SCM Module
SCM Module
A supply chain is a set of organizations directly linked by one or more of the upstream
and downstream flows of products, services, finances, and information from a source
to a customer.
Supply chain management spans all movement and storage of raw materials, work-in-
process inventory, and finished goods from point of origin to point of consumption
(supply chain).
Managing supply and demand, sourcing raw materials and parts, manufacturing and
assembly, warehousing and inventory tracking, order entry and order management,
distribution across all channels, and delivery to the customer
Thus, an integrated supply chain management is the coordination and efficient management
of information, material and financial flow through improved relationships at all stages of
supply chain to obtain a sustainable competitive advantage.
The Need for Supply Chain Management
To improve operations.
Competitive pressures.
Higher revenues
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
The growth of technologies such as the Internet enables greater collaboration between supply
chain trading partners
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
External Suppliers
External suppliers provide the necessary raw materials, services, and component
parts.
Purchased materials & services frequently represent 50% (or more) of the costs of
goods sold.
Suppliers are frequently members of several supply chains often in different roles.
Suppliers
Location
Capacity
Customer orders
EDI; web-based;…
In a supply chain integration process the planning are often separated hierarchically
into strategic, tactical, and operational planning.
While, in the strategic planning as the process of identifying the goals for the supply
chain firms and sharing them within all functions (Thunberg, 2016).
Supplier Integrations with Logistics and Transportation Integrations:
In a supply chain process integrated logistics process is the mature stage of logistics
industry development that provides to improving the logistics system of the firms.
Since, logistics integration is provides to enhance right products in the right place at
the right time at the right cost and in the right condition in supply chain systems
(Kondratjev, 2015).
Thus , the logistics industry become a leader in the production chain and coordination
and is able to provide the community with a full range of logistics services (Ran,
2009).
Internal Functions
Processing
Purchasing
Warehousing Management
Quality Assurance
Shipping
As well manufacturing integration with suppliers, customers have a key aspect for
achieving sustainable competitive advantage (Ely Laureano, 2011).
Warehouse/Distribution Centers
Key Material Decisions
Location
Capacity
Customer orders
Manufacturer/Assembler shipments
External Distributors …
Logistics managers are responsible for managing the movement of products between
locations. Includes;
Traffic management – arranging the method of shipment for both incoming and outgoing
products or material
Retailers
Location
Customer orders
Market prices
Encompasses methods and strategies that improve coordination between the firm
(Gizaw, 2016),(Safar Fazlia, 2014), (Pamela Danese, 2011), (Kenneth J. Petersena*,
2005).
CI includes aiding producers to understand customer's demand, collaborating and
cooperating with customers to design, product development process, innovation (Tim
Straub1, 2013),
Vertical Integration
Is defined as ―when a company expands its business into areas that are at different
points of the same production path‖(Wangler, 2000).
Mainly companies of different stages of the value chain are working together.
For instance, Carnegie steel company owned mills where the steel was manufactured,
mines where the iron ore was extracted, coal mines that supplied the coal
(upstream), ships and railroads that transported the material(downstream) is a
typical example of vertical integration.
When a company owns some of the subsidiaries that produce some of the inputs used
in the production of its products.
Company expands its operations into an industry that produces inputs to the
company‘s products.
Forward vertical integration: this is when a company owns the subsidiaries that market the
product.
Company expands into an industry that uses, distributes, or sells the company‘s
products.
Balanced Vertical Integration: is a company that sets up subsidiaries that supply them with
inputs as well as market their product.
Taper Integration
In addition to company-owned suppliers, the company will also use other suppliers for inputs
or independent outlets in addition to company-owned outlets.(University.E
Capacity balancing: Making sure that inputs will match outputs at all levels
Decreased Flexibility
Monopolization of markets
Horizontal Integration
Is two or more companies of the same industry and in the same stage of production
work together.
These companies belong to the same supply chain stage and normally produce or
trade the same products (Wangler, 2000).
For instance, telecommunications, water, gas and electricity distribution work jointly ,to
utilize resources such as the use of similar assets (networks), whose maintenance requires
similar skills, synergies in the management of customers, in advertising and in administrative
activities, a stronger position in raising financial performances.
Economics of scale: Selling more of the same product in different parts of the world
Reduction in cost
Costs
Increased Responsibilities
Anti-trust issues
Creating a monopoly
Purchasing:
Operations:
Distribution:
Integration:
Supply Chain Integration- when supply chain participants work for common
goals.
