- 1. Overview
- 2. Etymology
- 3. Cultural Impact
Supply chain optimization
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Business logistics
Distribution methods
⢠Order processing
⢠Trade routes
⢠Cross-docking
⢠Distribution resource planning
⢠Journey planner
⢠Fleet management
⢠Warehouse management system
⢠Supply chain
⢠Field inventory management
⢠Road transport
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Supplyâchain optimization (SCO) aims to ensure the optimal operation of a manufacturing and distribution supply chain . [1] This includes the optimal placement of inventory within the supply chain, minimizing operating costs including manufacturing costs, transportation costs, and distribution costs. Optimization often involves the application of mathematical modelling techniques using computer software. It is often considered to be part of supply chain engineering , although the latter is mainly focused on mathematical modelling approaches, whereas supply chain optimization can also be undertaken using qualitative management based approaches. [2]
Applications
Typically, supplyâchain managers aim to maximize the profitable operation of their manufacturing and distribution supply chain. This could include measures like maximizing gross margin return on inventory invested (GMROII ) (balancing the cost of inventory at all points in the supply chain with availability to the customer), minimizing total operating expenses (transportation, inventory and manufacturing), or maximizing gross profit of products distributed through the supply chain. Supplyâchain optimization addresses the general supplyâchain problem of delivering products to customers at the lowest total cost and highest profit, trading off the costs of inventory, transportation, distributing and manufacturing. In addition, optimizing storage and transportation costs by means of product / package size is one of the easiest and most costâeffective initial implementations available to save money in product distribution. [3]
Supplyâchain optimization has applications in all industries manufacturing and/or distributing goods, including retail , industrial products, and consumer packaged goods (CPG).
Approaches and solutions
The classic supplyâchain approach has been to try to forecast future inventory demand as accurately as possible, by applying statistical trending and âbest fitâ techniques based on historic demand and predicted future events. The advantage of this approach is that it can be applied to data aggregated at a fairly high level (e.g. category of merchandise, weekly, by group of customers), requiring modest database sizes and small amounts of manipulation. Unpredictability in demand is then managed by setting safety stock levels, so that for example a distributor might hold two weeks of supply of an article with steady demand but twice that amount for an article where the demand is more erratic. Universally accepted statistical methods such as Standard Deviation and Mean Absolute Deviation are often used for calculating safety stock levels.
Then, using this forecast demand, a supplyâchain manufacturing Production Planning and distribution plan is created to manufacture and distribute products to meet this forecast demand at lowest cost (or highest profitability). This plan typically addresses the following business concerns:
- How much of each product should be manufactured each day?
- How much of each product should be made at each manufacturing plant?
- Which manufacturing plants should reâstock which warehouses with which products?
- What transportation modes should be used for warehouse replenishment and customer deliveries?
The technical ability to record and manipulate larger databases more quickly has now enabled a new breed of supplyâchainâoptimization solutions to emerge, which are capable of forecasting at a much more granular level (for example, per article per customer per day). Some vendors are applying âbest fitâ models to this data, to which safety stock rules are applied, while other vendors have started to apply stochastic techniques to the optimization problem. They calculate the most desirable inventory level per article for each individual store for their retail customers, trading off cost of inventory against expectation of sale. The resulting optimized inventory level is known as a model stock . Meeting the model stock level is also an area requiring optimization. Because the movement of product to meet the model stock, called the stock transfer, needs to be in economic shipping units such as complete unit loads or a full truckload, there are a series of decisions that must be made. Many existing distributionârequirementsâplanning systems round the quantity up to the nearest full shipping unit. For example, the creation of truckloads as economic shipment units requires optimization systems to ensure that axle constraints and space constraints are met while loading can be achieved in a damageâfree way. This is generally achieved by continuing to add timeâphased requirements until the loads meet some minimum weight or cube. More sophisticated optimization algorithms take into account stackability constraints, load and unloading rules, palletizing logic, warehouse efficiency and load stability with an objective to reduce transportation spend (minimize âshipping airâ).
Optimization solutions are typically part of, or linked to, the company’s replenishment systems distribution requirements planning, so that orders can be automatically generated to maintain the model stock profile. The algorithms used are similar to those used in making financial investment decisions; the analogy is quite precise, as inventory can be considered to be an investment in prospective return on sales.
Supplyâchain optimization may include refinements at various stages of the product lifecycle , so that new, ongoing and obsolete items are optimized in different ways, and adaptations for different classes of products, for example seasonal merchandise. It should also factor in risks and unexpected constraints that often affect a global supply chain’s efficiency, including sudden spikes in fuel costs, material shortages, natural disasters such as hurricanes , and instability of global politics.
Whilst most software vendors are offering supplyâchain optimization as a packaged solution and integrated in ERP software, some vendors are running the software on behalf of their clients as application service providers .
Claimed advantages
Firstly, the techniques being applied to supplyâchain optimization are claimed to be academically credible . Most of the specialist companies that have been created as a result of research projects are in academic institutions or consulting firms: and they point to research articles, white papers , academic advisors and industry reviews to support their credibility.
Secondly, the techniques are claimed to be commercially effective . The companies publish case studies that show how clients have achieved significant and measurable benefits in terms of reduced inventory and lower logistics cost levels, while typically maintaining or improving customer service through better predictability and improved availability. Kokoris notes that a supply chain optimization initiative can represent âan untapped opportunity to realize increased short and longâterm cash flows and cost savingsâ. [4] However, there is limited published data outside of these case studies, and a reluctance for some practitioners to publish details of their successes (which may be commercially sensitive), therefore hard evidence is difficult to come by. Last, not least, independent advisors or benchmarks show the stickiness and benefits achieved in specific subâsectors.
The different routines in supplyâchain optimization have reached mature status and allow companies to gain competitive advantage by increased effectiveness and measurable savings, not only but supply chain optimization can bring in a better quality of clothes, possibly better collaboration, and increase profits. [5]
Direct plant shipments
Also known as direct shipment, direct plant shipment (DPS) is a method of delivering goods from the plant to the customer directly. At the same time regional centers, strategically located, provide overnight shipments to the maximum number of customers. This delivery scheme reduces transportation and storage costs.
See also
⢠Forecasting
⢠Service level