Purchasing & Supply Chain Coordination Flashcards
1
Q
Multi-sourcing: should we have several suppliers for a purchased product?
A
- Advantages
- maintain cost competition
- stockouts due to production or delivery problems are less likely
- lower risk of supplier bankruptcy
- combine local and global sourcing
- Disadvantages
- lower quantity per supplier
- quality differences between suppliers (QC harder!)
- more coordination work for purchasing/receiving
- higher delivery costs
2
Q
Supplier Selection Criteria
A
- Cost: price, conditions of payment etc.
- Quality: certified products, after-sales service…
- Delivery performance: short lead times, reliable delivery, flexible
- Service: Packaging, delivery on site, safety stocks
- Security: financial position, reputation
3
Q
Traditional and internet-enabled sourcing methods
A
- Traditional:
- Catalogues (e.g. Office Supply)
- Request for quotes (RFQ): one buyer, many sellers, standardized product
- Request for proposals (RFP): one buyer, many sellers, non-standard items
- Internet-enabled:
- e-Markets
- eRFQ
4
Q
Methods of negotiation
A
- Face-to-face:
- traditional
- can take several weeks
- iterative communication
- Imperfect initial RFQ can be adjusted
- With one supplier, outcome depends of buyer-supplier relationship
- Auctions:
- bid submission
- newly enabled by internet
- communication over quote details is front-loaded
- typically completed in swift manner!
5
Q
Types of auctions
A
- Sealed bid first-price:
- bids are submitted simultaneously, without knowledge of other’s bids
- Best bidder wins at her price
- Ex: government procurement
- English auction:
- Bidders submit bids sequentially with knowledge of previous bids
- Best bidder wins at her price
- Ex: Sotheby’s
- Dutch auction:
- prices move automatically according to price clock (top to bottom for one seller, many buyers; bottom to top for one buyer, many sellers!)
- First bidder to accept wins at the current price
- Vickrey auction:
- bidders submit bids simultaneously without knowledge of each other’s bids
- bidder with highest bid wins at the price of the second highes bidder
6
Q
When to use e-auctions?
A
- items can be clearly specified and translated into prices
- strong likelihood that the current price is sufficiently higher than the market price
- switching costs are acceptable
- sufficient number of qualified, competitive suppliers exist
- qualified suppliers are willing to participate in auction
7
Q
Pitfalls of auction
A
- Lowest price supplier might not be the best one
- True total cost of contract has to be considered
- quality
- warranty
- service
- switching costs
8
Q
Centralized purchasing pro’s and con’s
A
- Pros:
- bargaining power over suppliers
- organizational coordination on purchasing policies
- standardized procedures
- transparency and tight control on spending
- single interface to suppliers
- Cons:
- dissatisfied internal customers
- inflexible purchasing procedures
- bureaucratuc inefficiency
9
Q
The Bullwhip effect:
what is it
what causes it
solutions
A
- The variance of orders is greater than that of sales and the distortion increases as one moves upstream
- Causes:
- Order synchronization: everyone orders on a monday
- Order batching: each party orders in batches and these grow up the chain
- Trade promotions and forward buying: customers buy at times of discount and stock up for future
- Reactive and overreactive ordering: retailer has strong demnad for a week, orders more -> supplier thinks market is going up …
- Shortage gaming
- Solutions:
- Information sharing: what is my demand really like
- smoothing the flow of a product: ask retailers not to all order on same day
- eliminate pathological incentives: against shortage gaming: allocate supply according to past sales data etc.
- Use vendor-managed inventory, quick response initiatives (cf. Walmarts retail link system)
10
Q
Two general ways of Supply Chain Coordination
A
- Via Information Sharing
- EDI
- VMI: supplier determines order size
- Quick response: retailer makes Q choice
- Via Contracts
- Buyback
- Revenue sharing
11
Q
Coordinating the Supply Chain through Buyback Contracts
A
- Newsvendor Model:
- Individual order quantities do not maximize profits
- Publisher can determine the newsvendor’s Co to get him to order the profit maximizing Q*
12
Q
Revenue-sharing contracts
A
- Affect the retailers overage costs
- Overall revenues increase
- When do they work?
- Cost of an additional unit lower than incremental revenue per unit -> low marginal cost industries!
- Low administration costs! -> IT industries