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Business Logistics

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Understand the role and nature of inbound logistics in a supply chain context ... and make ready costs: unpacking, inspecting , counting, sorting, grading, and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Business Logistics


1
Business Logistics
  • Chapter 3
  • The Inbound Logistics System
  • Adam Conrad

2
Learning Objectives
  • Understand the role and nature of inbound
    logistics in a supply chain context
  • Explain the different types of inbound systems in
    a supply chain
  • Discuss the major materials management activities
  • Understand the procurement process

3
Learning Objectives (cont.)
  • Identify the four steps necessary for procurement
  • Explain the criteria for evaluating vendors
  • Understand the major inventory techniques
    associated with materials management

4
Logistics Profile
  • Robbins Company
  • Parts too big and costly to ship by air
  • Ocean transport too unreliable
  • Impact of missed deliveries
  • Trans-Atlantic shipping runs like clockwork
  • Systems in place when not (Fax/EDI)
  • Despite transportation improvements Customs
    remains difficult

5
Inbound vs. Outbound
  • Inbound
  • Materials management
  • Procurement
  • Outbound
  • Customer service
  • Channels of distribution
  • Focus on MM, Inventory management and Procurement

6
Inbound Logistics along the Supply Chain
  • Mining Firm extractive, most concerned about
    outbound
  • Steel Firm inbound items stored outside in
    piles, finished steel requires more sophisticated
    handling
  • Container firm cans of different sizes, also
    part of supply chain for auto making etc

7
Inbound Logistics along the Supply Chain (cont.)
  • Food Firm stores cans as brights adding
    labels later
  • Retail Store- labels added per orders
  • Return todays economy recycles
  • Complexity Boeing vs. US Steel inbound vs.
    outbound

8
Materials Management
  • Integration
  • Information needs to flow both directions for
    effective coordination
  • Definition
  • the planning and control of the flow of
    materials that are a part of the inbound
    logistics system

9
Procurement
  • Importance
  • Links members in the supply chain and assures the
    quality of the suppliers
  • Definition
  • act of buying goods and services for a firm or
    the process of it
  • Activities are interfirm (org boundaries) and
    intrafirm (functional boundaries)

10
Procurement - Activities
  • Identify or reevaluate needs
  • Specifications from external customers
  • Define and evaluate user requirements
  • Measurable criteria
  • Decide whether to make or buy
  • Identify the type of purchase
  • Straight rebuy
  • Modified Rebuy
  • New buy

11
Procurement - Activities
  • Conduct a market analysis
  • Oligopoly/ monopoly markets etc.
  • Identify all possible suppliers
  • Simple as the yellow pages for small companies
  • Prescreen all possible sources
  • Demands vs. desires of users
  • Evaluate the remaining supplier base
  • Choose a supplier
  • Mechanics of the relationship (Ts and Cs)

12
Procurement - Activities
  • Receive delivery of the product or service
  • Make a postpurchase performance evaluation
  • control activity
  • Measure supplier performance against user
    requirements

13
Managing the Procurement Process
  • Determine the type of purchase
  • Determine the necessary levels of investment
  • Time and information of the firm
  • Perform the procurement process
  • Evaluate the effectiveness of the procurement
    process
  • Control step to determine
  • User needs met
  • Was the investment necessary

14
Vendors
  • Vendor Partners
  • Competitive advantage of the company
  • Customer satisfaction
  • Reduced total number of suppliers
  • TQM and JIT systems

15
Vendor Selection Criteria
  • Quality
  • Life of product, ease of repairs
  • Reliability
  • Delivery and performance history and performance
    life of the product
  • Capability
  • Production facilities, capacity and technical
    capability, management, organizational
    capabilities and operating controls
  • Financial
  • Must be stable or it affects supply chain

16
Vendor Selection Criteria
  • Desirable Qualities
  • Image or impression
  • Training aids
  • Vendor Location
  • Fill rush orders, delivery dates
  • Factor Importance
  • Depends on the material being purchased

17
Procurement Price
  • Sources of Price
  • Commodity Markets
  • Grain, oil, sugar and raw materials
  • Price List
  • Publishes, may offer volume breaks
  • Price negotiations
  • RFP/RFQ
  • Negotiations
  • When other methods dont apply or fail

18
Hierarchy of Costs
  • Traditional basic input costs
  • Primary price (bid, quoted, negotiated)
  • Direct transaction costs
  • Detecting inventory need, requisitioning,
    preparing and transmitting order documents,
    receiving information - EDI
  • Supply relational costs
  • Travel, training, links between purchasing and
    traffic, engineering, research, product
    development

19
Hierarchy of Costs
  • Landed costs
  • Actual transportation costs
  • Sales/F.O.B terms
  • Four different inbound options
  • Supplier selected for hire or private carrier
  • Buyer selected for hire or private carrier
  • Who owns it and when/claims and damage
  • Quality costs/factors
  • Conformance of goods to desired spec.
  • Cost of conformance, nonconformance, appraisal
    and ultimate use costs

