Thi S Is Also Known As A "Pull System," and It Entails The Following
Thi S Is Also Known As A "Pull System," and It Entails The Following
Thi S Is Also Known As A "Pull System," and It Entails The Following
Provide access to real demand data along the chain for greater visibility of
the end customer. The first requirement is to replace the forecasts with real
data. The only supply chain partner with access to these data first hand is
the retailer, and retailers in the past have been no more willing to share
business data than any other firms. The other partners lack “visibility”—one
of the main supply chain principles. They simply cannot see what’s going
on with the end customer.
But visibility supply chain strategy is a necessity for building a pull
system, and pioneers like Wal-Mart have led the way in that regard.
With point of sale scanning or radio frequency identification (RFID), a
retailer can alert its suppliers to customer activity instantaneously. Instead
of producing to the monthly forecast, manufacturers with that kind of
immediate signal from the front lines can plan one day’s production runs at
the end of the preceding day. They produce just enough to replace the sold
items. Establish trust and promote collaboration among supply chain
partners. Collaboration is implied in the sharing of information. But more is
at stake than simply sharing sales information. Partners may have to invest
in new technology and develop new systems to be able to use the real-time
data.
With orders going out without a schedule, all processes will have to
be altered—warehousing (storage no longer needed), packaging, shipping,
and planning will all be handled differently in the new system.
In return for receiving real
time data that allow reduction of inventory; suppliers and distributors
have to agree to change their processes in whatever ways may be
necessary to make the new system function without disrupting custo
mer service. Increase agility of trade partners. Because the inventory
buffers will not exist or will be much reduced in this demand-
driven supply chain, the trade partners need to develop agility—the
ability to respond to the variability in the flow of orders based on sales.
The plant, for example, may have to undergo considerable change if it
has to produce several different kinds of products under the new
circumstances. When making to forecast, a plant can run a larger volume
of each product to send to inventory. But when making to order, the plant
may have to produce several different types of products in a day. There
will be no room for long changeover times between runs of
different products; therefore, equipment, processes, work center layout
s, staffing, or siting—or all these things—
may have to change to create the capacity required to handle the new
system.