Best Practices in Supply Management
Best Practices in Supply Management
Best Practices in Supply Management
Hell is :
Living in a Japanese House
Eating English Food
On a Chinese Salary
With an American Wife
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ASIA’s 50 MOST COMPETITIVE Cos.
- Asia Inc., Hongkong
Sundaram Fastners Ltd. (16th)
(Winner of General Motors’ “Supplier of the
Year” award)
Reliance Industries (9th)
Ranbaxy Laboratories (11th)
Bajaj Auto (20th)
Other International Companies :
Sony Corporation
Toyota Motor Corporation
Singapore Airlines
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Sundaram Fastners Ltd.
SFL supplies almost all of GM North America’s
requirements of metal caps, some four-and-a half
million a year – for several types of GM’s
requirements in cars, buses, trucks and there has
not been even a SINGLE rejection in full one year.
“Winning this award is an awesome achievement
since the recipients have exceeded the
expectations of their toughest customers – GM
buyers, GM engineers, & GM plants”
- HaroldR Kutner
VP-Prodn. & Logistics, GM North America
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BEST PRACTICES
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2. Tear Down Analysis : Get a sample of the
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3. Purchase Managers’ Pass Book
A Purchase Manager is held responsible for a
group of components, any increase in the
purchase price is debited to his/her account,
while any decrease in the price is credited to
him/her. The manager must maintain a positive
balance at all times. The purchase manager is
not allowed to place orders if his/her balance
becomes negative. She/ he can do so only after
obtaining special permission.
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4. “Challenge 1020”
(CBT)
CBT consisting of Purchase, Materials & Quality
(PMQ)
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Rating of Vendors-contd.
CBT gives its rating on a five category scale, based on:
Quality, technical competence, financial stability,
locational aspects, systems & procedures, managerial
competence and industrial relations in following five
categories:
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Dynamic Rating : Cross between a quarterly
report on quality and a monthly report on
delivery. The rating is on a 100-point scale.
With 60% on Quality (PMQ), 20% on Delivery
(Material) and 20% on suppliers’ response to
orders (Purchase).
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5. STABLE VENDOR MODEL OR CHURN
VENDOR MODEL
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THE VENDOR ARCHETYPE
Best Practices in handling vendor chains that
are in vogue :
Strategic Items :
Focus at the stable
Vendor chain
Leverage/genuine items:
Cubbyhole items : Such commodities can be
Design & ask bought with the quotation.
Vendors to adhere For these Vendor
to the Churn should be made
specifications feasible
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6. Look at TAC : “At TAC”
Maintaining a static relationship with vendors
can be suicidal. Vendor base becomes stagnant.
Project at TAC : Look at Total Acquisition Cost
(TAC = sum of pure cost, cost of rejection,
inventory, tax, inspection, inward expenditure
and line rejections and not pure costs)
Found a 25-35 per cent difference between the
two.
Hindustan Motor reactivated their Vendors Base
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7. Empower/ Arm Your Vendors
ssure the start-up a competition-free
environment initially, position engineers at
new 6endor’s operations, help obtain financial
and technical tie-ups.
Annual Vendors Meets, Work3hops, V)sits
Business w)th a handshake
No written contracts; work on Relationships
Consumer Operated Lube Oil Depot (COLD)
Vendors officers posted at Buyer’s premises
as Guest Officers, and the concept of Mother,
Daughter Companies followed in Japan.
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8. Vendor Satisfaction Index
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9. SFL’s Fruit Salad : Quality practice of
‘Parts Per Million’ Co.
If one wants to eat fruit-salad, one has to wash
each fruit, peel each fruit, cut each fruit, mix
with the necessary cream and it is ready to eat.
On the contrary, you cannot get fruit salad by
running a road roller on all the fruits.
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Best Practices emerge from a creative mindset ..