Also
Primary
Transportation
Inventory management
Location
Secondary, or supporting
Warehousing
Materials handling
Acquisition (purchasing)
Protective packaging
Product scheduling
Order processing
SCM Process and SC Flow Management…
Involves movement of goods and services from suppliers to customers as well as handling
customer service needs and product returns
Information flow
Involves sharing forecasts and sales data, transmitting orders, tracking shipments, and
updating order status
Financial flow
involves credit terms, payments, and consignment and title ownership arrangements
Supply chain management is a process used by companies to ensure that their supply
chain is efficient and cost-effective.
A supply chain is the collection of steps that a company takes to transform raw
materials into a final product.
The five basic components of supply chain management are the following
Digitization makes the supply chain more efficient, agile, and customer-focused.
The vision of Industry 4.0 is to be realized, most enterprise processes must become
more digitized.
The supply chain today is a series of largely discrete, series of steps taken through
marketing, product development, manufacturing, and distribution, and finally into the
hands of the customer
Digitization brings down those walls, and the chain becomes a completely integrated
ecosystem that is fully transparent to all the players involved
From the suppliers of raw materials, components, and parts, to the transporters of
those supplies and finished goods, and finally to the customers demanding fulfilment.
Information is the driver that serves as the ―glue‖ to create a coordinated supply chain
Accurate
Hardware and software used throughout the supply chain to gather and analyze information
Effective use of IT in the supply chain can have a significant impact on supply chain
performance
Inventory
Transportation
Facility
Relevant information available throughout the supply chain allows managers to make
decisions that take into account all stages of the supply chain
Allows performance to be optimized for the entire supply chain, not just for one stage
– leads to higher performance for each individual firm in the supply chain
Examples:
The processes that take place between an enterprise and its customers downstream in the
supply chain
Key processes:
Marketing
Selling
Order management
Call/Service center
Internal Supply Chain Management Includes all processes involved in planning for and
fulfilling a customer order
ISCM processes:
Strategic Planning
Demand Planning
Supply Planning
Fulfillment
Field Service
There must be strong integration between the ISCM and CRM macro processes
Those processes focused on the interaction between the enterprise and suppliers that are
upstream in the supply chain
Key processes:
Design Collaboration
Source
Negotiate
Buy
Supply Collaboration
The extent to which the TMF enables integration across the three macro processes
determines its value
Bar code and point-of-sale: data creates an instantaneous computer record of a sale
Radio frequency identification (RFID): technology can send product data from an
item to a reader via radio waves
Enterprise resource planning (ERP) is a term used to refer to a system that links individual
applications (for example, accounting and manufacturing applications) into a single
application that integrates the data and business processes of the entire business.
Today, an ERP system can encompass, but is not limited to, the following functions:
Accounting
Human resources
Businesses realized that much of the information they needed to run an e-business — stock
levels at various warehouses, cost of parts, projected shipping dates — could already be
found in their ERP system databases
A major part of the online efforts of many e-businesses involved adding Web access to an
existing ERP system
RFID technology uses radio waves to read data put on a chip embedded within a tag.
Monitor product location at all time, updating both planning and execution systems
RFID in Practice
At the highest level, the three SCM macro processes will continue to drive the evolution of
enterprise software
Software focused on the macro processes will become a larger share of the total enterprise
software market and the firms producing this software will become more successful
Functionality, the ability to integrate across macro processes, and the strength of their
ecosystems, will be keys to success
Collaborative engineering
There are several types of transportation models used to calculate the appropriate distribution
of goods/materials in the supply chain as part of the logistical requirements.
These focus on the amount of supplies, demands, and a relative measurement unit (cost,
distance, time etc) needed to move items between supply stations to destinations. Some are:
Determine Row Penalty Number (PN i) – the difference between lowest and 2 nd lowest
Row cost
Here: R1 is 1; R2 is 1: R3 is 2
Determine Column Penalty Number (PN j) – the difference between the lowest and 2 nd
lowest Column cost
step 1 of VAM
step 2 of VAM
step 3 of VAM
step 4 of VAM
Current:
In the LP method, we determine how much supply is sent from each source to each
destination using an optimization equation.
Constraint will be
The total amount supplied by each source cannot exceed the source capacity
Each destination will receive sufficient supply to meet its peak demand
Theorem: If a number is added to or subtracted from all of the entries of any one row or
column of a cost matrix, then an optimal assignment for the resulting cost matrix is also an
optimal assignment for the original cost matrix.
The following algorithm applies the above theorem to a given (n × n) cost matrix to find an
optimal assignment.
