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Introduction to Operations and Supply Chain Management PDF

   

Added on  2022-01-22

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Introduction to Operations and Supply Chain Management

1. Introduction to Operations and Supply Chain Management

1.1. Why study Operations and Supply Chain Management?

Three reasons:

1. Every organization must make a product or provide a service that someone values

Each organization has an operations function/ operations

This is the collection of people, technology and system in an organization that has primary
responsibility for providing the organization’s products or services

2. Most organizations function as part of larger supply chains

Supply chain= network of manufacturers and service providers that work together to create
products or services needed by end users

Manufacturers are linked together through physical, information and monetary flows

Much supply chain activities are conversion, storage and movement of materials and products

Supply chains link together the operations functions of many different organizations to provide
real value to consumers

3. Organizations must carefully manage their operations and supply chains in order to prosper and
survive

Organizations faces many decisions with regards to its role in the supply chain

The right choice can lead to higher profitability and increased market share

The wrong choice can cost the company dearly or even put it out of business

Operations Management

Traditional way to think about operations is as a transformations process

Inputs (Materials, intangible needs, information’s like demand forecast)

Transformation Process (manufacturing operations, service operations)

Outputs (tangible goods, fulfilled needs, satisfied customers, intangible services = nicht greifbar
-> law firm)

Operations are often highly dependent on the quality and availability of inputs

Nearly all operations activities require coordination with other business functions -> cross
functional decision making

Operations management activities are information and decision intensive

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Operations Management = the planning, scheduling and control of the activities that
transform inputs into finished goods and services

Operations management decisions can range from long-term, fundamental decisions to more
immediate issues

With operations management, organizations hope to provide the best value to their costumers
while making the best use of resources

Supply Chain Management (SCM)
Operations management mostly focuses on managing its own operations

But managers must also understand how the company is linked with the operations of its
suppliers, distributors and costumers -> supply chain

Organizations in supply chain are linked through physical, information and monetary flows

Flows go both up and down the chain -> flows go both ways

INBEV returning empty pallets to its firs-tier supplier -> flow of physical goods back up the
supply chain

Most of the participants in a supply chain are both customers and suppliers

Supply chain must be very efficient

Supply chains are not new
Supply chain management = active management of supply chain activities and relationships
in order to maximize customer value and achieve a sustainable and competitive advantage

It represents a conscious effort by a firm or a group of firms to develop and run supply
chains in the most effective and efficient way possible

Supply Chain Reference model (SCOR)

It is a framework, developed by the Supply Chain council, that seeks to provide standard
descriptions of the processes, relationships and metrics that define SCM

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According to SCOR-model, SCM covers five broad areas:

1. Planning activities: to balance demand requirement against resources and communicate
these plans to all the participants

2. Sourcing activities: identifying, developing and contracting with suppliers and scheduling
the delivery of incoming goods and services

3. Productions activities: actual production of a good or service

4. Delivery activities: all the activities from entering customer orders and determining
delivery dates to storing and moving goods to theit final destination

5. Return activities: activities necessary to return and process defective or excess products or
materials

Walmart is one of the earliest proponents of SCM (1980er and 1990er)

Stores sent daily sales information’s to Walmart to use them for the production

Dedicated fleet of trucks to ship good from warehouse to store in less than 48 hours

They replenish store inventories twice a week

Result: better customer service (products always available), lower production and
transportation cost (suppliers made and shipped only what was needed) and better use
of retail store space

Now many retailers make multiple shipments to stores each day based on continuous sales
updates

Two cases:

1. One very powerful firm took primary responsibility for improving performance across its
own supply chain -> Walmart

2. Companies within an industry form councils or groups to identify and adopt supply chain
practices that will benefit all firm in the industry

Automotive Industry Action Group (AIAG): provide an open forum where members
cooperate in developing and promoting solutions than enhance the prosperity of
the automotive industry

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Grocery Manufacturers of America (GMA)

Supply Chain Council (SCC): improve supply chain performance across many
industries

1.2. Important Trends

Operations management and SCM require interaction and trust between companies

Three developments made operations and supply chain management so important for
managers:

1. Electronic commerce

2. Increasing Competition and Globalization

3. Relationship management

Electronic Commerce
Use of computer and telecommunications technologies to conduct business via electronic
transfer of data and documents

Breakthroughs in information technology have made instantaneous communications across
supply chain partners a reality

It linked together suppliers, manufacturers, distributors, retail outlets and customers regardless
of location

