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Purchasing and Supply Management

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A Formal Supplier Selection Process 1. Questionnaire Production capability Emphasis on quality 2. Financial analysis Long-term reliability 3. Buyer tour of supplier's ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Purchasing and Supply Management


1
Purchasing and Supply Management
2
A Formal Supplier Selection Process
  • 1. Questionnaire
  • Production capability
  • Emphasis on quality
  • 2. Financial analysis
  • Long-term reliability
  • 3. Buyer tour of supplier's plant
  • 4. Suppliers tour the firm's plant

3
Why study PSM?
  • Purchasing and supply management is a powerful
    tool for improving profitability McKinseys
    Quarterly, 1997
  • 19 point gap in a survey of electronic companies

4
Why study PSM
  • 40-70 of COGS accounted for by the cost of
    purchased goods and services
  • 10 cost reduction in COGS 10 improvement in
    profit
  • 10 improvement in sales (with a profit margin of
    10) translates to only 1 improvement in profit

5
Why Study PSM
  • Strategic role
  • Globalization
  • Buyer/Planner concept
  • Quality at the source
  • Collaborative role of supplier

6
Purchasing and Supply Management - Introduction
A companys procurement organization is tasked
withsecuring a reliable supply of quality
products to meet the demand of both internal and
external customers, at the lowest total cost, by
sourcing from strategic suppliersand maximizing
corporate buying power.
7
Objectives of PSM
1. Uninterrupted flow of Materials 2. Manage
inventory 3. Improve Quality 4. Develop
Suppliers 5. Standardize 6. Achieve lowest
total cost 7. Improve competitive position 8.
Develop cross functional relationships 9. Reduce
Administrative costs
8
Uninterrupted flow of materials
  • Interrupted flow leads to lost production,
    escalation of operating costs, and inability to
    satisfy delivery promises strikes, earthquakes,
    Sept. 11 etc.
  • Hedging strategy - Volkswagen operates plants in
    the United States, Brazil, Mexico and Germany.
  • Flexible Strategy - multiple suppliers in
    different countries, excess manufacturing
    capacity in factories
  • Collaboration and Outsourcing - share in the
    downside risk

9
Improve Quality
  • The cost to correct a substandard-quality
    material input can be huge
  • Specification, quality audit etc.

10
Develop Suppliers
  • Reduction of supplier base (normally by 50)
  • Select appropriate suppliers and work with the
    suppliers to attain continuous improvement

11
Standardize
  • Reducing the number of parts or the number of
    variants or models of a product can save
    significantly on material costs and thus increase
    profitability
  • Most complexity of product comes from design, not
    customer

12
Achieve total lowest cost
  • Strive to obtain needed items or services at the
    lowest possible total cost, assuming that
    quality, delivery and service requirement are
    satisfied.

13
Improve competitive position
  • PSM does not begin and end with one-off cost
    reduction
  • Properly managed, PSM can give companies a
    network of suppliers capable of delivering the
    technology, knowledge, products, or service
    quality that will beat competitors, at the same
    time as securing ongoing cost reductions.

14
Develop cross-functional relationships
  • Achieve harmonious, productive working
    relationship with other functional areas within
    the organization
  • Production and Control provide info on material
    requirement in timely fashion
  • Production and Engineering must be willing to
    consider substitute materials and different
    suppliers
  • QC interface between QC and supplier
  • Accounting timely payment to take advantage of
    quantity discount etc.

15
Reduce Administrative Costs
  • Streamline purchasing procedures
  • eMart in SAF
  • Purchasing Card Program by VISA
  • B2B exchanges

16
Supply Organization
  • Centralized Purchasing
  • Pros and Cons?
  • Decentralized Purchasing
  • Pros and Cons?

17
The 5 stages of purchasing
  1. Serve the factory keep the factory running.
    Focus on clerical, logistical duties.
  2. Lowest Unit Cost Cost analysis, competitive
    bidding, and negotiation become key skills
  3. Coordinated Purchasing Cooperative purchasing
    across sites and profit centers. Eg. lead buyers,
    buying committees, centralization of purchasing
    etc.
  4. Cross functional Purchasing Recognition that
    design, specification, and supplier development
    can have far more impact on cost than does
    negotiation
  5. World Class Supply Management - Strategic
    supplier selection, long-term relationship
    design, supplier network management, supplier
    collaboration on new technologies etc.

