SCM PPT CH 1-4
SCM PPT CH 1-4
SCM PPT CH 1-4
Supply Chain Management and Total Quality Management (SCM & TQM)
Leng 5224
Leather Engineering Department (Bsc.), 5th Year 1st
Semester
Chapter One
1. Building a Strategic frame work to analyze supply chain
Content:
❖ Understanding supply chain
❖ Supply chain performance
❖ Supply chain drivers
1.1. Understanding supply chain
What is Supply
Chain?
• A supply chain is a set of organizations directly linked by one or more
of the upstream and downstream flows of products, services, finances,
and information from a source to a customer.
Supply Chain is:
Flow of products and services from:
• Raw materials manufacturers
• Intermediate products manufacturers
• End product manufacturers
• Wholesalers and distributors and
• Retailers
MANUFACTURERS
Makers of final products. Manufacturers perform the task of final assembly or product
integration.
DISTRIBUTORS
Responsible for managing, storing and handling of products for organizations that don’t want
to carry entire variety of products in their own facilities.
CONSUMERS
People who go into the stores and buy and consume the product
The four basic flows of a supply chain are:
• Finance Flow: All supply chain have finance flow. It is basically the
money flow or the blood stream of a supply chain.
• Material Flow: All manufacturing supply chains have material flows
from the raw materials at the beginning of the supply chain to the
finished products at the end of the supply chain.
➢ Facility are the actual physical locations in the supply chain network
where product are stored, assembled or fabricated.
manufacturing:
i. Product Focus: A factory that takes a product focus performs the
range of different operations required to make a given product line from
fabrication of different product parts to assembly of these parts.
2. Rails which is also very cost efficient but can be slow. This mode is
also restricted to use between locations that are served by rail lines.
5. Airplanes are a very fast mode of transport and are very responsive. This mode is
also very expensive mode & is somewhat limited by the availability of appropriate
airport facilities.
6. Electronic transport is the fastest mode of transport and it is very flexible & cost
efficient. However , it can be only be used for movement of certain types of products
such as electric energy, data, & products composed of data such as music, pictures &
text.
Cross-functional drivers:
Information(Basis for making decision)
➢ Managers must first decide which tasks will be outsourced & those that will
be performed within the firm.
➢ Pricing determines how much a firm will charge for goods & services that
it makes available in the supply chain.
• Pricing affects the behavior of the buyer of the good or services, thus affecting
supply chain performance, for example, if a transportation company varies its
charges based on the lead time provided by the customers, it’s very likely that
customers who value efficiency will order early & customers who value
responsiveness will be willing to wait & order just before they need a product
transported.
• This directly affects the supply chain in terms of the level of responsiveness
required as well as the demand profile that the supply chain attempts to
serve. Pricing is also a lever that can be used to match supply & demand.
Chapter Two
Transportation, Network design and information
technology in a supply chain
Contents
❖ Distribution and Warehousing in Supply chain.
❖ Transportation in a supply chain
❖ IT in Supply chain
Group Discussion
➢ It also covers the administration and manual labor required in storage such as
delivery, documentation, examination and certification.
building.
➢ The assembly and packing of the goods will be done in the ware house.
By doing so, the product cover will still look new and enticing upon
➢ If you pack the goods before bringing them to the warehouse, the
➢However, if you are far from distribution centers, you have to deal with
trucking costs and inventory frequently.
➢There are even businesses that literally combined these two business
operations.
Impact of Improper warehousing and distribution
➢ If the damaged goods are sold, they will either be sold in a much lower
price or not be sold at all.
➢ To bring back the wrong goods and to deliver the right ones.
➢ Due to delays, goods can get damaged and intended recipients may not
want to accept and pay for the delivery.
• Many manufacturers and retailers have found that they can use state of the
art supply chain management to reduce inventory and warehousing costs
while speeding up delivery to the end customer.
➢ Any supply chain’s success is closely linked to the appropriate use of
transportation.
➢ When freight costs are high, even seemingly small oversights can result
in unneeded expenses that could have been avoided and thus cut into
overall profit margins.
➢ Failure to monitor raw material prices can also result in above average
costs across multiple sources.
2.3. IT in Supply chain
❑Information is the driver that serves as the “glue” to create a
coordinated supply chain
➢ While excess inventory leads to risk of waste and for an increased need
for working capital funds, too low of inventory may lead to stoppages
in the production cycle and of losing business through stockouts.
➢ Manufacturers can also track activities through the whole supply chain, with
visibility into supplier end and distributor processes.
➢ This helps control the manufacturing process and leads to lower costs through
more effective decisions in procurement and contract management.
More Effective Order Tracking and Delivery
➢ Timely delivery of product is an important factor in ensuring customer
satisfaction. Higher customer satisfaction levels lead to higher customer
retention and repeat business.
Contents
❖ Co-coordinating and relationship in supply chain
❖ E-Business and Global supply chain
3.1. Co-coordinating in a supply chain
➢ A supply chain is a system of organizations, people, activities,
information, and resources involved in moving a product or service
from supplier to customer.
cost.
➢ Labor cost for shipping and receiving: The Lack of coordination
increases labor cost for shipping and receiving.
➢ Operational Obstacles
➢ Pricing Obstacles
➢ Incentive Obstacles
➢ Behavioral Obstacles
Managerial levels to achieve coordination
➢ Raw materials
be met
Most manufacturing organizations are networks of manufacturing and
distribution that produce raw material, transform them into intermediate
finished products and distribute the finished products to customers.
➢ Economies of scales
➢ Transportation savings
etc.)
Components of Inventory Decisions
Cycle inventory
• Average amount of inventory used to satisfy demand between
shipments
• Depends on lot size
Safety inventory
• Inventory held in case demand exceeds expectations
• costs of carrying too much inventory versus cost of losing sales
Seasonal inventory
▪ Inventory built up to counter predictable variability in demand
▪ Cost of carrying additional inventory versus cost of flexible
production
Value creation through Inventory handling
➢ Remember this