Provide visibility into incoming shipments and delays

Increasing Competition and Globalization

Rate of change in markets is escalating

So managers must make decisions on shorter notice with less information and higher penalty
costs if they make mistakes

Customers want quicker delivery and services suited to their individual needs

New competitors entering markets

Increasing Competition and Globalization have given opportunities to many firms to break
away from the pack

Relationship Management
The improve supply chain performance you need the cooperation with other firms ->
companies invest more in relationship management

But relationship management is difficult and poor relationships in the supply chain have
disastrous consequences for all the members

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Organizations must manage the relationships with their upstream suppliers and
downstream costumers

1.3. Operations and Supply Chain Management to you

Many careers option

Professionals Organizations can help

1. APICS: Association for Operations Management

Society for persons interested in operations and supply chain management; In USA

2. ISM: Institute for Supply Management

Provide national and international leadership in purchasing and materials management

3. CSCMP: Council of SCM Professionals

Providing worldwide leadership for the evolving logistics profession through the
development, dissemination and advancement of logistic knowledge

4. ASQ: American Society for Quality

Education and quality improvement

Operations and SCM work together with other functions in firms and are nor working in a
vacuum

1.4. Chapter Summary

Every organization must provide a product or service that someone values

Primary responsibility of the operations function

Most organizations activities are linked with those of other organizations through supply chains

You need management of operations and suppl chain

2. Operations and Supply Chain Strategies

2.1. Elements of the Business

Business elements include structural and infrastructural elements

1. Structural Elements

Tangible resources such as buildings, equipment and information technology

these resources require large capital investment that are difficult to reverse

high cost and inflexibility
structural elements are changed infrequently and after much deliberation

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2. Infrastructural Elements

People, policies, decision rules and organizational structure choices made by the firm

Elements are often not visible but very important

All the elements must work together

Businesses need to ensure that their decisions are appropriate and consistent with one another

Strategy is necessary

2.2. Strategy

Strategy = a mechanism by which a business coordinates their decisions regarding their
structural and infrastructural elements

Do many things well not only a few

Integrating

Strategies are long-term game plans (several years ore more)

Most organizations have many levels of strategy from upper-level business strategies to
more detailed ones

When organizations have different businesses they have an overall corporate strategy
and individual business unit strategies

Mission statement = explains why an organization exist it describes what is important to the
organization, called it core values, and identifies the organization’s domain

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Example: mission statement = Become a world-class competitor in our industry

Business strategy = Increase our European business presence

Functional level = develop a European source for raw material x

Business Strategy = strategy that identifies a firm’s targeted customers and sets time frames and
performance objectives for the business

Business Strategy parts, which are relevant for operations and SC-strategies:

1. Identify the firms targeted customers and indicate wat the operations and supply chain functions
need to do to provide value to these customers

2. Set time frames and performance objectives than managers can use to track the firm’s progress
toward fulfilling its business strategy

3. Identify and support the development of core competencies in the operations and supply chain
areas

Core Competencies = organizational strengths or abilities, developed over a long period, that
customers find valuable and competitors find difficult or impossible to copy

Could also be the ability to manage its supply chain partners

Functional Strategy = translate a business strategy into specific actions for functional areas such as
marketing, ...

Supply chain strategy might address the manufacturing or service process

A firm’s strategy should also be aligned across the functional areas

Many functional level strategies (new product development) are described as cross-
functional because the responsibility often reside in multiple areas

2.3. Operations and Supply Chain Strategies

Operations and Supply Chain Strategy = functional strategy that indicates how structural and
infrastructural elements within the operations and supply chain areas will be acquired and
developed to support the overall business strategy

Executing successful operations and supply chain strategies means choosing and implementing the
right mix of structural and infrastructural elements

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Three primary objectives of an operations and supply chain strategy:

1. Help management choose the right mix of structural and infrastructural elements, based on a clear
understanding of the performance dimensions valued by customers and the trade-offs involved

2. Ensure that the firms structural and infrastructural choices are strategically aligned with the firm’s
strategy

3. Support the development of core competencies in the firm’s operations and supply chains

Customer Value

Must customers evaluate products and services based on multiple performance dimensions
such as performance quality and delivery speed

The organizations that provide the best mix of these dimensions will have the highest value

Example for calculating value:

1. Choose categories and give the numbers for the importance (1 = not important, 5
=very) - I

2. Give the company’s grades for the category’s (1= poor, 5= excellent) - P

3. V (Value) = Summe (IxP)

Four Performance Dimensions

1. Quality

2. Time

3. Flexibility

4. Cost

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