What is supply chain management?
Supply chain management (SCM) is the combination of art and
science that goes into improving the way your company finds the raw components
it needs to make a product or service and deliver it to customers. The
following are five basic components of SCM.
Plan –
This is the strategic portion of SCM. You need a strategy
for managing all the resources that go toward meeting customer demand for your
product or service. A big piece of planning is developing a set of metrics to
monitor the supply chain so that it is efficient, costs less and delivers high
quality and value to customers.
Source –
Choose the suppliers that will deliver the goods and
services you need to create your product. Develop a set of pricing, delivery
and payment processes with suppliers and create metrics for monitoring and
improving the relationships. And put together processes for managing the
inventory of goods and services you receive from suppliers, including receiving
shipments, verifying them, transferring them to your manufacturing facilities
and authorizing supplier payments.
Make –
This is the manufacturing step. Schedule the activities
necessary for production, testing, packaging and preparation for delivery. As
the most metric-intensive portion of the supply chain, measure quality levels,
production output and worker productivity.
Deliver –
This is the part that many insiders refer to as logistics.
Coordinate the receipt of orders from customers, develop a network of
warehouses, pick carriers to get products to customers and set up an invoicing
system to receive payments.
Return –
The problem part of the supply chain. Create a network for
receiving defective and excess products back from customers and supporting
customers who have problems with delivered products.
What does supply chain management software do?
Supply chain management software is possibly the most
fractured group of software applications on the planet. Each of the five major
supply chain steps previously outlined composes dozens of specific tasks, many
of which have their own specific software. Some vendors have assembled many of
these different chunks of software together under a single roof, but no one has
a complete package that is right for every company. For example, most companies
need to track demand, supply, manufacturing status, logistics (i.e. where
things are in the supply chain), and distribution. They also need to share data
with supply chain partners at an ever increasing rate. While products from
large ERP vendors like SAP’s Advanced Planner and Optimizer (APO) can perform
many or all of these tasks, because each industry’s supply chain has a unique
set of challenges, many companies decide to go with targeted best of breed
products instead, even if some integration is an inevitable consequence.
It’s worth mentioning that the old adage about systems only
being as good as the information that they contain applies doubly to SCM. If
the information entered into a demand forecasting application is not accurate
then you will get an inaccurate forecast. Similarly, if employees bypass the
supply chain systems and try to manage things manually, then even the most expensive
systems will provide an incomplete picture of what is happening in a company’s
supply chain.
What is the relationship between ERP and SCM?
Many SCM applications are reliant upon the kind of
information that is stored in the most quantity inside ERP software.
Theoretically you could assemble the information you need to feed the SCM
applications from legacy systems (for most companies this means Excel
spreadsheets spread out all over the place), but it can be nightmarish to try
to get that information flowing on a fast, reliable basis from all the areas of
the company. ERP is the battering ram that integrates all that information
together in a single application, and SCM applications benefit from having a
single major source to go to for up-to-date information. Most CIOs who have
tried to install SCM applications say they are glad they did ERP first. They
call the ERP projects "putting your information house in order." Of
course, ERP is expensive and difficult, so you may want to explore ways to feed
your SCM applications the information they need without doing ERP first. These
days, most ERP vendors have SCM modules so doing an ERP project may be a way to
kill two birds with one stone. Companies will need to decide if these products
meet their needs or if they need a more specialized system.
Applications that simply automate the logistics aspects of
SCM are less dependent upon gathering information from around the company, so
they tend to be independent of the ERP decision. But chances are, you'll need
to have these applications communicate with ERP in some fashion. It's important
to pay attention to the software's ability to integrate with the Internet and
with ERP applications because the Internet will drive demand for integrated
information. For example, if you want to build a private website for
communicating with your customers and suppliers, you will want to pull
information from ERP and supply chain applications together to present updated
information about orders, payments, manufacturing status and delivery.
What is the goal of installing supply chain management
software?
Before the Internet came along, the aspirations of supply
chain software devotees were limited to improving their ability to predict
demand from customers and make their own supply chains run more smoothly. But
the cheap, ubiquitous nature of the Internet, along with its simple,
universally accepted communication standards have thrown things wide open. Now,
you can connect your supply chain with the supply chains of your suppliers and
customers together in a single vast network that optimizes costs and
opportunities for everyone involved. This was the reason for the B2B explosion;
the idea that everyone you do business with could be connected together into
one big happy, cooperative family.
Of course, reality isn’t quite that happy and cooperative,
but today most companies share at least some data with their supply chain
partners. The goal of these projects is greater supply chain visibility. The
supply chain in most industries is like a big card game. The players don't want
to show their cards because they don't trust anyone else with the information.
But if they showed their hands they could all benefit. Suppliers wouldn't have
to guess how many raw materials to order, and manufacturers wouldn't have to
order more than they need from suppliers to make sure they have enough on hand
if demand for their products unexpectedly goes up. And retailers would have
fewer empty shelves if they shared the information they had about sales of a
manufacturer's product in all their stores with the manufacturer. The Internet
makes showing your hand to others possible, but centuries of distrust and lack
of coordination within industries make it difficult.
Over the last few years most companies have gotten over the
trust issue. In many cases "gotten over" is a euphemism for
"have been bullied into sharing supply chain information from a dominant
industry player." Want to sell your goods in Wal-Mart? Better be prepared
to share data.
The payoff of timely and accurate supply chain information
is the ability to make or ship only as much of a product as there is a market
for. This is the practice known as just-in-time manufacturing, and it allows
companies to reduce the amount of inventory that they keep. This can cut costs
substantially, since you no longer need to pay to produce and store excess
goods.
What is supply chain collaboration?
