Enterprise Business Processes and Applications IS 6006

1 / 29
About This Presentation
Title:

Enterprise Business Processes and Applications IS 6006

Description:

Something must trigger inventory consumption as production proceeds (BO, WO, PO, SO, ... Manufacturing need a supplier oriented language to describe Bill of Materials ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:36
Avg rating:3.0/5.0

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Enterprise Business Processes and Applications IS 6006


1
Enterprise Business Processes and
Applications(IS 6006)
  • Masters in Business Information Systems
  • 4th Nov 2008

Fergal Carton Business Information Systems
2
Last week
  • Discussion of Dearden / Vizard
  • Examples of issues with OVOTT
  • Wastage / discrepancies in inventory
  • Plan, Buy, Make, Deliver model
  • Bill of Materials links raw materials to finished
    goods

3
This week
  • MRP
  • ERP modules (Sales, Finance, Logistics,
    Procurement, Manufacturing)
  • ERP is single instance
  • PCB exercise assignment practice
  • Bill of Materials matching supply with demand
  • Addditional reading

4
Material Requirement Planning
  • Emerged from BOMP in 60s
  • Conversion of production plan for parent items
    (finished products) into a production plan of
    production or purchasing for component items
  • Explosion of the requirements for a top level
    item through the BOM to generate component demand
  • Executed at each level of Assembly / sub-assembly

5
Principles of MRP
  • System to plan and control production and
    material flows
  • core principle
  • demand for material, parts and components depends
    upon the demand for finished product
  • Chain of causality from finished goods back to
    inventories
  • possible to reduce inventory to the minimum
  • plan for procurement based on actual needs
  • able to cater for lumpy (i.e. dependent) demand

6
BOM Recipe or formula
  • How to produce our products
  • List of components including possible substitutes
  • How much of each
  • Special conditions of operation
  • Expected yields and labour productivity (i.e.
    standards)
  • Extrapolate a cost per unit
  • Stored in a Bill of Material (BOM)

7
Example Bill of Material for desk
1 List out the components 2 describe the
steps required for assembly 3 arrange them in a
possible manufacturing sequence
8
Solution
Desk
Top (1)
Adjustable legs (4)
Screw Kit (1)
Frame (1)
Painted metal legs (4)
Painted tubing (4)
3 way junctions (4)
Leg Tubes (4)
Paint (0.6 dl)
Long Tubes (2)
Paint (1 dl)
Short Tubes (2)
9
How MRP works
  • Master production schedule drives the system
    based on customer orders
  • Bill of material (dependent demand)
  • Inventory status file
  • MRP package - contains the logic

See diagram next page
10
Benefits of MRP
  • Understanding the implications of changes in
    production schedule (by de-expediting parts)
  • Keeping inventory low (25 decreases reported)
    while removing risk of stock-outs
  • Better planning leading to
  • reduction in lead times
  • better use of capacity
  • lowered risk of obsolete production (e.g.
    engineering firms)
  • Early warning system earliest delivery dates are
    known before promises are made

11
Without MRP
Safety Stock
Demand variations
12
With MRP
Safety Stock
Demand variations
13
Keeping tabs on Work-in-Progress (WIP)
  • Inventory consumption
  • Something must trigger inventory consumption as
    production proceeds (BO, WO, PO, SO, )
  • Visibility of inventory in Work-in-Progress (WIP)
    is low
  • You can measure output / consumption at
    intermediate points but beware of disrupting
    process

14
ERP is often single instance
  • Single point of data entry (POs, SOs, )
  • Inventory control
  • Opportunity to re-design processes
  • Single technical platform (support)
  • Common language, common pool of data

Sales
Shipping
Collect cash
Production
Customer information (ship-to, bill-to,
install-at, )
15
(No Transcript)
16
Manufacturing - Core functionality
  • Planning Scheduling
  • Basic APICS standard planning (MS, RCCP, MRP,
    SFC) - requirements netted against on-hand
    inventories, lead times, etc.
  • Multilevel master scheduling
  • Multiplant MRP and DRP
  • Basic shop floor control utilizing workorders,
    backflush and repetitive options
  • Actual orders consume forecast
  • Quality Management.
  • Basic quality reporting and issue tracking
  • Maintenance Management
  • Ability to integrate maintenance work orders and
    inventory in system
  • Robust integration with fixed assets
  • Good tracking of maintenance costs

Quality Mgmt
Planning Scheduling
Maintenance Mgmt
Product
Process Monitoring Control
Resource Mgmt
  • Resource Management
  • Capacity requirements based on standards machine
    time, labor time, etc.
  • Rough cut capacity planning
  • Process Monitoring Control
  • Not covered in core ERP functionality

Production Mgmt
  • Production Management
  • Support for variety of production strategies
    kanban, etc. for JIT, production planning process
  • Track WIP inventory
  • Record detailed costs
  • Integration to quality management