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Thank You
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WORLD CLASS MATERIALS
MANAGEMENT
1
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OUTLINE OF THE PRESENTATION
➥CHALLENGES OF THE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
➥WORLD-CLASS ORGANISATION
➥WORLD CLASS MATERIALS MANAGEMENT
➥CHARTING PATH FORWARD
➥PROFILE OF 21ST CENTURY MATERIALS
MANAGER
2
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1.0 CHALLENGES OF THE BUSINESS ENVIRONM
☛ 1.1 LIBERALISATION
☛ 1.2 GLOBALISATION
☛ 1.3 COMPETITION
3
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1.0 CHALLENGES OF THE BUSINESS ENVIRONM
1.4 SPEED :
EVERYTHING MUST BE
FASTER, SOONER, NEWER,
QUICKER
1.5 CUSTOMER
EXPECTATIONS :
PRODUCTS MUST BE
BETTER YET CHEAPER
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5
1.10 TO GAIN COMPETITIVE ADVANTA
➪ IT IS A MOVING TARGET
7
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2.0 WORLD CLASS
ORGANISATIONS
➧2.2 “WORLD CLASS” IS NOT
NECESSARILY “WORLD
SCALE”
CONFEDERATION OF BRITISH
INDUSTRIES’
AGENDA FOR COMPANIES ASPIRING TO
BE
WORLD CLASS : 8
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Manufacturing yesterday
A sea of inventory
Quality Poor
Lon
defects Product Inaccurat
g
ProductioEquipmen Low ion flow e
set n t motivatio inflexible
up inflexibilitdowntime n schedulin
tim y g 29
9
World-class manufacturing
Just in Time production
Rs WIP Rs
➟ BENCHMARK AGAINST THE BEST PERFORMERS IN AREAS LIKE PRODUCTIVITY, TIME TO MARKET
AND STOCK-TURN.
11
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2.3 AGENDA FOR COMPANIES ASPIRING TO B
WORLD-CLASS (contd...)
Effectiveness :
How well expected
or desired results
are achieved
Doing Right Things
(DRT)
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3.2 STRATEGIC SUPERIORITY
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OPERATIONS & STRATEGY MATRIX
STRATEGY
Wrong ?
Right
x ??
Wrong Right
OPERATIONS
WORLD CLASS = OE + SS
16
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PURCHASING STRATEGY !?
HIGH
COMPLEXITY
LOW HIGH
VALUE 17
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3.3 ELECTRONIC COMMERCE
18 38
3.4 ELECTRONIC
E - COMMERCE-LINGO
1. Electronic Catalogues
Graphical / Descriptive catalogues of goods and services
2. Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
The Computer-to-computer exchange of business data in a
standardised format.
3. Value-added Network (VAN)
A third party entity which electronically exchanges in
formation between subscribers and trading partners.
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E-Commerce Lingo contd.......
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3.5 Purchasing via CD-ROM /
INTERNET
➢DIRECTORIES
➢INTERACTIVE APPLICATIONS
➦Educational
➦Informational
➦Allow search across legal text and contracts e.g.
Contract Manager
➢STORAGE TOOLS
21
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3.6 PROCUREMENT CARDS
CITI BANK
CHASE
CHASING CARD BANK
E YOUR PURCHASING MORE PRODUCTIVE
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3.7 MEASURING PURCHASING PERFORMANCE
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MEASURING PURCHASING
PERFORMANCE
➤Ability to cultivate qualified
suppliers
➤Ability to perform work with a
minimum of errors
➤Ability to determine the bottom
price a supplier will
take
➤Amount of complexity of
commodities in
purchaser’s responsibility 24
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TYPES OF MEASUREMENTS
26
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Purchasing Performance Benchmarks contd........
contd......
27
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Purchasing Performance
Benchmarks contd........
11. Purchasing’s operating expense per
active supplier
12. Change in the number of active
suppliers during the
reporting period
13. Percent of purchases spent with
minority-owned
suppliers
14. Percent of purchases spent with 28
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Purchasing Performance Benchmarks contd.........
29
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Types of Measurements contd........
AUTOMATION
Automating the purchasing and supply department
PRODUCTIVITY
➳Responsiveness to internal customers
➳Co-operation with other organisational functions
➳Supplier development and success of supplier
certification
programs
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3.9 CEO’S PERCEPTIONS
ABOUT PURCHASING FUNCTION
55% IT IS EFFECTIVE
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Remember, for a measure to be
effective, it should be easy to
understand, relevant to your
needs, quantifiable, meaningful
to customers, strategically
motivated and tactically
deployed, and aligned with
organisation business needs and
goals.
By Michael Harding, C.P.M.,
CPIM, Principal of Harding &
Associates in Bristol, Vermont,
and Steven Kranz, C.P.M.
