Chapter 7: Strategic Sourcing

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Chapter 7: Strategic Sourcing

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... gives retailer a temporary discount, called a trade promotion. ... Hardware stores: 3.5. Retail Nurseries & Garden Supply: 3.3. General Merchandise Stores: 4.7 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 7: Strategic Sourcing


1
Chapter 7 Strategic Sourcing
2
Strategic Sourcing
  • Strategic Sourcing is the development and
    management of supplier relationships to acquire
    goods and services in a way that aids in
    achieving the immediate needs of the business

Ford Manufacturing Supply Chain
http//www.covisint.com/
3
What is the bullwhip effect?
  • Demand variability increases as you move up the
    supply chain from customers towards supply

Customer
Retailer
Distributor
Factory
Tier 1 Supplier
Equipment
First noticed regarding Pampers
4
Bullwhip effect in the US PC supply chain
Annual percentage changes in demand (in s) at
three levels of the semiconductor supply chain
personal computers, semiconductors and
semiconductor manufacturing equipment.
5
Consequences of the bullwhip effect
  • Inefficient production or excessive inventory.
  • Low utilization of the distribution channel.
  • Necessity to have capacity far exceeding average
    demand.
  • High transportation costs.
  • Poor customer service due to stockouts.

6
Causes of the bullwhip effect
  • Order synchronization
  • Order batching
  • Trade promotions and forward buying
  • Reactive and over-reactive ordering
  • Shortage gaming

7
Order synchronization
  • Customers order on the same order cycle, e.g.,
    first of the month, every Monday, etc.
  • The graph shows simulated daily consumer demand
    (solid line) and supplier demand (squares) when
    retailers order weekly 9 retailers order on
    Monday, 5 on Tuesday, 1 on Wednesday, 2 or
    Thursday and 3 on Friday.

8
Order batching
  • Retailers may be required to order in integer
    multiples of some batch size, e.g., case
    quantities, pallet quantities, full truck load,
    etc.
  • The graph shows simulated daily consumer demand
    (solid line) and supplier demand (squares) when
    retailers order in batches of 15 units, i.e.,
    every 15th demand a retailer orders one batch
    from the supplier that contains 15 units.

9
Trade promotions and forward buying
  • Supplier gives retailer a temporary discount,
    called a trade promotion.
  • Retailer purchases enough to satisfy demand until
    the next trade promotion.
  • Example Campbells Chicken Noodle Soup over a
    one year period

One retailers buy
Total shipments and consumption
10
Reactive and over-reactive ordering
  • Each location forecasts demand to determine
    shifts in the demand process.
  • How should a firm respond to a high demand
    observation?
  • Is this a signal of higher future demand or just
    random variation in current demand?
  • Hedge by assuming this signals higher future
    demand, i.e. order more than usual.
  • Rational reactions at one level propagate up the
    supply chain.
  • Unfortunately, it is human to over react, thereby
    further increasing the bullwhip effect.

11
Shortage gaming
  • Setting
  • Retailers submit orders for delivery in a future
    period.
  • Supplier produces.
  • If supplier production is less than orders,
    orders are rationed, i.e., retailers are put on
    allocation.
  • to secure a better allocation, the retailers
    inflate their orders, i.e., order more than they
    need
  • So retailer orders do not convey good
    information about true demand
  • This can be a big problem for the supplier,
    especially if retailers are later able to cancel
    a portion of the order
  • Orders that have been submitted that are likely
    be canceled are called phantom orders.

12
Strategies to combat the bullwhip effect
  • Information sharing
  • Collaborative Planning, Forecasting and
    Replenishment (CPFR)
  • Smooth the flow of products
  • Coordinate with retailers to spread deliveries
    evenly.
  • Reduce minimum batch sizes.
  • Smaller and more frequent replenishments (EDI).
  • Eliminate pathological incentives
  • Every day low price
  • Restrict returns and order cancellations
  • Order allocation based on past sales in case of
    shortages
  • Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI) delegation of
    stocking decisions
  • Used by Barilla, PG/Wal-Mart and others.

13
Supply Chain Design Strategy
Based on concepts developed by Marshall Fischer
at Wharton (Penn)
  • Functional Products
  • Staples that people buy at retail outlets
  • Predictable demand and long life cycles
  • Physical costs
  • Strategy Minimize physical costs
  • Innovative Products
  • Life cycle is just a few months (e.g. fashion
    clothes computers)
  • Demand is unpredictable
  • Market mediation costs (inventory stockouts)
  • Strategy Maximize responsiveness flexibility

14
Hau Lees Concepts of Supply Chain Management
  • Hau Lees approach to supply chain (SC) is one of
    aligning SCs with the uncertainties revolving
    around the supply process side of the SC
  • A stable supply process has mature technologies
    and an evolving supply process has rapidly
    changing technologies
  • Types of SCs
  • Efficient SCs
  • Risk-Hedging SCs
  • Responsive SCs
  • Agile SCs

15
Hau Lees SC Uncertainty Framework
Efficient SC Ex. Grocery
Responsive SC Ex. Computers
Risk-Hedging SC Ex. Hydro-electric power
Agile SC Ex. Telecom
16
Outsourcing
  • Outsourcing is defined as the act of moving a
    firms internal activities and decision
    responsibility to outside providers
  • Reasons to Outsource
  • Organizationally-driven
  • Improvement-driven
  • Financially-driven

ABC News Report on Outsourcing Part 2
17
Inventory Turnover
  • A manufacturing company producing medical devices
    reported 60 million in sales last year. At the
    end of the year, they had 20 million worth of
    inventory in ready-to ship devices. Assuming
    that units are valued at 1000 per unit and sold
    at 2000 per unit, what is the turnover rate?
  • Sales 60,000,000 per year / 2000 per unit
    30,000 units sold per year _at_ 1000 COGS per unit
  • Inventory 20,000,000 / 1000 per unit 20,000
    units in inventory
  • Turns COGS/Inventory
  • 30,000,000/20,000,000 1.5 turns
  • Obtaining data
  • Look up inventory value on the balance sheet
  • Look up cost of goods sold (COGS) from earnings
    statement not sales!!
  • Common benchmark is inventory turns
  • Inventory Turns COGS/ Inventory Value

18
Inventory Turnover Statistics
Industries with higher gross margins tend to have
lower inventory turns
  • Wholesale
  • Groceries related 17.8
  • Vehicles automotive 6.9
  • Furniture fixtures 5.5
  • Sporting goods 4.8
  • Drug store items 8.5
  • Apparel related 5.5
  • Petroleum related 42.4
  • Alcoholic beverages 8.5
  • Retail
  • Hardware stores 3.5
  • Retail Nurseries Garden Supply 3.3
  • General Merchandise Stores 4.7
  • Grocery Stores 12.7
  • New Used Car Dealers 6.8
  • Gas stations mini-marts 39.3
  • Apparel Accessories 3.5
  • Furniture home furnishings 4.1
  • Drug Stores 5.3
  • Liquor Stores 6.6
  • Other Retail Stores 4.3

Source Bizstats.com
19
Value Density
  • Value density is defined as the value of an item
    per pound of weight
  • It is used as an important measure when deciding
    where items should be stocked geographically and
    how they should be shipped

20
Mass Customization
  • Mass customization is a term used to describe the
    ability of a company to deliver highly customized
    products and services to different customers
  • The key to mass customization is effectively
    postponing the tasks of differentiating a product
    for a specific customer until the latest possible
    point in the supply-chain network
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