Drivers of Supply Chain Management
Drivers of Supply Chain Management
Drivers of Supply Chain Management
TO
Sir M. A. Khan
BY
Pervaiz Zafar
11018
Asim Mahmood Khokhar
Ahmad Abbas
11002
Umer Sheikh
11010
Azeem Ashraf
11029
MBEMBE-11017
MBEMBEMBE-
Strategic decisions
hierarchy
Frame work
Facilities
Treet Group of Companies, has three places where raw
inventory is stored, assembled and fabricated and have
five destinations where Finished Good stores before
supplies to distributors
TCL Group has three production sites and three initial
storage sites.
Inventory
At least an Inventory of One month in advance for Raw
materials of Steel Products, Plastic Products and Soap
Products.
Inventory with in production on daily bases is 3.3%, of
total Factories work 24 hours
Finished goods within a supply chain
Inventory policies
1. FACILITY
Facility are the actual physical locations in the supply chain network where
product are stored, assembled or fabricated. The two major types of
facilities are :
Product Focus: Treet 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. INVENTORY
3.TRANSPORTATION
Transportation entails moving inventory from point to point in the supply
chain . Transportation can take the form of many combinations of modes &
routes, each with its own performance characteristics. There are six basic
modes of transport that a company can choose from:
Ship which is very cost efficient but also the slowest mode of transport. It
is limited to use between locations that are situated nest to navigable
waterways & facilities such as harbor & canals.
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.
Pipelines can be very efficient but are restricted to commodities that are
liquid or gases such as water, oil & natural gas.
Trucks are a relatively quick & very flexible mode of transport. Trucks can
go almost anywhere. The cost of this mode is prone to fluctuations though,
as the cost of fuel fluctuates and the condition of road varies.
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.
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
4. INFORMATION
Information serves as the connection between various stages
5. SOURCING
Sourcing is the set of business processes required to
6.PRICING
PRICING
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.
Components of Pricing Decisions:
Fixed Price versus Menu pricing: A firm must decide whether it will
charge a fixed price for its supply chain activities or have a menu
with prices that vary with some other attribute, such as response
time or location of delivery.
Every day low pricing versus High-Low pricing
.Obstacles to Achieving
Strategic
fit
Economical variables
Increasing variety of products
Decreasing product life cycles
Increasingly demanding customers
Fragmentation of supply chain ownership
Globalization
A Newer Paradigm:
Pull Strategies
Production is demand driven
Production and distribution coordinated with true
customer demand
Firms respond to specific orders
Pull Strategies result in:
Reduced lead times (better anticipation)
Decreased inventory levels at retailers and
manufacturers
Decreased system variability
Better response to changing markets
But:
Harder to leverage economies of scale
Doesnt work in all cases
Push-Pull Strategy
The push strategy for Local Products
requires:
Push-Pull Supply
Chains The Supply Chain Time Line
Customers
Suppliers
PUSH STRATEGY
Low Uncertainty
PULL STRATEGY
High Uncertainty
Push-Pull Boundary
Raw
Material
Customers
Push
Pull
Low Uncertainty
High Uncertainty
Cost Minimization
Service Level
Resource Allocation
Responsiveness
Demand Management
Demand forecasting is essentially a linear process of
translating input assumptions into a forecast of
expected sales; demand management, by contrast, is a
highly iterative process that involves driving to a
revenue and profit target through prioritization of
customers, channels, products, geographies and the
demand stimulation programs available to the
enterprise.
Function of Demand
Management
Product introduction, phase out modification
Promotional planning
Consensus forecasting of anticipated business
Customer order services
Order delivery date promising
Customer order entry
Distribution requirement planning
Forecasting:
Defination
Forecasting is the establishment of future expectations by
the analysis of past data, or the formation of opinions.
Forecasting is an essential element of capital budgeting.
Capital budgeting requires the commitment of significant funds
today in the hope of long term benefits. The role of forecasting
is the estimation of these benefits.
25
Forecasting
helps
management
in
its
attempt to cope with the
uncertainty of the future,
relying mainly on data
from the past and present
and analysis of trend.
Forecasting
start
with
certain assumption based
on
management
experience,
Knowledge
and
judgment.
These
estimates are projected
into the coming month or
year using one or more
techniques such as Delphi
method, moving average
etc
Inherent lead time in the
business
Improve customer service
level
Maximize revenue and
profit
Why Forecasting
Element of Good
Forecasting
Timely
Accurate
Reliable
Meaningful units
In writing
Simple to understandable and use
Cost-effective
Steps of Forecasting
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Quantitati
ve
Simple
regressions
Multiple
regressions
Time trends
Moving
averages
Routes
Qualitativ
e
Top-down
route
Bottom-up
route
Delphi method
Nominal group
technique
Jury of executive
opinion
Scenario
projection
29
Quantitative Forecasting
Quantitative: Regression with related variable
Data set of Sales as related to both time and the number of blades in millions
Forecasting of "Blades"
Sales In Million
Yeild Per Ton In Millions
Consumption in Tons
2 Month Inventry
Total Requirement
Monthly Requirement
Lahore
Hyderabad
Total
180
600
1.3
1.3
138
462
780
1.3
600
100
700
58
Lahore
Sales in Million
420
1.3
Consumption
323
Monthly Requirement
27
30
Top-Down
where international and national
events affect the future behaviour of
local variables.
33
Bottom-Up
34
Forecasting: Summary
Sophisticated forecasting is essential for capital
budgeting decisions
Quantitative forecasting uses historical data to
establish relationships and trends which can be
projected into the future
Qualitative forecasting uses experience and
judgment to establish future behaviours
Forecasts can be made by either thetop down or
bottom up routes.
35
Intensive Distribution:
Distribution of blades in intensively cover and available
Cont..
Number of Members:
Manufacturer
Distributer
Wholesaler
Retailer
End-User
Upstream Member:
Manufacture is known as upstream member it
Cont..
Why Treet Like intensive Distributions?
Treet wants that the demand of their product increase in the
market resulting more profit earn so the Treet available their
product on all over the country and in some times international
levels. Through intensive distribution they make their product
available at any where for the consumption of end user by doing
this they get a lot of profit and the product of the Treet so they like
intensive distributions.
Distribution?
Distributors want to make him unique in
distribution o f blade so they dislike intensive
distribution.
CHART
Response Time