This week’s reading focuses on planning and
managing inventories in a supply chain. It covers the details of several
quantitative methods for deciding the appropriate order quantity to minimize
the inventory cost. They are more theoretical than practical for new learners.
As which is also mentioned in the articles, modeling results can be used for
reference, the exact inventory management strategies depend on many other
factors.
After my reading, I came across an article
published in 1992, “Managing Supply Chain Inventory: Pitfalls and Opportunities”[1]
by Hau L. Lee and Corey Billington. It drags me out from simply calculation to
an overview of supply chain inventory management. I’m so surprised that the
pitfalls mentioned in 1992 still exist now. Although the negative effects of
some of the pitfalls have been largely reduced by the development of modern
technology, some of them still remain as big concerns when managing supply
chain inventory. The pitfalls of supply chain inventory management and their
symptoms is listed in the following table.
Pitfalls
|
Symptoms
|
1.No supply chain metrics
|
l Independent and
disconnected individual sites
l Incomplete
metrics
l Performance
measures not tracked
l No attention to
measure tracked
|
2.Inadequate definition of
customer service
|
l Inadequacy of
line-item fill rate measure
l No measures for
response times
l No measures for
lateness
l No measures for
backorder profile
|
3.Inaccurate delivery
status data
|
l Delays in
providing delivery information
l Inaccurate
delivery information
|
4.Inefficient information
systems
|
l Inadequate
linkage among databases at different sites
l Proliferation of
operating systems for the same function at different sites
l Delays and
inaccuracies of data transfer
|
5.Ignoring the impact of
uncertainties
|
l No documentation
or tracking of key sources of uncertainties
l Partial
information on sources of uncertainties
|
6.Simlistic inventory
stocking policies
|
l Stocking
policies independent of magnitudes of uncertainties
l Static stocking
policies
l Generic and
subjective stocking policies
|
7.Discrimination against
internal customers
|
l No service
measures of internal customers
l Low priority for
internal orders
l Inappropriate
incentive systems
l Jockeying for
priority among different internal division
|
8.Poor coordination
|
l No coordination
among supplying divisions to complete an order
l No system
information among multiple supplying divisions
l Independent
shipment plans
|
9.Incomplete shipment
methods analysis
|
l No consideration
of inventory and response time effects
|
10.Incorrect assessment of
inventory costs
|
l Omission of
obsolescence and cost of rework
l No quantitative
basis for inventory holding cost assessments
|
11.Organizational barriers
|
l Independent
performance measures and incentive systems at different sites
l Barriers between
manufacturing and distribution
|
12.Porduct-process design
without supply chain consideration
|
l No consideration
of manufacturing and distribution in product-process design
l No consideration
in design for customization and localization
l Organizational
barriers between design and the supply chain
|
13.Separation of supply
chain design from operational decisions
|
l Chain decisions
without consideration of inventory and response time efficiencies
|
14.Incomplete supply chain
|
l Focus on
internal operations only
l Inadequate
understanding of operational environment and needs of immediate and ultimate
customers
|
Table 1 Pitfalls of Supply
Chain Management and their Symptoms[1]
We can see from the table that some of
pitfalls existing 20 years ago are caused by limited information technology.
Pitfall 3, 4 are typical examples. As modern technology enables information tracking
and sharing, these pitfalls rarely appear. Some companies like FedEx and Amazon
are taking advantage of these modern technologies to make their supply chains
more efficient.
From what we learn from last two weeks, we
can see some pitfall concerns are under research these days. Examples are
pitfall 5, 6, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14. Companies taking these concerns into
consideration are becoming more competitive. Now companies are encouraged to
embrace uncertainties but not ignore it (Pitfall 5). Mature quantitative
methods have been developed to analyze inventory and estimate new order
quantity (Pitfall 6, 9, 10). Companies like Ikea and Tata are innovating in
product design to transform its supply chain (Pitfall 12, 13, 14).
The pitfalls mentioned above are easier to
be noticed and can be solved by deeper analyzing and impactful execution.
However, pitfalls 1, 2, 7, 8, 11 are involved with the nature of business and
the culture of companies. As it is described in the article “Ten ways to
improve inventory management”, the author recommends cross-functional teams to optimize
inventory management, which can be considered as a solution to pitfall 2, 8 and
11. Yet there are no accurate ways to examine the outcome these solutions.
In other words, the supply chain inventory
management has become much more mature than 20 years ago. Most of the pitfalls
discovered then have theoretical solutions and are still under research towards
different branches. Successful supply chain inventory management depends on how
companies are going to use them practically and efficiently. However, some of
the pitfalls as benefits conflicts of business will remain unchanged. I’m sure
during the 20 years, new pitfalls must have appeared, this is a question what
we need to think about when we are studying modern supply chain management.
Sources:
[1] Managing Supply Chain Inventory:
Pitfalls and Opportunities by Hau L. Lee and Corey Billington
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