20
Hierarchy of Costs
  • Operations/Logistics costs
  • Receiving and make ready costs unpacking,
    inspecting , counting, sorting, grading, and
    moving to the use point
  • Lot size costs
  • Production costs similar goods with dissimilar
    impact on production lines
  • Logistics costs

21
Other MM Activities
  • Warehousing
  • Facilities required
  • Raw materials vs. Finished product
  • Production Planning and Control
  • Coordinating product supply with product demand
  • Forecast customer demand
  • Provide from inventory or producing the product

22
Other MM Activities
  • Traffic
  • Managing inbound transportation of materials
  • Vendor Control analyze periodically
  • Modal Choice
  • Rush Shipments less on inbound
  • Receiving
  • Inspection Notify AP, Purchasing and Users
  • Damage Claims Notes on Bill of Lading Guilty

23
Other MM Activities
  • Quality Control
  • Quality Standards Meet the purchase agreement
  • Quality Implications Affects finished product
  • Sample vs. 100
  • Salvage and Scrap Disposal
  • Value of Scrap
  • Excess and obsolete materials
  • Solid market exists for salvage
  • Disposal
  • Legal and regulatory requirements for safe
    disposal of hazardous materials

24
Inventory
  • Holding inventory significant costs
  • Companies can reduce cost of business and improve
    ROI/ROA by decreasing inventory levels
  • MM/Inbound logistics plays a major role in
    driving inventory levels
  • Uncoordinated inventory approach loss for
    company and customers

25
Just-in-Time
  • Available when a firm needs them
  • short consistent lead times
  • Kanban
  • Signboard indicates replenishment quantities and
    times it must take place
  • JIT Operations
  • Production cards (kan cards) establish the amount
    to be produced
  • Requisition cards (ban cards) authorize the
    withdrawal of materials from feeding or supply
    operation
  • Andon (light system), yellow (little), red (big)
    prob.

26
Just-in-Time
  • Fundamental Concepts
  • Zero inventory
  • Short lead times
  • Small, frequent replenishment quantities
  • High quality, zero defects
  • Similarity to two-bin system
  • Or reorder point system
  • One bin to fill demand for a part and when empty
    the second bin supplies the part
  • Reducing lead times
  • Forklift example of 1 month for Toyota vs. 6-9
    months for American manufacturers

27
JIT vs. Traditional Approaches
  • Reduce Inventories
  • Does the supplier carry more?
  • Shorter Production Runs
  • Setup issues
  • Minimize Waiting lines
  • When and where firms need them
  • Short, consistent lead times
  • Proximity
  • Quality
  • Win-Win relationships

28
JIT Summary
  • Demand responsive, resembles EOQ and Fixed order
    Quantity approaches
  • Difference is reliance on improved responsiveness
    and flexibility
  • Relies heavily on accuracy of forecasting,
    communication, IS, and transportation

29
MRP
  • Materials Requirements Planning Joseph Orlicky
  • Supplying materials and component parts whose
    demand depends upon the demand for a specific end
    product
  • Logically related procedures, decision rules and
    records designed to translate a master production
    schedule in to time-phased net inventory
    requirements, and the planned coverage of such
    requirements for each component item needed to
    implement this schedule

30
MRP
  • Goals
  • Ensure availability of materials, components and
    products for planned production and for customer
    delivery
  • Maintain the lowest possible inventory level
  • Plan manufacturing activities, deliver schedules,
    and purchasing activities
  • Exploding
  • Determine how much customers desire and when they
    need it timing and need for components based
    upon the scheduled end product need

31
MRP
  • Master Production Schedule
  • MPS detailed schedule of SKUs and when they
    must be produced
  • Bill of materials file
  • Recipe and when they must be available BMF shows
    interrelationship of components and subunits
  • Inventory status file
  • Also does safety stock and lead times

32
MRP
  • MRP program
  • Calculates gross requirements and takes into
    account inventory and places orders
  • Outputs and reports
  • Quantities and time of order
  • Need to expedite or reschedule order dates
  • Canceled need for product
  • MRP system status

33
MRP Summary
  • Responsiveness
  • Quickly react to changing demand for finished
    products
  • Strengths
  • Safety stock levels, minimize or eliminate
    inventories
  • Identify process problems and potential supply
    chain disruptions and take corrective actions
  • Coordinate materials ordering across points in a
    firms logistics system
  • Most suitable for batch/intermittent
    production/assembly

34
MRP Summary
  • Limitations
  • Computer intensive and making changes is
    sometimes difficult while in operation
  • Ordering and transportation costs could increase
    as smaller amounts arrive more frequently
  • Not as sensitive to short-term fluctuations in
    demand as order point approaches
  • Complex and dont work as intended

35
Advanced Approaches
  • MRPII Manufacturing Resource Planning
  • Integrates financial planning and
    operations/logistics what if
  • Distribution Resource Planning (DRP)
  • MRP for marketplace
  • Customer demand drives time-phased plan for
    distributing product from plants and warehouses
    to customers
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