17
Procurement - Core functionality
  • Vendor Performance Management
  • Good granularity of data and control over
    receiving date
  • Basic vendor ratings/qualifications mgmt.
  • Basic quality and delivery tracking
  • Financial Interfaces
  • Fully integrated w/AP for 2-way or 3-way matching
  • Fully integrated with costing for variance
    analysis
  • automatic voucher generation
  • Quote/Contract Management
  • Limited RFQ quote tracking
  • Blanket orders
  • Basic contract management

Vendor Performance Mgmt
Quote/ Contract Mgmt
Financial Interfaces
Purchase
Purchase Order Mgmt
Product Performance Mgmt
  • Purchase Order Management
  • Orders automatically generated for items through
    MRP, Min/Max, or manual requisitions
  • Integrated receiving inspection and quality
    tracking
  • Product Performance Management
  • Good granularity of data
  • Basic quality and defect tracking

Receiving Mgmt
  • Receiving Management
  • Integrated receiving inspection and quality
    tracking
  • Items non-nettable until approved
  • Receiving routings, matched with PO at dock

18
Logistics - Core functionality
  • Transportation Management.
  • Supports basic transportation processing,
    shipping documents, and organization of shipments
  • Network Infrastructure
  • Hierarchical system of branch/plants can include
    suppliers and virtual warehouses
  • Warehouse Management
  • Basic inventory location tracking
  • RF capable
  • Limited advanced capabilities (pick/put away
    strategies, cross-docking)

Transportation Mgmt
Network Infrastructure
Warehouse Mgmt
Fulfillment
Distribution Planning
Trade Mgmt
  • Distribution Planning
  • Distribution requirements planning with multiple
    replenishment strategies and inventory stocking
    strategies
  • Trade Management
  • Landed costs, multinational taxation and currency

Inventory Mgmt
  • Inventory Management
  • Visibility across organization
  • Serial and lot control

19
Sales - Core functionality
  • Sales/Order Entry.
  • Order templates, blanket orders and interbranch
    orders
  • UCC 128 compliance
  • Automatic credit check, order validity check
  • Customer Demand Management
  • Forecasts generated from sales history or other
    algorithms
  • Specification / Configuration Management
  • Feature and option-based system with simple
    if/then rule checking
  • Robust integration with fixed assets
  • Good tracking of maintenance costs

Sales\Order Entry
Customer Demand Mgmt
Specification/ Configuration Mgmt
Sale
Sales Force Mgmt
Price Promotion Mgmt
  • Sales Force Management
  • Some support for configured quotes and quote
    tracking
  • Automatic generation of orders from quotes
  • Price Promotion Management
  • Multiple pricing methods (by item, family,
    customer)
  • Basic promotions management (effectivity dates,
    volume or value discounts)
  • Limited complex promotions and pricing management

Client Information Systems
  • Client Information Systems
  • Customer hierarchies
  • Multiple ship-to, bill-to addresses and contacts
  • Very limited customer information

20
http//www.sap.com/solutions/business-suite/crm/fe
aturesfunctions/sales.epx
21
http//www.sap.com/solutions/manufacturing/feature
sfunctions/index.epx
22
PCB exercise
  • Read narrative
  • Draw a process map of the sales order process
  • Show how you would take into account specific
    customer requirements.
  • What are the strengths / weaknesses of the
    process mapping exercise?
  • How will you use this process map in the next
    stage of the project?

23
Strengths of process mapping
  • Separates physical from virtual flows
  • Flexible
  • Intuitive
  • Fast
  • Facilitates sharing of ideas
  • Helps define roles and responsibilities
  • Highlights potential for automation
  • Bottlenecks, delays, errors, redundancy,

24
Weaknesses of process mapping
  • Biased representation?
  • Difficult to meet all people involved
  • Dependent on accuracy of information given by
    participants
  • Holes in understanding -gt poor process
  • Doesnt take into account new processes
  • Interpreted differently
  • Consistency in analysis when using multiple
    analysts
  • Only maps repetitive processes?
  • What about manual work?
  • Find right level of abstraction
  • Only theoretical?
  • Complexity / overcomplication

25
How will you use the process map?
  • Spot problems
  • Optimise process
  • Tool to explain / educate
  • Map alternatives
  • Draw how we would like the process to work

26
What is a Bill of Materials?
  • Links demand and supply
  • Sales require a customer oriented language to
    describe functionality
  • See example for iPhone
  • Manufacturing need a supplier oriented language
    to describe Bill of Materials

27
Model names (sales)
28
Model numbers (manufacturing)
29
Additional reading from library
  • The enterprise resource planning decade lessons
    learned and issues for the future (Adam,
    Frédéric) Hershey, PA Idea Group Pub., c2004.
  • Second-wave enterprise resource planning systems
    implementing for effectiveness (Graeme Shanks,
    Peter B. Seddon and Leslie P. Willcocks.)
    Cambridge, U.K. New York Cambridge University
    Press, 2003.
  • Mission critical realizing the promise of
    enterprise systems (Davenport, Thomas H.) Boston,
    MA Harvard Business School Press, 2000.
  • Enterprise resource planning global
    opportunities and challenges (Liaquat Hossain,
    Jon David Patrick, Mohammad A. Rashid.) Imprint
    Hershey, PA Idea Group Pub. London
    Information Science Pub., 2002.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)