Step 1: Subtract the smallest entry in each row from all the entries of its row.
Step 2: Subtract the smallest entry in each column from all the entries of its column.
Step 3: Draw lines through appropriate rows and columns so that all the zero entries of the
cost matrix are covered and the minimum number of such lines is used.
(i) If the minimum number of covering lines is n, an optimal assignment of zeros is possible
and we are finished.
(ii) If the minimum number of covering lines is less than n, an optimal assignment of zeros is
not yet possible. In that case, proceed to Step 5.
Step 5: Determine the smallest entry not covered by any line. Subtract this entry from each
uncovered row, and then add it to each covered column. Return to step 3.
Step 3: Draw lines through appropriate rows and columns so that all the zero entries of
the cost matrix are covered and the minimum number of such lines is used.
Chapter Two
Supply Chain Network Design
The network design in supply chain determines
Its physical arrangement, design, structural layout and infrastructure of the supply
chain.
The major decisions to be made are on the number, locations and size of
manufacturing plants and warehouses and the assignment of retail outlets to
warehouses, etc.
Physical location of facilities and transportation links are the decision variables that
allow used products to transfer from their former users to a producer and to future
markets again (Cascini, 2015).
Facility role: What role should each facility play? What processes should be performed at
each facility?
Market and supply allocation: What markets should each facility serve? Which supply
sources should feed each facility?
Technological
Macroeconomic
Political
Infrastructure factors
Distribution: the steps taken to move and store a product from the supplier stage to the
customer stage in a supply chain
Distribution directly affects cost and the customer experience and therefore drives
profitability
Choice of distribution network can achieve supply chain objectives from low cost to high
responsiveness
Distribution network performance evaluated along two dimensions at the highest level:
Distribution network design options must therefore be compared according to their impact on
customer service and the cost to provide this level of service
Response time
Product variety
Product availability
Customer experience
Order visibility
Return ability
An agile supply chain can be defined as a chain of supply that has the potential to respond to
changing requirements in a way that accelerates the delivery of ordered goods to customers.
Supply chain agility is a custom adopted by many companies for choosing a dealer.
A supply chain with flexibility and the ability to quickly react to emergency requirements can
help the business answer more efficiently to its customers.
Apart from flexibility, speed and accuracy are also signature marks of this type of supply
chain.
To acknowledge the advantages of an agile supply chain, we have to learn about the elements
of any type of supply chain.
These include elements like collection of orders and processing, supply of materials to create
the goods used to complete orders, packaging and transport of finished goods, and the quality
of customer service that is advertised throughout the process from the point of sale to the
actual delivery and beyond.
Thus, for considering the functions of supply chain as agile, each one of these elements must
be managed efficiently and coordinated in such a way that makes it possible to adapt to
changing circumstances.
With the help of an agile supply chain, merchants can easily respond to the varying
requirements of customer with relatively less time required.
Working collaboratively, the merchant and the customer develop a strategy to permit the
delivery of as much of the order as possible within the new time frame required.
Reverse supply chain states the evolution of products from customer to merchant.
This is the reverse of the traditional supply chain evolution of products from merchant to
customer.
Mostly RSC is designed to carry out the below given five key processes
Product acquisition − Accumulating the used product from the user by the reseller or
manufacturer because of some manufacturing defect or some other reason. It is basically
considered as a company‘s growth strategy.
Reverse logistics − Shipping of products from their final destination for auditing, sorting and
disposition.
Reverse logistics is the process of planning, executing, monitoring and controlling the
efficient and effective inbound flow and storage of secondary goods and information related
to the purpose of recovering value or proper disposal.
Inspection and disposition − Examining the condition of the product returned along with
making the most profitable decision for reusing it in some other way.
Remanufacturing or refurnishing − Returning the product to its original source from where
it was ordered in the very first place along with specifications. This is done basically when
there is a manufacturing or furnishing defect in the goods.
Marketing − Establishing secondary markets for the goods that have been recovered by the
merchant from the client who initially ordered it in the beginning but chose to return it.
There are emissions and consumptions of resources at every stage of product life
Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) – process used to evaluate the environmental impact at every
stage of production of a product or service
Final goal: purchase products with the minimal negative environmental impacts
Product design,
Material,
Manufacturing processes,
Warehouse,
Delivery of the final product to the consumers in order to achieve a greener supply
chain and maintain competitive advantage (Seman1, 2012).
The supply chain has been traditionally defined as a one way, integrated manufacturing
process wherein raw materials are converted into final products, then delivered to customers.