18
JUST IN TIME
  • Only what is needed, nothing more... To have
    only the right materials, parts and products in
    theright place at the right time. 

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21
THE SEVEN WASTES from Shigeo Shingo in Robert
W. Halls book Attaining Manufacturing
Excellence, 1987
  • Waste of over production
  • Waste of waiting
  • Waste of transportation  
  • Waste of processing itself
  • Waste of stocks
  • Waste of motion
  • Waste of making defective products

22
Toyota seven sources of waste in manufacturing
  • The process if the wrong type or size of
    machinees are used, if the process is not
    operated correctly of if the wrong tools and
    fixtures are used
  • Methods of methods in performing tasks by
    operators cause wasted movement, time,or effort
  • Movement Poorly planned layouts cause
    unnecessary movements.
  • Product defectsdefects interrupt the smooth flow
    of of work

23
  • Waiting time two kinds of waiting time that of
    the operator and that of material.
  • Overproduction raw materials and labor are
    consumed for parts not needed resulting in
    unnecessary inventories.
  • Inventoriesexcess inventories adds extra cost to
    the product

24
Misunderstandings about JIT
  • thinking of JIT as a physical system to be
    implemented rather than a management philosophy
    to be adopted
  • thinking of JIT as simply an inventory control
    system
  • thinking of JIT as strictly a manufacturing
    oriented management approach

25
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27
What happens with JIT
  • Eliminate non-value added activities ? less time
    spent and less money spent...
  • Involve your suppliers and customers?
    eliminate duplications, non value addded activ.
  • Shorter Set-up time and less WIP ?
  • Faster through-put, less time, higher quality

28
JIT Action Areas
  • Develop people - increase skills,productivity,
    morale
  • Eliminate waste in all areas
  • Optimize materials handling and production flow
  • Control Tooling
  • Increase quality
  • Improve continuously!

29
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30
1. Production flexibility at every stage of
supply
  • Smaller and more frequent shipments of products
  • Flexibility to produce quantities of intermediate
    products as needed

31
2. Schedule stability and discipline
  • Replace large batch sizes with continuous flow of
    smaller quantities
  • Reduction of storage, movement from place to
    place or inspection
  • Minimizes extra inventory extra with changes in
    demand
  • Quick delivery of products to respond to changes
    in demand

32
3. Comprehensive quality assurance
  • Defective-free, high quality products and
    processes avoids costs.
  • Eliminates wastes of
  • - Time - Material
  • - Product - Energy
  • - Money - Information

33
4. Teams of competent, empowered employees
  • Supervisor becomes a teacher, facilitator and a
    leader rather than an enforcer
  • Employees are empowered to take appropriate
    actions

34
5. A signaling system to pull production
  • Every system has a signal that triggers
    production
  • Kanban
  • Push production system
  • Pull production system
  • Modifications in the signaling system
  • Areas of Kanban applications

35
6. A logistics system to support JIT delivery
  • JIT requires fast and regular supply
  • Cost, reliability, quality, and flexibility are
    key factors in vendor selection
  • Vendors preferred with small lot sizes, frequent
    deliveries
  • Few to single suppliers
  • Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI)

36
Barriers to Successful Implementation of JIT
  • Cultural resistance to change
  • Lack of resources
  • Frequently top management lack understanding or
    commitment
  • Lack of or difficulty establishing performance
    measures

37
JIT Purchasing
  • Just in Time purchasing requires frequent
    releases of orders and frequent deliveries of
    products. For this to work, purchasers and
    suppliers must develop long-term relationships
    rather than use the multiple sourcing
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