APICS BSCM Chapter 1 Notes
APICS BSCM Chapter 1 Notes
Color Key
APICS Definition
Material Management Book
Session Book
Manufacturing
Membership
Voluntary, any companys CEO signature and board of directors is
required
Alignment with Global Compact principles (4 areas, 10 principles)
Human Rights
Labor Practices
Environment
Anti-corruption
Remanufacturing
An industrial process in which worn-out products are restored to
like-new condition.
In contrast, a repaired product normally retains its identity, and
only those parts that have failed or are badly worn are replaced or
serviced.
Providing customer service and support
o Meeting customer needs
o Communication with customer
o Resolving design/production problems with customer input
Global Environment
Global competition
Economic, government, and regulatory influences
Customer expectations
o Providing value to the customer
Cost/price
Quality
Speed (order lead time)
Dependability
Flexibility in product and volume
Corporate Social Responsibility
o Human rights
o Labor practices
o Environment
o Anti-corruption
Manufacturing Environments
Engineer to order (ETO)
o Products whose customer specifications require unique engineering design,
significant customization, or new purchased materials. Each customer order
results in a unique set of part numbers, bills of material, and routings. Syn:
design-to-order.
Low volume, high variety
Product Life Cycle introduction only
Longest delivery lead time required (includes purchase and design
lead time)
Make to order (MTO)
o A production environment where a good or service can be made after receipt of
a customer's order. The final product is usually a combination of standard
items and items custom-designed to meet the special needs of the customer.
Where options or accessories are stocked before customer orders arrive, the
term assemble-to-order is frequently used. Syn: produce-to-order.
o
o
o
o
1) The stages a new product goes through from beginning to end, i.e., the stages that a
product passes through from introduction through growth, maturity, and decline.
2) The time from initial research and development to the time at which sales and support
of the product to customers are withdrawn.
3) The period of time during which a product can be produced and marketed profitably.
Product Life Cycle and Manufacturing Environments
Introduction
Growth Maturity Decline Phaseout
ETO
X
MTO
X
X
X
X
X
ATO
X
X
X
MTS
X
X
Mass
Customization
Intermittent
o A form of manufacturing in which the jobs pass through the functional
departments in lots, and each lot may have a different routing.
o Syn: job shop, process, functional layout
o
Flow
o
Workstations used
General purpose equipment used for various products
Used when volume isnt high enough to justify dedicated equipment
Repetitive (or Line)
The repeated production of the same discrete products or families
of products.
Repetitive methodology minimizes setups, inventory, and
manufacturing lead times by using production lines, assembly
lines, or cells.
Work orders are no longer necessary; production scheduling and
control are based on production rates.
Project
o Made at one site, usually specially designed products like ships
o ETO
The global network used to deliver products and services from raw materials to end
customers through an engineered flow of information, physical distribution, and cash.
The design, planning, execution, control, and monitoring of supply chain activities with
the objective of creating net value, building a competitive infrastructure, leveraging
worldwide logistics, synchronizing supply with demand, and measuring performance
globally.
Components
o Suppliers
o Manufacturers
o Distributors
o Retailers
o Consumers
o Flow of information, cash, and goods and services
Internal View
Materials Management
Materials Management
o The grouping of management functions supporting the complete cycle of material
flow, from the purchase and internal control of production materials to the
planning and control of work in process to the warehousing, shipping, and
distribution of the finished product.
Two Areas
o MPC
MRP II and ERP systems
o Physical Supply and Distribution
Physical supply - The transportation of goods from supplier to buyer.
Distribution
1) The activities associated with the movement of material, usually
finished goods or service parts, from the manufacturer to the
customer.
These activities encompass the functions of transportation,
warehousing, inventory control, material handling, order
administration, site and location analysis, industrial packaging,
data processing, and the communications network necessary for
effective management.
It includes all activities related to physical distribution, as well as
the return of goods to the manufacturer. In many cases, this
movement is made through one or more levels of field
warehouses. Syn: physical distribution.
o Manufacturing Planning and Control (MPC)
Right Products
Right Quantity
Right Time
Right Price
Priority and Capacity Planning
The process of balancing resources and demand
Priority planning
Establishes the priority plan for the due dates and order quantities
for the components of end items
Closed Loop MRP
Links production plan to MPS in early stage of MPC process
Links production planning/master scheduling/MRP to capacity
planning
Closed loop enables changes to priority plans/production
schedule by MRP and production activity control (PAC)
Helps report cost data
MRP II to ERP
MRP II Manufacturing Resource Planning
More emphasis on cross functional coordination
o Production, finance & marketing coordination to develop
sales/production plans during S&OP
o Constant production & marketing coordination to adjust
MPS due dates/order quantities in response to demand
changes
o Priority plan adjustments to align with capacity
o Financial data reporting
ERP its the best, blah blah blah
New Systems/Philosophies
Goals
Reduce lead times
Reduce inventory
Improve worker productivity
Improve product quality
Cost reductions
Increase profitability
Lean manufacturing
Eliminating non-value added activities (syn waste)
Continuous flow of manufacturing based on pull of customer
Empowering employees
Continuous improvement
Total Quality Management (TQM)
Long term management approach to success through customer
satisfaction
o Customer focus, identifying costs of quality, taking action to
solve problems, continuous improvement
Six Sigma
Reducing defects by decreasing process and product variation
o Variation causes defects
o < 3.4 defects per million opportunities (six sigma level
performance)
o Continuous improvement
Theory of Constraints (TOC)
Chapter 14 MM
Product Life Cycle Intro, Growth, Maturity, Decline
Product Development Principles
Product Design
o
o
o
o
Functional
Low-cost
Environmental/green
Simultaneous Engineering product design and process design working together
Time to market is reduced
Cost is reduced
Better quality
Lower total system cost
Process Design