Let's look at consumer packaged goods for an example of
collaboration. If there are two companies that have made supply chain a
household word, they are Wal-Mart and Procter & Gamble. Before these two
companies started collaborating back in the '80s, retailers shared very little
information with manufacturers. But then the two giants built a software system
that hooked P&G up to Wal-Mart's distribution centers. When P&G's
products run low at the distribution centers, the system sends an automatic
alert to P&G to ship more products. In some cases, the system goes all the
way to the individual Wal-Mart store. It lets P&G monitor the shelves
through real-time satellite link-ups that send messages to the factory whenever
a P&G item swoops past a scanner at the register.
With this kind of minute-to-minute information, P&G
knows when to make, ship and display more products at the Wal-Mart stores. No
need to keep products piled up in warehouses awaiting Wal-Mart's call.
Invoicing and payments happen automatically too. The system saves P&G so
much in time, reduced inventory and lower order-processing costs that it can afford
to give Wal-Mart "low, everyday prices" without putting itself out of
business.
What are the roadblocks to installing supply chain software?
Gaining trust from your suppliers and partners.
Supply chain automation is uniquely difficult because its
complexity extends beyond your company's walls. Your people will need to change
the way they work and so will the people from each supplier that you add to
your network. Only the largest and most powerful manufacturers can force such
radical changes down suppliers' throats. Most companies have to sell outsiders
on the system. Moreover, your goals in installing the system may be threatening
to those suppliers, to say the least. For example, Wal-Mart's collaboration
with P&G meant that P&G would assume more responsibility for inventory
management, something retailers have traditionally done on their own. Wal-Mart
had the clout to demand this from P&G, but it also gave P&G something
in return-better information about Wal-Mart's product demand, which helped P&G
manufacture its products more efficiently. To get your supply chain partners to
agree to collaborate with you, you have to be willing to compromise and help
them achieve their own goals.
Internal resistance to change.
If selling supply chain systems is difficult on the outside,
it isn't much easier inside. Operations people are accustomed to dealing with
phone calls, faxes and hunches scrawled on paper, and will most likely want to
keep it that way. If you can't convince people that using the software will be
worth their time, they will easily find ways to work around it. You cannot
disconnect the telephones and fax machines just because you have supply chain
software in place.
Many mistakes at first.
There is a diabolical twist to the quest for supply chain software
acceptance among your employees. New supply chain systems process data as they
are programmed to do, but the technology cannot absorb a company's history and
processes in the first few months after an implementation. Forecasters and
planners need to understand that the first bits of information they get from a
system might need some tweaking. If they are not warned about the system's
initial naiveté, they will think it is useless. In one case, just before a
large automotive industry supplier installed a new supply chain forecasting
application to predict demand for a product, an automaker put in an order for
an unusually large number of units. The system responded by predicting huge
demand for the product based largely on one unusual order. Blindly following
the system's numbers could have led to inaccurate orders for materials being
sent to suppliers within the chain. The company caught the problem but only
after a demand forecaster threw out the system's numbers and used his own. That
created another problem: Forecasters stopped trusting the system and worked
strictly with their own data. The supplier had to fine-tune the system itself,
then work on reestablishing employees' confidence. Once employees understood
that they would be merging their expertise with the system's increasing
accuracy, they began to accept and use the new technology.
What is the extended supply chain?
The extended supply chain is a clever way of describing
everyone who contributes to a product. So if you make text books, then your
extended supply chain would include the factories where the books are printed
and bound, but also the company that sells you the paper, the mill where that
supplier buys their stock, and so on. It is important to keep track of what is
happening in your extended supply chain because with a supplier or a supplier’s
supplier could end up having an impact on you (as the old saying goes, a chain
is only a strong as its weakest link). For example, a fire in a paper mill
might cause the text book manufacturer’s paper supplier to run out of
inventory. If the text book company knows what is happening in its extended
supply chain it can find another paper vendor.
What is the impact of globalization on the Supply Chain?
The extended supply chain is a clever way of describing
everyone who contributes to a product. So if you make text books, then your
extended supply chain would include the factories where the books are printed
and bound, but also the company that sells you the paper, the mill where that
supplier buys their stock, and so on. It is important to keep track of what is
happening in your extended supply chain because with a supplier or a supplier’s
supplier could end up having an impact on you (as the old saying goes, a chain
is only a strong as its weakest link). For example, a fire in a paper mill
might cause the text book manufacturer’s paper supplier to run out of
inventory. If the text book company knows what is happening in its extended
supply chain it can find another paper vendor.
What are some emerging technologies that will affect the
Supply Chain?
The most notable is Radio Frequency Identification, or RFID.
RFID tags are essentially barcodes on steroids. Whereas barcodes only identify
the product, RFID tags can tell what the product is, where it has been, when it
expires, whatever information someone wishes to program it with. RFID
technology is going to generate mountains of data about the location of
pallets, cases, cartons, totes and individual products in the supply chain.
It's going to produce oceans of information about when and where merchandise is
manufactured, picked, packed and shipped. It's going to create rivers of
numbers telling retailers about the expiration dates of their perishable
items—numbers that will have to be stored, transmitted in real-time and shared
with warehouse management, inventory management, financial and other enterprise
systems. In other words, it is going to have a really big impact.
Another benefit of RFIDs is that, unlike barcodes, RFID tags
can be read automatically by electronic readers. Imagine a truck carrying a
container full of widgets entering a shipping terminal in China. If the
container is equipped with an RFID tag, and the terminal has an RFID sensor
network, that container’s whereabouts can be automatically sent to Widget Co.
without the truck ever slowing down. It has the potential to add a substantial
amount of visibility into the extended supply chain.
Right now the two biggest hurdles to widespread RFID
adoption are the cost of building the infrastructure and the lack of
agreed-upon industry standards.
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