GSC also screens suppliers for environmental performance, work with them on green design
initiatives and provide training & information to build suppliers' environmental management
capacity
GSC- buyer requiring certain level of environmental responsibility in the business practice
Benefits of GSCM
By reducing wastes, companies decrease handling expenses, fines, and even costly inputs.
Supplier's savings may be passed along to buyer companies.
Efficient production is enhanced through the use of cleaner technologies, process innovation,
and waste reduction. Reduction in wastes equals dollars earned.
Government
Company
Product Packaging
Materials Innovation
Energy Efficiency /Green/Alternative sources of energy
Reduce
Reuse (Replace)
Recycle
Repair (Refine)
A ‗Green‘ Product:
Can be recycled
Be energy efficient
Emission reducing
Re-usable
Biodegradable
Organic
Purchasing Criteria
Green Purchasing
A way of purchasing which gives preference as far as practicable to those products &
services which cause least harm to the environment
It encompasses environmentally preferable purchasing i.e. the purchase of products which are
least harmful to the environment & human health
Taking into considerations of the quality, price & environment, the purchase of a product or
service with the least environmental impact
Green Purchasing
Environmental issues to consider:
Packaging
Recycled contents
Low energy
Longer life
Locally produced
Low pollution
Purchasing Criteria …
■Do not be biased against Green Purchasing – does it cost more ? There are increasing
numbers of products which can be purchased at the same price as conventional products.
■Seek measures to avoid cost increases as a whole, including the reduction of purchasing
quantity, reuse, etc.
■Some Green Products may be costly for now, but the stance to support it may be necessary
in consideration of the social significance of Green Purchasing: ―Social Costs‖.
Smaller suppliers have financial constraint and may not devote the necessary resources
Example: Computer manufacturer increase offerings to meet the Green Star standard for
energy efficiency
Documentation
However, lack of protection for innovation & intellectual property challenge the
confidentiality of the information
Quantitative measures − for example, order-to-delivery lead time, supply chain response
time, flexibility, resource utilization, delivery performance.
Quantitative Measures
Mostly the measures taken for measuring the performance may be somewhat similar
to each other, but the objective behind each segment is very different from the other.
The metrics of non-financial measures comprise cycle time, customer service level,
inventory levels, resource utilization ability to perform, flexibility, and quality.
Activity-based costs like the material handling, manufacturing, assembling rates etc.
Transportation costs.
Capturing the ―as is‖ state of a process and derive the ―to be‖ future state (reengineering);
Quantify the operational performance of similar companies and establish ―best of class‖
performance (benchmarking); and,
Characterize and describe the management processes that will result in ―best in class‖
performance (best practice analysis).
Chapter 3
Role of Logistics in Supply Chains
Logistics management
A SCM component that plans, implements, and executes flow and storage of goods, service
and information from the point of origin to the point of consumption.
Business Logistics:
● That part of the supply chain process that plans, implements, and controls the
efficient, effective flow and storage of goods, service, and related information from
point of use or consumption in order to meet customer requirements.
Military Logistics:
● The design and integration of all aspects of support for the operational capability of
the military forces (deployed or in garrison) and their equipment to ensure readiness,
reliability, and efficiency.
Event logistics:
● The network of activities, facilities, and personnel required to organize, schedule, and
deploy the resources for an event to take place and to efficiently withdraw after the
event.
Service logistics:
International Logistics
International logistics is the design and management of a system that controls the
forward and reverse flow of materials, services, and information into, through, and out
of the international corporation.
Management…
● International logistics will have a corporate logistics manager who will coordinate
logistics activities with other managers.
● This will require clear plans on execution and distribution processes, and may lead to
challenges in decision making.
Costs involved
● In both domestic and international logistics, you have to consider the costs involved
with store facilities, transportation, workers and technology.
● But, in international logistics, there are some additional costs to be considered too
which include tariffs, government taxes, fees and currency exchange fluctuations.
Trans-national
International
Multi-national
Global
Global Logistics
Worldwide basis
International Logistics
Importing/exporting issues
Market Potential
Geographic Diversification
• Consumer Preferences
• Distribution Channels
• Legal Frameworks
• Financial Infrastructures
Chapter 4
Reverse Logistics
Reverse Logistics Activities
• Damage
• Seasonal inventory
• Stock–balancing returns
• Material reuse
• Remanufacturing / refurbishing
• Many firms have not yet decided to emphasize reverse logistics as a strategic
variable.
