Order Management and Supply Chain Network Design
Index vs Metric vs Measure
Index combines metrics into a single indicator, metric involves a calculation or combination of measurements, measure requires no calculations
Order Management
Influencing order through customer relationship management (CRM) and executing the order through OTC (order to cash) and replenishment cycles
Product Availability Metrics
Internal metrics: item fill rate, line fill rate; External metrics: order fill rate, perfect order
Role of Distribution (warehousing) Operations in SCM
Inventory management, customer service, balancing supply and demand, production support, omni channel fulfillment, transport economies
Full Collaboration
Involving all parties
Postsale logistics support (PLS)
Management of product returns from the customer to the supplier, and delivery/installation of spare parts
4 basic steps of CRM process
Segment the customer base by profitability, identify the product/service package for each customer segment, develop and execute the best processes, measure performance and continuously improve
Execution and Control
Shipment preparation, freight documentation, in-transit visibility, transportation metrics, service quality monitoring
Facility Considerations
Size, interior layout, product location
Vertical Collaboration
Up and down the supply chain (supplier, manufacturer, distributor, retail store)
Air Carriers
Used to ship small quantities of high-value, low-weight goods
Distribution Technology
Warehouse management systems (WMS), automatic identification (Auto ID) tools, warehouse execution systems (WES), warehouse control systems (WCS)
Elements of Successful Collaboration
Well understood goals and objectives, trust and commitment, organizational compatibility and communication, equitable sharing of gains and losses, benefits greater than going it alone, dedication to continuous improvement, strategic plan
FIFO
First in first out inventory model to pick later date package
Metrics for LOR
Flexibility/Adaptability of Process, Customization of Product/Service
Metrics for LSI
Forecast accuracy, inventory accuracy, data integrity, EDI compliance
Key Distribution Tradeoffs
Functional Tradeoffs: balance customer service/costs; Facility-Level Tradeoffs: space vs equipment, equipment vs people, people vs space
GIGO
Garbage in garbage out - the quality of the output is determined by the quality of the input
Geographic and Site-Specific Locational Determinants
Global/national/regional factors, site-specific factors
Water Carriers
Globally dominate all other modes internationally, compete with railroads for long-distance movement of low-value, high density, bulk cargoes
Sales objective
Customer service and profit
Horizontal Collaboration
Between suppliers
Stockout issues
Buyer waits until product is available, buyer back-orders the product, seller loses current revenue, seller loses a buyer and future revenue
Replenishment cycles
Acquisition of additional inventory
Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
Aligning the supplier's resources with its customers to increase customer satisfaction and supplier profits
Omni Channel
Alignment with go-to-market strategy, integrated fulfillment, store fulfillment, flow through fulfillment, direct store delivery, pool distribution, dedicated fulfillment
Marketing Objective
Allocate resources to the marketing mix to maximize long-term profitability of the firm
Drivers of Supply Chain Network Redesign
Changes in global trade patterns, changes in customer service requirements, shifts in customer and/or supply market locations, changes in corporate ownership/merger and acquisition activity, cost pressures, competitive capabilities, corporate organizational change
How to improve Return on Assets
Channel structure management, inventory management, order management, transportation management
3PL Trends
Continued expansion of 3PL and global reach, broadening of services offered
Role of Transportation in SCM
Critical links between organizations in a supply chain network, permitting goods to flow between their facilities, influences supply chain design, strategy development, and total cost management
Supply Chain Network Design Process
Define the process, perform a supply chain audit, examine network alternatives, conduct a facility location analysis, make decisions regarding network and facility location, develop an implementation plan
Logistics Operations Responsiveness (LOR)
Examines how well seller can respond to buyer's need. Response can take 2 forms: customization of service offerings and quick response to sudden changes in buyer's demand pattern
Customer Wait Time (CWT)
Includes order cycle time and maintenance, often overlooked
Key Distribution Challenges
Labor availability issues, demand variation, increasing customer requirements, distribution planning and strategy
LIFO
Last in first out inventory model
Logistics Objective
Minimize total costs, given customer service objective. Total costs = transportation + warehousing + order processing/information + lot quantity + inventory carrying
Carrier Selection
Modal selection, carrier selection based on freight rates, geographic coverage, and product protection
Pipelines
Most economical form of transport with the lowest cost per ton of any mode
Motor Carriers (Semi)
Most widely used mode of transportation in the US domestic supply chain, good for shipping to adjacent countries
Intermodal
Multiple modes of transportation
Network Design Model
Objective and need for decision support tools, optimization models, simulation models, heuristic models
Product service package
Option 1: Offer the same thing for each customer; Option 2: Vary the service offering for each customer segment
Distribution Execution
Order picking best practices, support functions (inventory control, safety/maintenance/sanitation, security, performance analysis, information technology), distribution metrics
Phase 2: Execute the Order
Order receipt (electronic vs manual), order fulfillment (inventory policy, number/location of warehouses), order shipments (transport mode choice)
Phase 1: Influence and Order
Organization attempts to change the manner by which its customers place orders
Current Trends Governing Site Selection
Positioning of inventory, greater use of delivery to customer from manufacturer, growing use of cross-docking facilities, emphasis on access to major airports/ocean ports, use of 3rd party logistics
Logistics System Information (LSI)
Pretransaction information for planning, transaction information for execution, posttransaction information for evaluation
Railroads
Primarily used for long distance movement of low value goods
Distribution Facility Functionality
Primary Functions: Accumulation, Sortation, Allocation, Assortment; Value-Adding Roles: Assembly, Kitting, Product Postponement, Sequencing
Decision to Outsource Transportation
Private fleet vs external service providers (3PL)
Performance Categories
Process Measures: time, quality, cost, other/supporting measures; Finance Connection: inventory management and capital, lead times and inventory cost, order processing time and order to cash cycle, profit and return on assets
Characteristics of Good Performance Measures
Quantitative, easy to understand, encourages appropriate behavior, visible, defined and mutually understood, encompasses outputs and inputs, measures only what is important, multidimensional, uses economies of effort, facilitates trust
OTC (Order to Cash)
Refers to outbound to customer, time it takes for order to come in until money hits the bank account, from supplier's perspective
Places to fail for service orders
Refused orders, rectified orders, orders rehandled
Successful Development of a Supply Chain Metrics Program
Team effort, involves customers and suppliers, tiered structure, metric owners, top management support
Elements of Customer Service
Time, dependability, communications, convenience
Range of relationship types
Transactional, Collaborative, Strategic
Types of 3PL Providers
Transportation based, contract based, freight forwarding based, financial based, information based, corporate subsidiaries based
5 Modes of Transportation
Truck, Rail, Water, Air, Pipeline