Book Read Free

Guide to Supply Chain Management

Page 27

by David Jacoby


  Appendix 2

  Strategic sourcing techniques based on competition

  Stimulating competition is an important aspect of rationalisation through strategic sourcing, although it falls outside supply chain management in so far as it does not affect the ability to balance demand with supply or reduce the bullwhip effect throughout the supply chain.

  For leverage categories, the most effective strategy is generally based on approaches that act to keep suppliers’ margins in check. These approaches include, for example, requests for information (RFI), quotes (RFQ) and proposals (RFP), collectively called RFX for short, global sourcing, auctions and payment terms.

  Buyers have recently made a significant move from managing supplier price to managing supplier cost. Led by Wal-Mart, buyers know that knowledge of the actual cost is power. When buyers speak knowledgeably and accurately about cost structures in the supply market, sellers are more inclined to share information that proves (or disproves) the buyers’ understanding.

  In recent years, low-cost country sourcing has proved to be the most effective supplier competition strategy. Studies reveal that global sourcing has saved companies 13% of acquisition cost on their largest-spend categories, compared with an average of 7% for most supply chain initiatives. Both goods manufacturers and service providers do it under different names, for example outsourcing or offshoring, and even small and mid-sized firms are doing it. The arrival of value-priced competitors such as Zara (Spain) and Matalan (UK) has shifted the price expectations of consumers. Tesco buys over 60% of its clothing and 40% of its non-food products through its Hong-Kong based global sourcing centre.1 Even high-end retailers such as London-based Marks and Spencer have turned to low-cost country sourcing. When it started to make the transition in 1998, textile labour cost $9.50 per hour in the UK, while it cost less than 50 cents per hour in China, Pakistan and Indonesia. Like many retailers, Marks and Spencer began by asking its suppliers to offshore their sourcing and eventually it established some of its own supply relationships overseas. To deal with the challenge of the long import lead times for fashion-oriented clothes, it ordered half of its merchandise well before the season, 40% of it nearer to the season in which it is sold and 10% of it during the season “in response to emerging fashion trends”.2

  Offshoring is a common form of low-cost country sourcing. China became prominent for its low-cost offshore manufacturing capabilities. India also became a hotspot for business process outsourcing (BPO), and other countries are getting in on the BPO game. For example, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, president of the Philippines, cites BPO as one of the country’s growth strategies. Outsourcing and offshoring have been so widespread that international transportation and logistics companies, especially air express carriers such as DHL and UPS, are expanding rapidly on international routes that connect Asia and the West, which is catalysing the spread of SCM concepts in Asia. Even small, privately held firms can participate in the offshoring opportunity. Take, for example, MacGregor, a US financial services software developer that was recently acquired by Investment Technology Group. It operated a development centre in Spain, which was part of the reason it was attractive to Investment Technology Group.

  Other ways to engage suppliers in competition include competitive bidding, reverse auctions (which start at high prices and go down), competitive events and structured negotiation.

  The traditional mechanism for competitive bidding has been RFX. Charles River Laboratories, a $1.4 billion US clinical research company, uses RFX to source much of its material and service requirements, including lab supplies, animal transportation, and IT hardware and software. The RFX programme was part of a plan to centralise some parts of procurement after years of decentralised purchasing. Procurement decision-making had been fragmented across 40 locations in the United States, Canada, Scotland and Japan as a result of rapid growth through acquisitions.

  GlaxoSmithKline, a UK pharmaceutical company, has used reverse auctions extensively for purchasing materials and services. Purchasing magazine reports:3

  In 2003, the company completed 939 e-sourcing events including 534 e-auctions, pushing more than $3.8 billion through the tools, almost one-third of its total spend. After assuming responsibility for procurement, [chief procurement officer Gregg Brandyberry] was saving an average of 8% before moving suppliers to an online bidding system, when it almost doubled to 15% for sealed bids and sometimes as much as 28% for reverse auctions.

