0% found this document useful (0 votes)
15 views28 pages

SCM1 - Pengenalan SCM

Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
15 views28 pages

SCM1 - Pengenalan SCM

Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 28

SUPPLY CHAIN

MANAGEMENT
Supply Chain

DepartemenTeknik Industri
Fakultas Teknik USU
Reference

 Chopra, S., and Meindl, P. (2001). Supply chain management:


 Strategy, planning, and operations. New Jersey - Prentice-Hall.
 Pujawan, I N. (2005). Supply chain management. Guna Widya.
 Simchi-Levi, D., Kaminski, P., and Simchi-Levi, E. (2000).
 Designing and managing the supply chain: Concept, strategies,
 and case studies. Irwin McGraw-Hill.
 Handfield, R., and Nichols, Jr., E. L. (2002). Supply chain redesign:
 Transforming supply chains into integrated value systems. New
 Jersey: Financial Times – Prentice Hall.
TUJUAN

 Untuk memberikan gambaran


umum tentang konsep-konsep,
metode dan alat dasar dalam
SCM.
 • Untuk memberikan pemahaman
tentang aplikasi sistem dan
teknologi informasi dalam
mendukung SCM
Definitions

4
What Is the Supply Chain?

• Also referred to as the logistics network


• Suppliers, manufacturers, warehouses, distribution
centers and retail outlets – “facilities”
Suppliers Manufacturers Warehouses & Customers
Distribution Centers

and the

• Raw materials
• Work-in-process (WIP) inventory Transportation Transportation
Costs Costs

• Finished products
Material Costs Transportation
Manufacturing Costs Inventory Costs
Costs

that flow between the facilities

5
The Supply Chain
Suppliers Manufacturers Warehouses & Customers
Distribution Centers

Transportation Transportation
Costs Costs
Material Costs Transportation
Manufacturing Costs Inventory Costs Costs
6
Supply Chain Illustration
Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 10-7
Supply Chain Processes

Sebuah rangkaian atau jaringan perusahaan-


perusahaan yang bekerja secara bersama-sama untuk
membuat dan menyalurkan produk atau Jasa kepada
konsumen akhir. Rangkaian atau jaringan ini
terbentang dari penambang bahan mentah (di bagian
hulu) sampai retailer / toko (pada bagian hilir).

Dalam sebuah SC terdapat tiga aliran:


• Material
• Informasi
• Dan Uang / dana.

10-8
Struktur SC yang sederhana
The Supply Chain – Another View

Plan
Plan Source
Source Make
Make Deliver
Deliver Buy
Buy

Suppliers Manufacturers Warehouses & Customers


Distribution Centers

Transportation Transportation
Material Costs Costs Costs Transportation
Manufacturing Costs Inventory Costs Costs

10
What Is Supply Chain Management (SCM)?

Plan Source Make Deliver Buy

• A set of approaches used to efficiently integrate


– Suppliers
– Manufacturers
– Warehouses
– Distribution centers
• So that the product is produced and distributed
– In the right quantities
– To the right locations
– And at the right time
• System-wide costs are minimized and
• Service level requirements are satisfied

11
History of Supply Chain Management

• 1960’s - Inventory Management Focus, Cost Control


• 1970’s - MRP & BOM - Operations Planning
• 1980’s - MRPII, JIT - Materials Management,
Logistics
• 1990’s - SCM - ERP - “Integrated” Purchasing,
Financials, Manufacturing, Order Entry
• 2000’s - Optimized “Value Network” with Real-Time
Decision Support; Synchronized & Collaborative
Extended Network

12
Why Is SCM Difficult?

Plan Source Make Deliver Buy

• Uncertainty is inherent to every supply chain


– Travel times
– Breakdowns of machines and vehicles
– Weather, natural catastrophe, war
– Local politics, labor conditions, border issues

• The complexity of the problem to globally optimize a supply


chain is significant
– Minimize internal costs
– Minimize uncertainty
– Deal with remaining uncertainty

13
The Importance of Supply Chain Management

• Dealing with uncertain environments – matching supply and


demand
– Boeing announced a $2.6 billion write-off in 1997 due to “raw
materials shortages, internal and supplier parts shortages and
productivity inefficiencies”
– U.S Surgical Corporation announced a $22 million loss in 1993
due to “larger than anticipated inventories on the shelves of
hospitals”
– IBM sold out its supply of its new Aptiva PC in 1994 costing it
millions in potential revenue
– Hewlett-Packard and Dell found it difficult to obtain important
components for its PC’s from Taiwanese suppliers in 1999 due to
a massive earthquake
• U.S. firms spent $898 billion (10% of GDP) on supply-chain
related activities in 1998

14
Value vs. Supply Chain

 Value chain
 every step from raw materials to the
eventual end user
 ultimate goal is delivery of maximum
value to the end user
 Supply chain
 activities that get raw materials and
subassemblies into manufacturing
operation
 Terms are used interchangeably

Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 10-15


Supply Chain
Management (SCM)
 Managing flow of information through
supply chain in order to attain the
level of synchronization that will
make it more responsive to customer
needs while lowering costs
 Keys to effective SCM
 information
 communication
 cooperation
 trust

Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 10-16


Supply Chain Uncertainty

 One goal in SCM:  Factors that


 respond to contribute to
uncertainty in uncertainty
customer demand  inaccurate demand
without creating forecasting
costly excess
inventory
 long variable lead times
 Negative effects of  late deliveries
uncertainty  incomplete shipments
 lateness
 product changes batch
 incomplete orders ordering
 price fluctuations and
 Inventory discounts
 insurance against  inflated orders
supply chain
uncertainty

Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 10-17


The Importance of Supply Chain Management

• Shorter product life cycles of high-technology products


– Less opportunity to accumulate historical data on customer
demand
– Wide choice of competing products makes it difficult to predict
demand
• The growth of technologies such as the Internet enable greater
collaboration between supply chain trading partners
– If you don’t do it, your competitor will
– Major buyers such as Wal-Mart demand a level of “supply chain
maturity” of its suppliers
• Availability of SCM technologies on the market
– Firms have access to multiple products (e.g., SAP, Baan, Oracle,
JD Edwards) with which to integrate internal processes

18
Supply Chain Management and Uncertainty

• Inventory and back-order levels fluctuate considerably across


the supply chain even when customer demand doesn’t vary
• The variability worsens as we travel “up” the supply chain
• Forecasting doesn’t help!

Multi-tier Wholesale
Suppliers Manufacturer Distributors Retailers Consumers

Sales

Sales
Sales

Sales

Time Time Time


Time

Bullwhip Effect
19
Factors Contributing to the Bullwhip

• Demand forecasting practices


– Min-max inventory management (reorder points to bring
inventory up to predicted levels)
• Lead time
– Longer lead times lead to greater variability in estimates of
average demand, thus increasing variability and safety stock costs
• Batch ordering
– Peaks and valleys in orders
– Fixed ordering costs
– Impact of transportation costs (e.g., fuel costs)
– Sales quotas
• Price fluctuations
– Promotion and discount policies
• Lack of centralized information

20
Bullwhip Effect

Occurs when slight demand variability is magnified as


information moves back upstream

Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 10-21


Today’s Marketplace Requires:

• Personalized content and services for their customers


• Collaborative planning with design partners,
distributors, and suppliers
• Real-time commitments for design, production,
inventory, and transportation capacity
• Flexible logistics options to ensure timely fulfillment
• Order tracking & reporting across multiple vendors
and carriers
Shared visibility for
trading partners
22
Supply Chain Management – Key Issues

• Forecasts are never right


– Very unlikely that actual demand will exactly equal forecast
demand

• The longer the forecast horizon, the worse the forecast


– A forecast for a year from now will never be as accurate as a
forecast for 3 months from now

• Aggregate forecasts are more accurate


– A demand forecast for all CV therapeutics will be more accurate
than a forecast for a specific CV-related product

Nevertheless, forecasts (or plans, if you prefer)


are important management tools when some
methods are applied to reduce uncertainty

23
Supply Chain Management – Key Issues

• Overcoming functional silos with conflicting goals

Customer Service/
Purchasing Manufacturing Distribution
Sales

High
Low pur- Few change- inventories
chase price overs
Low High service
Multiple Stable invent- levels
vendors schedules ories
Regional
Long run stocks
lengths Low trans-
portation

SOURCE MAKE DELIVER SELL

24
Supply Chain Management – Key Issues

ISSUE CONSIDERATIONS
Network Planning • Warehouse locations and capacities
• Plant locations and production levels
• Transportation flows between facilities to minimize cost and time

Inventory Control • How should inventory be managed?


• Why does inventory fluctuate and what strategies minimize this?

Supply Contracts • Impact of volume discount and revenue sharing


• Pricing strategies to reduce order-shipment variability

Distribution Strategies • Selection of distribution strategies (e.g., direct ship vs. cross-docking)
• How many cross-dock points are needed?
• Cost/Benefits of different strategies

Integration and Strategic • How can integration with partners be achieved?


Partnering • What level of integration is best?
• What information and processes can be shared?
• What partnerships should be implemented and in which situations?
Outsourcing & Procurement • What are our core supply chain capabilities and which are not?
Strategies • Does our product design mandate different outsourcing approaches?
• Risk management

Product Design • How are inventory holding and transportation costs affected by product
design?
• How does product design enable mass customization?

Source: Simchi-Levi 25
Supply Chain Management Operations Strategies

STRATEGY WHEN TO CHOOSE BENEFITS


Make to Stock standardized products, Low manufacturing costs;
relatively predictable meet customer demands
demand quickly

Make to Order customized products, Customization; reduced


many variations inventory; improved
service levels
Configure to Order many variations on Low inventory levels; wide
finished product; range of product
infrequent demand offerings; simplified
planning

Engineer to Order complex products, unique Enables response to


customer specifications specific customer
requirements

Source: Simchi-Levi
26
Supply Chain Management – Benefits

• A 1997 PRTM Integrated Supply Chain Benchmarking Survey


of 331 firms found significant benefits to integrating the supply
chain

Delivery Performance 16%-28% Improvement


Inventory Reduction 25%-60% Improvement
Fulfillment Cycle Time 30%-50% Improvement
Forecast Accuracy 25%-80% Improvement
Overall Productivity 10%-16% Improvement
Lower Supply-Chain Costs 25%-50% Improvement
Fill Rates 20%-30% Improvement
Improved Capacity Realization 10%-20% Improvement

Source: Cohen & Roussel


27
Supply Chain Imperatives for Success

• View the supply chain as a strategic asset and a differentiator


– Wal-Mart’s partnership with Proctor & Gamble to automatically
replenish inventory
– Dell’s innovative direct-to-consumer sales and build-to-order
manufacturing
• Create unique supply chain configurations that align with your
company’s strategic objectives
– Operations strategy
– Outsourcing strategy
– Channel strategy
Supply chain configuration components
– Customer service strategy
– Asset network
• Reduce uncertainty
– Forecasting
– Collaboration
– Integration

28

You might also like