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CEO’S PERCEPTIONS OF PURCHASING PERFORMANCE
33
53
CEO’S HAVE CAUSED OR
ALLOWED THE PURCHASING OF
GOODS AND SERVICES TO BE
SPLINTERED IN VARIOUS
A JOR DEPARTMENTS
A M O R
T T
NO TRIBU
CON OST
M
TO ISION
DEC ING
K
MA
34
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WHAT THE CEO WANTS
☛ ? PERFORMANCE DEPT.
A HIGH
☛ REPORT SUCCESS : BOTTOMLINE IMPACT
☛ TALK LANGUAGE OF MONEY :
☛ RELATE YOUR ARGUMENTS TO PROFIT &
LOSS
☛ PRESENT YOUR CASE FROM THE CEO’s
PERSPECTIVE
☛ DEMONSTRATE THAT YOUR IDEAS
CONTRIBUTE TO CORPORATE GOALS
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3.10 INNOVATION
Improvement
Innovation
Continuous
Improvement
Time
36
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3.11 INTER-DEPENDECIES : EMPLOYEES
37
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4.0 CHARTING PATH FORWARD
WHERE DO WE WANT TO
GO ?
INTERPERSONAL ABILITIES
SELF-AWARENESS SKILLS
COMMUNICATION SKILLS
INFLUENCE SKILLS
TECHNICAL ABILITIES
PROBLEM SOLVING
COMMODITY KNOWLEDGE
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60
CHANGE
“ FROM REACTIVE TO
PROACTIVE
FROM TO DEFENSIVE TO
ASSERTIVE
FROM INWARD TO
OUTWARD
FOCUSED
FROM TRADITIONAL TO
DYNAMIC
FROM EXECUTIVE TO
ENTREPRENEUR 61
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Isn’t it getting a bit hot?
Well, it will probably soon pass
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I’m having the time
of my life!
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Boiled - MORTAL
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THANK YOU
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BENCHMARKING
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Contents
1. Benchmarking
2. Thought
3. Definition
4. Definition
5. Definition
6. Who does it
7. Objectives
8. Change- How Benchmarking help
9. Types of Benchmarking
10. Variations of Benchmarking
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Contents
11. Benchmarking : Fundamentals
12. 10- Step Benchmarking process
13. 5 Phases of Benchmarking
14. 5 Phases of Benchmarking
15. Benchmarking
16. Who can help
17. Benchmarking Companies
18. AI&T’s 12- Steps
19. ALOA’s Six Steps
20. Benchmarking Purchasing performance
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Contents
21. Benchmarking Purchasing Performance
22. Epilogue
23. Epilogue
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BENCHMARKING
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Benchmarking is … …
“AN ONGOING INVESTIGATION AND LEARNING
EXPERIENCE SO THAT BEST INDUSTRY PRACTICES
ARE UNCOVERED, ADOPTED, AND IMPLEMENTED.
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DANTOTSU
a Japanese word which means :
“Striving to be the BEST OF THE BEST”
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WHO DOES IT
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OBJECTIVES
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CHANGE - HOW BM HELPS ?
BELIEVE THERE IS A NEED FOR CHANGE : When
you see gaps between own Company and competition,
you want to change.
INTERNAL BENCHMARKING :
Comparison of practices between similar operations within a firm.
COMPETITIVE BENCHMARKING :
Comparison to the best face-off competitors
FUNCTIONAL BENCHMARKING :
Comparison of functional activities, even in dissimilar industries for
uncovering innovative practices.
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VARIATIONS OF BENCHMARKING
PRODUCT BM :
Comparison between different features and attributes of
products.
PERFORMANCE BM :
Comparison of indicators of a business as a whole, or
divided into critical functions and processes.
PROCESS BM :
Comparison of processes - business, support services
and management
STRATEGIC BM :
Studying and outperforming strategies of competition.
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BENCHMARKING :
FUNDAMENTALS
KNOW YOUR OPERATION :
Assess Strengths & Weaknesses
Document Work Process Steps & Processes
Define Critical Performance Measures
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10-STEP
BENCHMARKING PROCESS
10. Recycle the Process
9. Implement and monitor
8. Develop Action Plans
7. Revise Performance Goals
6. Communicate Findings
5. Project Future Performance Gaps
4. Analyze Performance Gaps
3. Collect Data
2. Identify Whom to Benchmark
1. Decide What to Benchmark
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FIVE PHASES
PLAN, ANALYSE, INTEGRATE, ACT, IMPROVE
(MATURITY)
1. PLANNING :
What to Benchmark
Whom to Benchmark
Data sources and Data collection
2. ANALYSIS :
Measuring the gap at present
Projecting the gap into the future
3. INTEGRATION :
Evolve goals, objectives and strategies and integrate
into business plans and operational reviews.
