The main concept of
supply chain management is simple: customers buy products from you; you try to
keep track about demand of your product in the market; and you manage inventory
by producing enough items to cover your customers' demand; producing means you
order enough materials from your suppliers.
It sounds simple, but
still it makes forecasting demand as a difficult job. Wrong forecasting can
lead to out of stock or excessive inventory. The problem is about coordination.
Suppliers, manufactures, sales division and customers have their own estimation
about demand. It is not match between each other. Further, each group makes
decision based on others. This situation refers to as Bullwhip Effect.
Prof. Hau Lee from
Stanford illustrated this Bullwhip Effect by story when Volvo found itself with
extra inventories of green cars. In effort to minimize inventory, Sales
Department made special discount offers, so demand increased. Production
department, unaware about the promotion, saw pattern of increased demand and
made decision to produce more green cars.
Coordination is not
only the problem. Delays on manufacturing and procurement also contribute to
bullwhip effect. To explain about it, there is simulation game called “The Near
Beer Game” that I found from internet. I recommend trying this simulation game
to get better understanding about bullwhip effect.
After I tried this simulation
game, It obviously clear that even with no breakdown in communication and knowing
exact information about demand, I still get Bullwhip effect from procurement
and manufacturing delays. The result that I have got is either out of stock or
excessive inventory over period of time.
So how does company
try to reduce the Bullwhip Effect?
Step 1: Improve better
information and communication along the supply chain in effort to forecast
demand.
Step 2: Reduce or
eliminate delays in supply chain. Cutting order and delivery time will decrease
fluctuation on inventories.
Step 3: Use your point
of sale to analyze customer preference and behavior.
Step 4: Reduce order
batching and create smaller order increment to avoid demand fluctuations.
Step 5: Maintain
stable price for products. As we already know, when price goes down, the demand
will increase and create bullwhip effect.
From these examples we
can see how serious companies with its supply chain management. They understand
that out of stock inventories will means their customers will buy their
competitor products and excessive inventories will become a burden in their
balance sheet. So it can't be more or less. Wrong formula will make them loose
business. Isn't it becoming a bit like rocket science?What is your opinion?
Reference:
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2013-01-31/coke-engineers-its-orange-juice-with-an-algorithm
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