SCLM
SCLM
The HUL manufacturing plant receives its raw materials from other various
suppliers who might have been supplied by other small suppliers. For Eg-
Packaging material may have come from XYZ Company, where this XYZ
company receives its raw material for packaging from other small suppliers.
• Customers
• Retailers
• Wholesalers/Distributors
• Manufacturers
In this Eg, the Wal-Mart store provides the Product, Pricing Information, and
availability information to the customer, and in return the customer provides
funds to the Wal-Mart. Wal-Mart then conveys POS information and
Replishment Order to the Distributor/Warehose, who then transfers the
replishment order back to the store through trucks. Wal-Mart then in return
transfers the funds to the Distributor after the replishment. The Distributor
also sends the Pricing Information and Delivery Schedule to the Wal-Mart.
Thus similar Information, Material and Funds flows takes place across
the entire Supply Chain.
The website provides the customer with Information regarding Price, product
variety and product availability.
Having made the product choice, the customer enters order information and
pays for the product.
These examples illustrate that customers are integral part of any supply
chain. The primary focus of any SC is to satisfy customer’s need and in the
process generate profit for itself.
Objectives of a Supply Chain
The objective of a SC should be to maximize the overall value generated.
The value that SC generates is the difference between what the final
product is worth to the customer & the costs the supply chain incurs
in filling the customer’s requests.
For most commercial Supply Chains, values will be strongly co-related with
SC profitability, which is the difference between the Revenue
generated from a customer and the overall cost across the Supply
Chain.
Supply chain value = Final Product Value – Total Supply Chain Cost
Higher the SC profitability, the more successful is the Supply Chain. But the
success should be measured in overall SC profitability not in terms of the
profits made at an individual stage. A focus on profitability at an individual
stage may lead to a reduction in overall Supply Chain profits.
• Strategy or Design
• Planning
• Operation
During this phase, given the pricing &marketing plans for the product,
company decides how to structure the Supply Chain format for the next
several years.
It decides-
• How resources will be allocated and what processes each stage will
perform. Locations & capacities of facilities.
A firm must ensure that the Supply Chain configuration supports its strategic
objectives and increases the SC profitability during this phase. SC decisions
are typically made for long time and are very expensive to alter at a short
time.
• Facilities
• Inventory
• Transportation
• Information
• Sourcing
• Pricing
1. Facilities:
These are the actual places where the inventory is stored, assembled
or fabricated. There are 2 types of major facilities- Prodution Sites &
Storage Sites
2. Inventory:
This includes all the Raw materials, Work in progress, finished goods,
etc within a Supply Chain. Changing Inventory policies may
dramatically alter the Supply Chain’s responsiveness and efficiency.
For Eg- a cloth retailer can make him more responsive by storing large
variety of clothes (inventory) and satisfying his customer’s needs from
that stock. But the large inventory increases the retailer’s cost, thus
making it less efficient. Reducing Inventory makes him more efficient
but hurts its responsiveness
3. Transport:
This involves moving inventory from one point to another in the Supply
Chain. Transportation can take the form of many combinations of
modes & Routes each with its own performance characterstics.
Transportation has large effect on efficiency & responsiveness of the
Supply Chain. For Eg- A Courier service provider company can use a
faster modes, such as FEDEX to ship its products, thus making its
Supply Chain more responsive, but less efficient due to high cost of
using FEDEX services or the Company can use a slower but cheaper
transportation modes to ship the products making the Supply Chain
efficient but less responsive.
4. Information:
5. Sourcing:
Determines how much a firm will charge for goods and services that it
makes available in supply chain. Pricing affects the behavior of the
buyer of the good or service, thus effecting the SC performance