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Five Phases contd …
4. ACTION & IMPLEMENTATION :
Work out specific action plans, milestones, target dates,
persons responsible.
5. MATURITY :
Stay current with industry changes and update
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BENCHMARK
A BENCHMARK IS A STANDARD OF
OR JUDGED.
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WHO CAN HELP ?
*AMERICAN PRODUCTIVITY & QUALITY CENTRE
Created
APCQ BENCHMARKING CLEARING HOUSE
*NAPM’s
CENTRE FOR ADVANCED PURCHASING STUDIES
*In India
INSTITUTE OF QUALITY
NATIONAL CENTRE FOR QUALITY MANAGEMENT
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BENCHMARK COMPANIES
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Area Company
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Assembly Automation .. Ford Motor Co.
Billing & Collections .. American Express
Customer Focus .. Xerox
Employee Suggestions .. Toyota
Industrial Design .. Black & Decker
Information Systems .. General Electric
Marketing .. Proctor & Gamble
Research & Development Corning
Supply Management .. Motorola, Xerox, Ford Motor
Co.
Training .. Caterpillar
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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AT & T’s 12-STEPS
1. Determining who the clients are 7. Verifying that the BM process is part of
the business planning process.
2. Helping the clients understand the 8. Developing Implementation Plan
purpose of the Information
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ALCOA’S SIX STEPS
4. Studying Others
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BENCHMARKING PURCHASING
PERFORMANCE
1. Comparing total system against that of another
Company / Division.
2. Comparing total system against that of a Competitor
3. Comparing total system against the best in another
industry
4. Comparing a specific purchasing component against
another Division.
5. Comparing a specific purchasing against another
Competitor
6. Comparing a specific purchasing against any one in
the field
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7. Comparing firm’s paid prices against those of the
industry overall
8. Comparing Actual Budgets against Planned
Budgets.
9. Comparing Results of a Zero based Budgeting
Process.
10. Baselining good practices in each area.
11. Asking internal customers what they think of
purchasing’s performance.
… J. Carinato
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EPILOGUE
BROAD PURPOSES
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EPILOGUE contd...
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STRATEGIC ISSUES IN SUPPLY
CHAIN MANAGEMENT
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STRATEGIC ISSUES IN SUPPLY CHAIN
MANAGEMENT
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Contents:
1.0 Global Scenario
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1.0 Global Scenario
1.0 Highly Competitive Environment :
Reduced Costs
Increased Quality
Improved Responsiveness & Services
Flexibility
Better product availability
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2.0 Objectives of the Supply Chain
A well-oiled Supply Chain is expected to support
the strategic objectives of a business by adopting
the following performance objectives defined in
specific measurable parameters :
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Slack Vs Taut Supply Chain
Supply Chain should be neither too slack to
be inefficient nor too taut to break :
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SCM at Material & People Levels
Material Flow
Information Flow
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Definition
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4.0 Supply Chain Strategy
Strategic Supply Chain Management is directly
related to and draws strength from the business
strategy of an organization. It is developed from
business strategy.
Five aspects of Business Strategy / Policy :
(i) Products / Services for marketing
(ii)Market Segments (geographic) of operations
(iii)
Customer Segments
(iv)Channels of Distribution (Distributors, Dealers,
Retailers)
(v) Customer Service
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Five Elements of Supply Chain Strategy :
Sourcing
Distribution Inventory
Strategy
Strategy Strategy
Customer Integration
Service Strategy
Strategy
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4.1 Sourcing Strategy :
Make or Buy
Sourcing
Strategy
Mfg. Capacity
Management Management
Elements of Sourcing Strategy
102
Three Elements of Sourcing Strategy
(i) Manufacturing Management : Traditionally, PPC
Systems were designed to maximise efficiency of
labour and utilization of machines. These are no
longer adequate.
Now, production processes have to optimize
balance between Customer Satisfaction and
Efficiency.
