Chapter 11 (1 of 3) - Supply Chain Management
Chapter 11 (1 of 3) - Supply Chain Management
Chapter 11 (1 of 3) - Supply Chain Management
7. Logistics Management
8. Distribution Management
10. Management
• Raw material ……
• Manufacturer ……
• Customers …………
SUPPLY CHAIN
STRATEGY
VS.
SALES
STRATEGY
TO ACHIEVE
A TARGET
PROFIT
• In general, supply chain costs need to shrink by a much lower percentage than sales revenue
needs to increase to attain a profit goal.
To ensure that the supply chain supports a firm’s strategy, managers need to consider the supply chain
issues shown below:
3 Supply Chain Strategies
Prior to embarking on supply chain design, operations managers must first consider the “make-or-buy” and outsourcing
decisions
Make-or-buy decision
A choice between producing a component or service in-house or purchasing it from an outside source.
• The Supply chain personnel evaluate alternative suppliers and provide current, accurate, and complete data relevant to the buy
alternative
Outsourcing
Transferring a firm’s activities that have traditionally been internal to external suppliers.
• The vendor performing the outsourced service is usually an expert in that particular specialty. This leaves the
outsourcing firm to focus on its key success factors and its core competencies.
1. Many Suppliers
Many suppliers compete on the buyer`s demands through quotation requests and the order usually goes to the low bidder.
This approach holds the supplier responsible for maintaining the necessary technology, expertise, and forecasting abilities, as well
as cost, quality, and delivery competencies.
2. Few Suppliers
When a buyer is better off forming a long-term relationship with a few dedicated suppliers often to place
emphasis on quality and reliability.
Advantages
i.The suppliers are more likely to understand the broad objectives of the procuring firm and the end customer.
ii.Can create value by allowing suppliers to have economies of scale.
iii.Learning curve that yields both lower transaction costs and lower production costs.
iv.The few suppliers are encouraged to provide design innovations and technological expertise.
Disadvantages
v.The cost of changing partners is huge.
vi.Poor supplier performance.
vii.The purchaser must also be concerned about trade secrets and suppliers that make other alliances or venture out on their own.
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3. Six Sourcing Strategies
3. Vertical Integration
Developing the ability to produce goods or services previously purchased or actually buying a supplier or a
distributor.
It appears to work best when the organization has a large market share and the management talent to operate an
acquired vendor successfully
Advantages
i. May provide substantial opportunities for cost reduction, higher quality, timely delivery, and inventory reduction.
Disadvantages
ii. “doing everything” or “vertical integration” is increasingly difficult.
iii. Backward integration may be particularly dangerous for firms in industries undergoing technological change if
management cannot keep abreast of those changes or invest the financial resources necessary for the next wave
of technology.
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3. Six Sourcing Strategies
3. Vertical Integration
It is part collaboration, part purchasing from few suppliers, and part vertical integration.
These manufacturers are often financial supporters of suppliers through ownership or loans.
6. Virtual Companies
Companies that rely on a variety of supplier relationships to provide services on demand. Also known
as hollow corporations or network companies. In a virtual company, the supply chain is the company. Managing it is
dynamic and demanding.
Advantages
Specialized management expertise, low capital investment and overheads, flexibility, and speed. The result is efficiency.
Example:
The apparel business provides a traditional example of virtual organizations. The designers of clothes seldom manufacture
their designs; rather, they license the manufacture. The manufacturer may then rent space, lease sewing machines, and contract
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for labor.
4. Supply Chain Risk and Mitigation Tactics
2. From interviews with workers and information from the Internet, identify the elements of the
supply chain.
3. Determine whether the supply chain supports a low-cost, rapid response, or differentiation
strategy.
4. Are the supply chain characteristics significantly different from one product to another?