  The internet and low-cost computing have spawned many creative variations on auctions. For example, combinatorial auctions allow bidders to choose parts of the whole or the whole bundle in order to increase the chance of a higher bid value. Also, buyers can significantly affect results by controlling the sequence in which the bidders bid and the information is known or hidden from bidders. Today, buyers have polarised opinions on auctions. Some feel that they are the best way to send a hard message to suppliers and get tangible results quickly, while others feel that suppliers are less co-operative when under the auction model than under more relationship-focused supplier management models.4

  Appendix 3

  List of abbreviations

  3PL

  third party logistics provider

  ABC

  inventory counting method that stratifies types of inventory into categories according to the frequency of its rotation, or turns; alternative meaning: activity-based costing

  AGV

  automated guided vehicle

  APS

  advanced planning and scheduling

  APICS

  Association for Operations Management. The abbreviation comes from its former name, the American Production and Inventory Control Society

  ASRS

  automated storage and retrieval system

  ATO

  assemble to order

  ATP

  available to promise

  BOM

  bill of material

  BPO

  business process outsourcing

  BPR

  business process re-engineering

  CAD/CAM

  computer aided design, computer aided manufacturing

  CEO

  chief executive officer

  CFO

  chief financial officer

  CLO

  chief logistics officer

  CMO

  chief marketing officer

  COO

  chief operations officer

  CMMS

  computerised maintenance management system

  COGS

  cost of goods sold

  CORE

  clear, objective, relevant and effective

  CPG

  consumer packaged goods

  CPO

  chief procurement officer

  CRM

  customer relationship management

  CSCMP

  The Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals

  CSI

  Container Security Initiative

  CT/PAT

  Customs Trade Partnership Against Terrorism

  CTO

  configure to order

  DC

  distribution centre

  DIAD

  delivery information acquisition device

  DMAIC

  define, measure, analyse, improve and control

  DRP

  distribution resource planning

  EBIT

  earnings before interest and tax

  EBITDA

  earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation

  ECM

  electronic contract manufacturer

  ECR

  efficient consumer response

  ECO

  engineering change order

  EDI

  electronic data interchange

  EDLP

  every day low price

  EFT

  electronic funds transfer

  ERP

  enterprise resource planning

&nb
sp; EOQ

  economic order quantity

  ETO

  engineer to order

  EVA

  economic value added

  FMCG

  fast-moving consumer goods

  GPO

  group purchasing organisation

  GPS

  global positioning system

  ISCEA

  International Supply Chain Education Alliance

  JIT

  just-in-time

  KPI

  key performance indicator

  KRA

  key results area

  LP

  linear programme

  MECE

  mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive

  MRO

  maintenance, repair and operating

  MRP

  materials requirements planning

  MTO

  make to order

  MTP

  make to plan

  MTS

  make to stock

  NPD

  new product development

  NPI

  new product introduction

  OCR

  optical character recognition

  OEM

  original equipment manufacturer

  OM

  operations management

  OR

  operations research

  PDA

  personal digital assistant

  PDCA

  plan-do-check-act

  PLM

  product life-cycle management

  PO

  purchase order

  PPP

  public-private partnership

  QEC

  quick engine change

  RFID

  radio frequency identification

  RFx

  requests for information, quote and proposal (RFI/RFQ/RFP, collectively called RFx for short)

  RMA

  returned merchandise authorisation

  ROA

  return on assets

  ROCE

  return on capital employed

  RONA

  return on net assets

  S&OP

  sales and operations planning

  SaaS

  software as a service

  SCM

  supply chain management

  SCOR

  supply chain operations reference (model)

  SFA

  salesforce automation

  SKU

  stock-keeping unit

  SMED

  single minute exchange of die

  SRM

  supplier relationship management

  TCO

  total cost of ownership

  TMS

  transportation management system

  TPM

  total productive maintenance

  TPS

  Toyota production system

  TQM

  total quality management

  VAR

  value-added reseller

  VMI

  vendor-managed inventory

  VOIP

  voice over internet protocol

  VPN

  virtual private network

  WMS

  warehouse management system

  XML

  extensible markup language

  Appendix 4

  Glossary

  All definitions in this glossary are deliberately reduced to the essence of their pertinence to end-to-end SCM. For more detailed definitions, the reader may wish to consult the APICS Dictionary, the CSCMP Glossary and sources cited in the notes.