• Reduce the risk of buying products that may not be ―hot selling‖ items.
Competitive Reasons
• Liberal return policies over the last few years due of competitive pressures.
• These activities enhance the value of the brand and are a marketing incentive
to purchase their products.
Clean Channel
• Clean out customer inventories, so that they can purchase more new goods.
• Fresher inventories can demand better prices, which in turn, protects margin.
Avoidance
Goal: design its merchandise and systems in a manner that will minimize returns since
the impossibility of fully prevent customers from sending purchased products back
Preventive Measures:
Customer Service – providing toll-free numbers that customers can call before
returning products
GATEKEEPING
―The screening of defective and unwarranted returned merchandise at the entry point
into the reverse logistics process‖. Rogers, Dale, and Don Tibben-Lembke
Goal: to reduce the amount of time to figure out what to do with returned products
once they arrive
When material often comes back in to a distribution center, it is not clear whether the
items are: defective, can be reused, or refurbished, or need to be sent to a landfill
Zero Returns
A program where the company in question does not accept returns from its customers.
Rather, it gives the retailer an allowable return rate, and proposes guidelines as to the
proper disposition of the items. Such policies are usually accompanied by discounts
for the retailer
It passes the returns responsibility onto the retailer, while reducing costs for the
manufacturer or distributor
Negotiation is a key element for all parties of the reverse logistics process. Because of
the inherent lack of expertise on product returns, negotiations usually are informal and
approached without formal pricing guidelines. Firms often do not maximize the
residual value of returned product.
Financial Management
Probably the most difficult part of reverse logistic and also one of the most
important
Returns are sometimes charged against sales. People in the sales department
may tend to fight returns and delay them as much as possible. Furthermore,
accounts receivables are impacted by returns
Outsourcing
Reverse logistic is usually not a core competence of the firm. In many cases,
however, it makes more sense for the firm to outsource their reverse logistics
functions than keep those in-house.
Timeliness of response
• Reactive Response
• For example:
• Firms forced to take back their products at the end of their useful lifetime.
• Reverse Logistics refers to all efforts to move goods from their typical place
disposal in order to recapture value.
Chapter Five
Vehicle Routing & Scheduling
The primary components of any transportation system are facilities, equipment and people.
• Facilities include terminals, tracks, bridges, tunnels, signals, roadways, waterways
and docks.
In long-haul freight transportation, goods are moved over relatively long distances, between
terminals or other facilities. Commodities may be transported by truck, rail, ship or any
combination of modes.
In short-haul freight transportation, goods are transported, usually by truck, between pick-up
and delivery points situated in the same area. Such tasks are of short duration, shorter than a
work shift.
Often the context is that of delivering goods located at a central warehouse or depot to
customers who have placed orders for such goods. Objective of such problems is to minimize
the time and distance traveled.
Pickup-Delivery Problems.
Backhauls.
Complications.
minimum cost,
minimum distance, or
minimum travel time.
Orders may be
General Setup
Model
Depot.
Customers.
Arcs or Links
Transportation links.
Delivery: Load vehicle at depot. Design route to deliver to many customers (destinations).
Pickup: Design route to pickup orders from many customers and deliver to depot.
Examples:
UPS, FedEx, etc.
– …..
• Yet TSP &VRP provide a perfect test ground for the development of novel ideas
TSP Solutions
• Heuristics
– Construction: build a feasible route.
– Exact algorithms
– Integer programming.
• Nearest neighbor.
– Nearest insertion.
– Savings method.
• However, each customer‘s definition of, and expectation from, fleet management is
unique.
• Fleet Facts – Understanding Costs
• 20% of the total cost of materials handling is associated with the acquisition cost of
the fleet.
– Downtime increases
– Productivity decreases
• On average, companies have 10% to 20% more units in operation than are required to
do the job.
• Short term rental units are often used to address shortages created by excessive
downtime.
• vehicles are often sourced through multiple vendors, limiting flexibility related to
fleet rotation and re-location.
• fleet Effectiveness
• fleet Management
• Reduced speed
• Process defects
• Reduced yield
• However, fleet breakdowns, idling and minor stoppages will make it very difficult to
reduce cycle times
• Hence, cycle time reductions result in shorter and more frequent production runs.
• Past OEE studies show that set-up and adjustments can consume up to 50% of total
production time
• In such situation the six big losses become more of an issue to solve
Down Time.
Speed Losses.
Defects.
