scale and a high degree of concentration e.g. Giant firms such as DHL, Flextronics etc.and
geographical concentration (e.g. low cost manufacturing in China, IT clusters in India) make the
clusters highly vulnerable for terrorist attacks and natural disasters
Political and Societal risk: Land acquisition or people displacement are involved: Risks
such as change in the government, State- Center relations, Corruption, Social factors need to be
assessed If resource intensive shortages such as infrastructure, oil, power, water, mining etc
should be quantified.
Computer systems are subjected to electronic attacks originating from sources that are usually
unidentified.
The terrorist and counterfeit networks are also globally connected and indeed they follow the HR
practices of recruitment, training of people and also systematic planning processes for
implementing their objectives
For the product of your company (knowledge, product, solutions, and value chains) identify the
partners (Companies & Countries) for the Goods, Information and Financial flows and also the
risks of partnering
x Use the ecosystem information of partners of your partners while assessing the risks
(Failure of a Govt., Bank or an Earth quake)
x Map the supply chain processes including methods of collaboration and also for ensuring
partner loyalty
x Map your supply chain for each customer order and have mitigation strategies for
operational possible attacks, failures, etc.
x What do we have at the end of the Supply chain formation phase?
x Ecosystem map, various network partners (including manufacturing, logistics & IT) &
their (country & regional) locations
x Risks that the ecosystem faces
x The innovations (product, process, business model) needed to make it big in the industry
x The value chain architecture with outsourced and ownership details.
Figure 3.6: Ways to mitigate Supply Chain IP (Intellectual Property) Risks
Logistics is the way your company organizes its transportation, warehousing, inventory,
customer service and information processing systems. There are always tradeoffs in business. Do
you keep larger inventories of your products, resulting in increased warehousing costs, more
waste in outmoded or outdated product on the shelf, and higher management costs? Or do you
reduce the inventory to save money but risk insufficient product to fulfill demands? These
tradeoffs are different for different businesses, but all businesses have tradeoffs that must be
considered. Firms often re-organize their logistics in an attempt to improve their transportation,
inventory, and infrastructure. Deciding when, what and how to reorganize is a problem faced by
companies worldwide every day. The down side of tradeoffs is that nothing is guaranteed. Your
decisions to reduce inventory, increase prices, or maintain the status quo can result in potential
benefit and/or harm to your customers and to your business. Considering the pros and cons of
tradeoffs to your clients can sometimes help identify the solution during the process. Effective
Supply Chain Management results in an opportunity to discover the best tradeoffs for your
clients. Processing, planning, implementing and controlling your business ensures efficiency and
cost effectiveness. The process or steps that change your product from its raw materials into the
finished product is your supply chain. Managing that chain of products, and ensuring the
efficiency of the steps to achieving successful delivery, is called Supply Chain Management
(SCM). Here are some potential benefits to your clients that effective and efficient SCM can
provide:
x Reduced Costs: Improving your bottom line can result in bringing the costs down for
you and for your consumer.
x Better delivery: As you research and improve transportation methods, the delivery of
your product to the end user will improve.
x Enhanced Product Conformity/Reliability: Improvements to your product based on
research, design improvement and adherence to standards results in better reliability and
performance.
x Better Service: As you explore methods to better serve your customers, overall public
perception of your product will improve.
x Customer Satisfaction: Your customer will be more impressed with your product, and
therefore more apt to continue to purchase, use and enjoy it.
x Better Technology: When you add technology to the development of your product, you
improve the technology of the end product itself.
x Better Availability: As you increase your methods of delivery, shelf stocking, sales, and
product distribution, your customer benefits because your product is there when he needs
it, where he needs it.
x Cohesive and efficient SCM results in improved products for your customers. That is
the bottom line that all organizations need to remember when considering logistical
tradeoffs.
Figure 3.8: Trade Offs associated with Logistics Network
The broad classes of capacity planning are lead strategy, lag strategy, match strategy, and
adjustment strategy.
x Lag strategy refers to adding capacity only after the organization is running at full capacity
or beyond due to increase in demand (North Carolina State University, 2006). This is a more
conservative strategy and opposite of a lead capacity strategy. It decreases the risk of waste,
but it may result in the loss of possible customers either by stockout or low service levels.
Three clear advantages of this strategy are a reduced risk of overbuilding, greater
productivity due to higher utilization levels, and the ability to put off large investments as
long as possible. Organization that follow this strategy often provide mature, cost-sensitive
products or services.
x Match strategy is adding capacity in small amounts in response to changing demand in the
market. This is a more moderate strategy.
x Adjustment strategy is adding or reducing capacity in small or large amounts due to
consumer's demand, or, due to major changes to product or system architecture.
3. More transparency across the supply base. More companies are demanding transparency
into the shipping process. Having better visibility into processes can improve shipment times and
minimize supply chain disruption, but in order to do this, standardization and automation is
needed.
5. The last mile is transforming. The uberization of many services is impacting the industry,
and the last mile is becoming more fragmented. Cloud platforms and crowd-sharing startups are
also collaborating with incumbents to complement their services. These disruptions to the last
mile as we knew it requires speed in accessing accurate information.
6. Analytics to gain insight. Forward-thinking companies will use analytics to better understand
their digital initiatives and customers’ challenges. Transforming that data to anticipate future
needs expands the value to customers.
3.6: Global LIS / LITS Capabilities and Limitations: LIS (Logistics Information Systems)
and LITS (Logistics Information and Telecommunication System), LIS and LITS both may be
taken in same context.
LIS may be defined as “An interacting structure of people, equipment, and procedures
which together make relevant information available to the logistics manager for the purposes of
planing, implementing and control.”
Information flow makes a logistical system dynamic. Quality and timeliness of information are
key factors in logistical operations.
Cost reductions
Sales increases
x Bar code
x Point-of-Sale ( POS)
x EDI
x RF-RFID