Summary of Learning Objectives
is achieving strategic fit critical to a companys overall success? How does a company achieve strategic fit between its supply chain strategy and its competitive strategy? What is the importance of expanding the scope of strategic fit across the supply chain?
Why
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CHAPTER 2 SCM - STRATEGIC FIT
CUSTOMERS DEMAND PRODUCTS WITH DIFFERENT CHARACTERISTICS Cost Quantity Speed Flexibility Customization Quality Service Features (C, Q, S, F)2 These requirements can vary dramatically for customers and products. Consider some examples.
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Competitive & Supply Chain Strategies
Competitive strategy: defines the target market/customer needs. Product Development strategy: portfolio of new products to achieve competitive strategy. Marketing and sales strategy: specifies how the market will be segmented and product positioned, priced, and promoted Supply chain strategy: determines the nature of material procurement, transportation of materials, manufacture of product or creation of service, distribution of product Consistency and support between supply chain strategy, competitive strategy, and other functional strategies is important
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SCM - STRATEGIC FIT
ACHIEVING FIT - UNDERSTANDING: 1. THE CUSTOMER/PRODUCT REQUIREMENTS CQSF2 ALSO - IMPLIED DEMAND UNCERTAINTY 2. THE SUPPLY CHAIN RESPONSIVE VS. EFFICIENT 3. STRATEGIC FIT THE ZONE OF STRATEGIC FIT
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Achieving Strategic Fit
Strategic fit:
Consistency between customer priorities of competitive strategy and supply chain capabilities specified by the supply chain strategy Competitive and supply chain strategies have the same goals
A company may
fail because of a lack of strategic fit or because its processes and resources do not provide the capabilities to execute the desired strategy Example of strategic fit -- Dell
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The Value Chain: Linking Supply Chain and Business Strategy
Business Strategy
New Product Marketing Strategy Strategy
Supply Chain Strategy
New Product Development
Marketing and Operations Distribution Sales
Service
Finance, Accounting, Information Technology, Human Resources
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Step 1: Understanding the Customer and Supply Chain Uncertainty
Identify the
needs of the customer segment being
served Quantity of product needed in each lot Response time customers will tolerate Variety of products needed Service level required Price of the product Desired rate of innovation in the product
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Achieving Strategic Fit
is Implied Demand Uncertainty So Important? Understanding the Customer, CQSF2
Why
Lot size Response time Service level Product variety Price Innovation
Implied Demand Uncertainty
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Impact of Customer Needs on Implied Demand Uncertainty (Table 2.1)
Customer Need Range of quantity increases Lead time decreases Causes implied demand uncertainty to increase because Wider range of quantity implies greater variance in demand Less time to react to orders
Variety of products required increases Demand per product becomes more disaggregated Number of channels increases Rate of innovation increases Required service level increases
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Total customer demand is now disaggregated over more channels New products tend to have more uncertain demand Firm now has to handle unusual surges in demand
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Levels of Implied Demand Uncertainty
Detergent Long lead time steel High Fashion Emergency steel
Customer Need
Price Responsiveness
Low
High
Implied Demand Uncertainty
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Correlation Between Implied Demand Uncertainty and Other Attributes (Table 2.2)
Attribute Profit margin Avg. forecast error Avg. stockout rate Low Implied Uncertainty Low 10% 1%-2% High Implied Uncertainty High 40%-100% 10%-40% 10%-25%
Avg. forced season- 0% end markdown
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SUPPLY CHAINS EFFICIENT VS. RESPONSIVE
GOAL: LOWEST COST PRODUCT:MAX. PERF. AT MIN COST PRICING: LOWER PRICE AND MARGIN MANU: HIGH EFFICIENCY INVENT: MIN. INVENTORY LEADTIME: REDUCE LEADTIME SUPPLIERS: COST/QUALITY TRANSPORTATION: COST
QUICK RESPONSE ASSEMBE TO ORDER HIGHER PRICE AND MARGINS FLEX. CAPACITY MAINTAIN BUFFER REDUCE EVEN WITH HIGHER PRICE SPEED, FLEX., QUALITY QUICK& RESPONSIVIE
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Step 2: Understanding the Supply Chain
There is
a cost to achieving responsiveness Supply chain efficiency: cost of making and delivering the product to the customer Increasing responsiveness results in higher costs that lower efficiency Figure 2.3: cost-responsiveness efficient frontier Figure 2.4: supply chain responsiveness spectrum Second step to achieving strategic fit is to map the supply chain on the responsiveness spectrum
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Understanding the Supply Chain: CostResponsiveness Efficient Frontier (Fig. 2-3)
Responsiveness
High
BOSE RADIO DELL
Low High
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WAL-MART BARILLA
Cost
Low
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Responsiveness Spectrum (Figure 2.4)
Highly efficient
Somewhat efficient
Somewhat responsive
Highly responsive
Integrated steel mill
Hanes apparel
Most automotive production
Dell
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Step 3: Achieving Strategic Fit
All
functions in the value chain must support the competitive strategy to achieve strategic fit Fig. 2.7 Two extremes: Efficient supply chains (Barilla) and responsive supply chains (Dell) Table 2.3 Two key points
there is no right supply chain strategy independent of competitive strategy there is a right supply chain strategy for a given competitive strategy
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Achieving Strategic Fit
Responsive supply chain
Responsiveness spectrum
Efficient supply chain Certain demand
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Implied uncertainty spectrum
Uncertain demand
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Achieving Strategic Fit with Same Firm with Various Products
Responsive supply chain
PRODUCT LINE B CUSTOMER B PRODUCT LINE A CUSTOMER A
Responsiveness spectrum
PRODUCT LINE A CUSTOMER B PRODUCT LINE B CUSTOMER A
Efficient supply chain
Certain demand
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Implied uncertainty spectrum
Uncertain demand
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Achieving Strategic Fit Product Life Cycle Progresses/Competition
Responsive supply chain
INTRODUCTION
Responsiveness spectrum
MATURING COMMODITY
Efficient supply chain Certain demand
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Implied uncertainty spectrum
Uncertain demand
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Strategic Scope
Competitive Strategy Product Dev. Strategy Supply Chain Strategy Marketing Strategy
LOCAL OPTIMAL BY FUNCTION
VERY LOCAL OPTIMAL BY OPERATION W/I
Suppliers Manufacturer Distributor
Retailer
Customer
FUNCTIONALLY OPTIMAL
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Intracompany Interfunctional Scope
All
functional strategies within a company are developed to support each other and the companys competitive strategy Strategic fit is expanded to include all functions in a firm Goal is to maximize company profit Figure 2.11
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Strategic Scope GLOBALLY OPTIMAL STRATEGY
Suppliers Manufacturer Distributor Competitive Strategy Product Dev. Strategy Supply Chain Strategy Marketing Strategy Retailer Customer
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Intercompany Interfunctional Scope
The only
positive cash flow for the supply chain occurs when the customer pays for the product all other cash flows are resettling of accounts within the chain and add to total supply chain cost Supply chain surplus
Difference between what the customer pays and total supply chain cost Total profit to be shared among all members of the supply chain
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Intercompany Interfunctional Scope
Increasing supply chain
surplus increases the amount
to be shared All stages coordinate strategy across all functions to ensure that they best meet the customers needs and maximize supply chain surplus Also provides more speed by managing the interfaces between supply chain stages Each company must evaluate its actions in the context of the entire supply chain Figure 2.12
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