1. Defects in process and rework (scrap and quality defects requiring repair)
Availability
• Loading time = Total available time per day (or month) – Planned downtime
• Planned downtime: amount of downtime officially scheduled in the production plan
Performance Efficiency
Alternative formula in case ideal cycle time is not known or products with different cycle
times are run on the same machine.
– Speed losses,
Rate of Quality
Pr ocessedamount - rejects
Rate of Quality 100
Pr ocessedamount
Usable operating time - Defects time loss
Rate of Quality 100
Usable operating time
SMED was originally designed to improve die press setups but its principles apply to
changeovers in all types of processes. Set-ups can be either:
• 3 Phases of SMED
In an ideal factory, fleet would operate 100 percent of the time at 100 percent capacity, with
an output of 100 percent good quality.
• So, let‘s imagine that we have bought our new tool and installed it to the
manufacturer‘s standard.
• Everyone has been trained and we all know how to use it, how to set it up for
production, and we have also started making our first product.
• We, as the users, need to consider all the different ways it can fail or how many ways
it can fail to fulfill the description.
1. The fleet can stop working completely known as a total failure (Availability),
total time available downtime
Availability (%) * 100%
total time available
2. The fleet can work slower than it is capable of known as the partial failure
(throughput rate/Performance), and
3. The fleet or product can lose quality known as quality failure (Quality).
Step 1: Survey
– Make/Model
– Age/Serial Number
– Current/Anticipated Operating
– Utilization/Required Availability
– Specifications/Special
– Application/Operating
– Maintenance History
Step 2: Analysis
– Maintenance History
– Utilization Studies
– Projected Maintenance
– Potential Savings
– ROI Analysis
Step 3: Proposal
• fleet Recommendations
• Maintenance Options
• Training Recommendations
Step 4: Implement
– Maintenance Arrangements
– Customer Commitment
Step 5: Monitor
– Condition of fleet
– Hours
– Utilization
– Maintenance Cost
– Management Reporting
• US policy has opened direct flights into many cities other than coastal gateways
Cargo Characteristics
• Stowability: degree to which a product can fill the available space in a transportation
vehicle
• Conferences represent several firms which have banded together for collective rate
making -- a steamship conference
• Oversupply of space has resulted in some liner firms withdrawing and offering lower
rates
• Price cutting by ships owned by the former Soviet Union (under variable costs) in
order to obtain hard currency
• Overall, they provide a somewhat stable rate structure which foster uniformity of rates
and procedures
Air
• Expensive
• Fast
• Mostly Intermodal
• Product has weight of 480 lbs with dimensions of 6‘x5‘x3‘ or 90 cubic feet. 480/90 =
5.33 lbs/cf
• Carrier charges based on standard density since this is a low density item
• Items with high density (> 10.4 lbs/cf) charged on actual weight
• Deregulation
– Global business
– Driver shortages
Containerization
– non-asset owning
• Earn difference between what they charge (LTL, LCL) and what they pay (CL, TL)
III. Owner-Operator
• Own or lease a truck and trailer and make services available to for-hire carriers
• Operate large network of terminals, pick up and delivery vehicles, and line haul
I. Improving Efficiency
• Rule of efficiency: Straight line, minimize stopping--avoid damage and cost (delay)
Rate:
– the amount that is lawfully charged and is based on cost plus market supply
and demand
Price:
Market-related factors
» Degree of competition
» Location of markets
» Government regulation
Product-Related Factors
• Monopoly (Rail/Air)
• Oligopoly (Ocean/Air)
• Monopolistic Competition
• Economic cost
– Opportunity cost
– Sunk cost
Cost Structures
• Common
Pricing of Transportation
• Transportation firms claim to know their costs but do not know how to price
Economic characteristics
» Cost
» Market coverage
» Degree of competition
» Predominant traffic
Service characteristics
» Speed (time-in-transit)
» Availability
Carrier Pricing
• Free-on-board (FOB)
• Cost-of-service pricing
• Value-of-service pricing
• Delivered pricing
• Quantity discounts
• Allowances
Mode/Carrier Selection
• Problem recognition
• Search process
• Choice process
• Postchoice evaluation
FOB Terms
• Identifies your legal responsibilities during a transaction and perhaps hidden costs.
Air Transportation
Revenue Management
• Basically, yield management is the process of allocating the right type of capacity to
the right kind of customer at the right price so as to maximize revenue or yield.
Generally, Yield Management system will significantly alter the traditional approach to
accommodation management specifically within the following key areas:
Management focus
Data collection
Capacity levels
Technological input
Pricing
Customer hotel interface
Incentive schemes
Training