Supply chain management and enterprise resource planning Flashcards
What is Supply chain management?
Supply chain management is the management of the interconnection of organisations that relate to each other through upstream and downstream linkages between the processes that produce value to the ultimate consumer in the form of products and services’.
SCM is concerned with managing the flow of materials and information between a string of operations, that form the strands or ‘chains’ of a supply network.
- a holistic approach
what are the implications of external and internal supply chains?
The supply chain concept applies to the internal relationships between processes as well as the external relationships between operations.
what are the implications of tangible and intangible supply chains?
The supply chain concept applies to non-physical flows (universities, consultants ,counselling) between operations and processes as well as physical flows
Why is it important to consider the whole supply chain?
- it helps an understanding of competitiveness
- it helps to identify the significant links in the network
- it helps focus on long term issues
How can the shape of the supply chain be changed?
- Disintermediation (cutting out the middle men)
ex; Dell, airlines, hotels - Co-opetition (cooperation between competitors)
Ex; restaurants, art gallery’s, theaters
What is the importance of the five performance objectives in satisfying the customers requirements?
quality: Only by every stage taking some responsibility for its own and its suppliers’ performance, can a supply chain achieve high end customer quality.
Speed:
- how fast customers can be served( achieved by over-stocking)
- The time taken for goods and services to move through the chain ( reduces inventory related costs)
Dependability:
- guarantee ‘on-time’ delivery by keeping excessive resources, such as inventory, within the chain, reduces uncertainty within the chain
Flexibility:
- chain’s ability to cope with changes and disturbances.(agility)
- focusing on the end customer and ensuring fast throughput and responsiveness to customer needs.
Costs:
- costs incurred within each operation, and the supply chain as a whole incurs additional costs that derive from each operation in a chain doing business with each other.
What are the factors for rating alternative suppliers- short term ability to supply?
Short term ability to supply:
- range of products or services
- quality of products or services
- responsiveness
- dependability of supply
- delivery and volume flexibility
- total cost of being supplied
- ability to supply in the required quantity
What are the factors for rating alternative suppliers- Long term ability to supply?
- ease of doing business
- willingness to share risk
- long term commitment to supply
- ability to transfer knowledge as well as products and services
- technical capability
- operations capability
- financial capability
- managerial capability
What is multi-sourcing?
The purchase of individual items used to create a product from different, multiple providers in order to keep production on track in the event of a failure to produce at one particular source. This reduces production risk in the event that the supply chain has a problem.
What are the advantages and disadvantages of multi-sourcing?
Advantages:
- Purchaser can drive price down by competitive tendering
- can switch source in case of supply failure
- wide sources of knowledge and expertise
Disadvantages:
- difficult to encourage commitment by supplier
- less easy to develop effective SQA
- more effort needed to communicate
- suppliers less likely to invest in new processes
- more difficult to obtain scale economies
What are the advantages and disadvantages of single sourcing?
Advantages:
- potentially better quality because more SQA possibilities
- strong relationships which are more durable
- greater dependancy encourages commitment and effort
- better communication
- easier to co-operate on new product/service development
- more scale economies
- higher confidentiality
disadvantages:
- more vulnerable to disruption if a failure to supply occurs
- individual supplier more affected by volume fluctuations
- supplier might exert upward pressure on prices if no alternative supplier is available
What are Business to business relationships in supply chains? (B2B)
Are by far the most common in a supply chain context. These relationships involve businesses trading products (or components) and services with each other, possibly using some of the e-procurement exchange networks
What are Business to Consumer relationships in supply chains? (B2C)
are the end of the supply chain where businesses sell products and services to final consumers. This could include both ‘bricks-and- mortar’ retailers and online retailers.
What are Consumer to business relationships in supply chains? (C2B)
involve consumers informing businesses of their opinions, ideas, or needs, or in some other way creating value to the business. It includes consumers posting their needs on the internet (sometimes stating the price they are willing to pay) and companies then decide whether to offer also includes crowdsourcing
What are Customer to customer business relationships in supply chains? (C2C)
consumers post items or services for sale to other consumers, and/or bid to purchase them.