104
4.2 Distribution Strategy
Linkage between the firm’s customers and the sources
of its products or services that the firm provides to the
market place. This decision involves consideration of
distribution costs, long term commitment to certain
types of costs associated with a channel of distribution.
Distribution Strategy
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Elements of Distribution Strategy
(i) Channel Selection : Choice of Channel depends on the
products or services to be marketed, volumes involved,
geographical locations, long-term policy regarding marketing
and level of customer service desired.
(ii) Supply Chain Configuration : Has a number of participants e.g.
sources of supplies, storage or stocking stations & distribution
channels till the supplies reach the end customers. Their
location has important bearing on the efficacy of supply chain
system and the business results of the organization. Supply
Chain configuration calls for determining numbers and location
of each of the
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participants, their role, etc. Factors such as Volume of supplies,
number of customers, geographic locations, cost of
transportation, distribution costs, level of customer delight and
vendor satisfaction are involved.
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4.3 Inventory Strategy
This is the core of SCM. The major cost of a supply
chain, the level of customer satisfaction, the business
growth (or fall) are largely influenced by the Inventory
Strategy.
Three Elements of Inventory Strategy :
Demand
Forecasting
Inventory
Strategy
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(iii) Stock Facilities Planning : Storage facilities,
handling equipment, proximity to rail/road
heads, closeness to distribution channels
are important.
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4.4 CUSTOMER SERVICE STRATEGY
The strategy defining methods and means to respond to
the needs and expectations of the customers in a manner
that maximises profitability. Companies do not sell their
products but relationships, solutions, supports and care.
Customer service has become the cutting edge and a
valuable business activity. Customer Service Strategy is
developed from three factors.
Service
Needs
Customer
Service
Strategy
Service Revenue
Cost Manage-
ment
Input for Customer Service Strategy
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(i) Identification of Service Needs : The
exercise calls for :
Segmentation of customers
Identification of segments unique to the Company
Identification of service needs relevant to each customer
segmentation / product / geographic location.
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(iii) Revenue Management : The principal of
maximising profitability and growth cannot
be sacrificed. Increased customer service
also must lead to these. Service is a profit
centre.
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4.5 SUPPLY CHAIN INTEGRATION
STRATEGY
Traditionally, suppliers and manufacturers
operate rather independently. Information on
stocks with manufacturer, distributors, dealers,
retailers is not available. In an efficient SCM,
manufacturers, suppliers, distribution channels
and customers are linked in the form of a chain
to develop and deliver products as a single
organization of pooled skills and resources.
Information Integration
This integration can have three forms in a spirit
of partnership :
Integration Decision Integration
Strategy
Financial Integration
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(i) Information Integration : Share confidential &
critical information, EDI, IT applications like
ERP have been successfully tried. Planning
and implementation of information systems can
help to analyze product flows, order patterns,
inventories, obsolescence, levels of production
and supply costs.
116
5.0 BARRIERS TO MM AND ROOT
CAUSES
The old approach was to create a new
functional silo - Materials Management. Few
companies were successful in using
multifunctional teams to effectively manage
their material flows.
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It was rare for companies to take holistic
approaches to managing materials. Key measures
and systems were generally focused inward. Most
organizations were overly focused on their internal
operations and had inadequate focus, processes
and resources to manage supplier and customer
linkages and relationships.
118
Conventional solutions were widely
adopted - for example computer systems
such as MRP and MRP II. Those with
vested interests in technical solutions
fought long battles with proponents of
common-sense approaches, such as JIT
and lean manufacturing. The most
common MRP and MRP II software, for
many years, did not contain effective
means to support the processes of
purchasing and supplier management.
This is still true today in many companies. 119
Inappropriate financial information was widely
used in decision making. Considerable
outsourcing has occurred, and resources
have been eliminated. Insourcing will be
difficult. Bad decisions are hard to correct
quickly.
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Best supply chain management programmes focus on actual
customer demand. Instead of forcing into the market a
product that may not sell quickly, they react to actual
customer demand.
So they minimise the flow of raw materials, finished product
and packaging materials at every point in the pipeline. SCM
systems pull data from every step of supply chain, providing
a clear, global picture of where the enterprise is heading.
By linking SCM applications with other business systems,
companies can slash cycle time and reduce inventory. They
can also reach beyond their own corporate walls to better
connect with suppliers, distributors and end customers.
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