  Assemble to order

  Production system in which material is prepared so it can be assembled quickly upon customer request.

  Barcode symbology

  Logical systems of data storage in barcodes (strips of vertical lines of varying widths designed to be read by optical scanners) that define the amount and type of data that can be stored and how they are transmitted between the barcode and the reader. The UPC code, which is used at most retail checkout counters, is the most popular barcode symbology.

  Bottleneck

  Point of limited capacity where the flow slows down because of constriction.

  Break-bulk

  Irregularly-shaped and often oversized cargo that needs to be transported and handled by hand or by specialised equipment. Alternative definition (from the APICS dictionary): division of truckloads of homogeneous items into smaller or more appropriate quantities for use.

  Channel design

  Architecture of a set of supply chain relationships that defines which actors will trade with which other ones and sets high-level parameters such as which partner will hold inventory and how much, which will face the customer and which will share information with which others.

  Close-out

  Sale, discount or clearance.

  Collaborative inventory management

  Co-operation between a buyer and a supplier, usually in the form of shared forecast information and a single unified and reconciled plan, to improve stock availability and reduce its cost.

  Concurrent design

  Method of product development whereby new product conception is a collaborative and simultaneous process between many functions, such as product development, manufacturing and field service, with the goal of cost effectiveness and customer-perceived value once the product is produced and distributed in large volumes.

  Configure to order

  Assemble to order.

  Consignment

  Inventory replenishment mode in which the buyer pays only when he sells the product to his customer, and he may return unsold inventory to the supplier. Alternatively (CSCMP Glossary): a shipment that is handled by a common carrier.

  Constraints management

  Identifying, reducing or eliminating bottlenecks in an operation; according to the theory of constraints, a five-step process for identifying and eliminating bottlenecks that was developed by Eliyahu Goldratt.

  Cross-docking

  The process of taking cargo from an incoming vehicle to an outgoing vehicle without storing it in inventory at a warehouse. Cross-docking reduces inventory investment and storage space requirements.

  Cross-selling

  Offering a customer or prospective customer products or services from parts of the company’s offering other than what the customer is currently purchasing or interested in purchasing.

  Cycle time compression

  Re-engineering of processes to reduce the time, and hence the cost, needed for a product to move through part or all of a supply chain.

  DC bypass

  Circumventing the distribution centre by routing freight directly to its destination. This requires co-ordination with suppliers and customers to ensure the proper inventory levels and frequency of delivery to achieve the target service level and avoid stock-outs.

  Demand chain management

  Supply chain management that emphasises the primacy of customer requirements as manifested through the strategy techniques of synchronisation and customisation.

  Design for assembly/modularisation

  Engineering a system of components so that they can be easily and quickly assembled as a final product or service when a customer needs it.

  Design for maintainability

  Engineering a product or service so it can be easily and inexpensively repaired and updated.

  Design for manufacturability

  Approach to conceiving products that considers the complexity and cost of large-scale production.

  Design for operability

  Engineering a product or service so it can be easily and inexpensively used.

  Design for prototypeability

  Approach to conceiving a product that allows it to be easily and rapidly translated into a working model.

  Design for supply chain

  Approach to conceiving and developing products that considers total supply chain costs.

  Disintermediation

  Bre
aking down of an established reseller relationship in a supply chain in favour of a direct relationship between two parties.

  Drum-buffer-rope

  Lean manufacturing concept in which the drum represents the heartbeat, or takt time, of the operation (which is also the pace of the binding constraint); the buffer represents work-in-process inventory in the production operation; and the rope represents the pull of demand limited by the pace of material release.

  Early customer involvement

  Soliciting input from customers in the product development stage to increase customer satisfaction and implement cost-saving ideas before suboptimal supply chain processes, systems or infrastructure are developed.

  Early prototyping

  Creation of working models of a product at the initial stages of product development to identify problems while the design is still fluid enough that it can be modified at low cost.

 

‹ Prev