Chapter Seven: Supply Chain Management
Chapter Seven: Supply Chain Management
Chapter Seven: Supply Chain Management
Current transformation
Automobiles Flour milling
Finished goods
(customers)
Dealers Baked goods
Features Vertical Integration
• Value chain
– every step from raw materials to the eventual end user
– ultimate goal is delivery of maximum value to the end user
• Supply chain
– activities that get raw materials and subassemblies into
manufacturing operation
• Terms are used interchangeably
Supply Chain Uncertainty
• Overproduction
• Waiting time
• Transportation
• Inefficient processing
• Inventory
• Unnecessary motion
• Product defects
Common Causes of Waste
• Layout (distance)
• Long setup time
• Incapable processes
• Poor maintenance
• Poor work methods
• Lack of training
• Inconsistent performance measures
• Ineffective production planning
• Lack of workplace organization
• Poor supply -quality/reliability
JIT Contribution to Competitive
Advantage
• Suppliers
– reduced number of vendors
– supportive supplier relationships
– quality deliveries on time
• JIT purchasing- The most challenging area for most
manufacturers in achieving JIT is the purchasing of raw
materials and parts. This is important because an internal JIT
system can only be operated successfully when the material
being fed into it are of sufficient quality and delivered on
time.
JIT Contribution to Competitive
Advantage - continued
• Layout
– work-cell layouts with testing at each step of the
process
– group technology
– movable, changeable, flexible machinery
– high level of workplace organization and neatness
– reduced space for inventory
– delivery direct to work areas
JIT Contribution to Competitive Advantage -
continued
• Inventory
– small lot sizes
– low setup times
– specialized bins for holding set number of parts
• Eliminate Safety Stock = Zero Inventory
• Scheduling
– zero deviation from schedules
– level schedules
– suppliers informed of schedules
JIT Contribution to Competitive
Advantage - continued
• Preventive Maintenance
– scheduled
– operator involvement
• Quality Production
– statistical process control
– quality by suppliers
– quality within firm
JIT Contribution to Competitive
Advantage - continued
• Employee Empowerment
– empowered and cross-trained employees
– few job classifications to ensure flexibility of
employees
– training support
• Commitment
– support of management, employees, and suppliers
Yielding
A competitive advantage!
Just-in-Time Success Factors
Suppliers
Employee
Layout
Empowerment
Preventive
Scheduling
Maintenance