Procurement objectives
Support organizational goals and objectives
→ Logistics is a system and subsystem of enterprise activity (subsystem of supply chain)
Effective and efficient management of purchasing process
→ Effective: How well keeps procurement keeps its promises
→ Efficient: How well uses procurement company resources to keep promises
Management of supply base
→ Selection, development, and maintenance of supply sources
Development of strong relationships with other functional groups
→ Procurement decisions require more cooperation and coordination
→ Lack of cooperation and coordination result in supply shortages, excessing inventory, and increased lead times
Support of operational requirements
→ Focus on satisfying internal customers
→ Buying right product, at right price, from right source, at right specifications, in right quantity, for delivery at right time to right internal customer
Supplier selection process
Identify the need for supply
Situation analysis (internal assumption concerning supply, external conditions)
Identification and evaluation of potential suppliers (sources of information, selection criteria, weights to selection criteria)
Final selection of supplier(s) 5.Evaluation of choice made
Inventory
Stocks of materials and goods, that are maintained for enterprise activities
Purpose: Satisfy regular demand patterns (trading, service, manufacturing)
Buffers to accommodate that items arrive in one pattern and are used in another pattern
Inventory typology:
Cycle stock
Base stock
Needed to satisfy normal demand during the course of an order cycle
Safety stock
Buffer stock
Held additionally to cycle stock to compensate for uncertainty regarding demand or process time
Stock in transit
Pipeline stock
Flow during delivery between various fixed facilities in a logistic system (plant, warehouse, store)
Speculative stock
Held for seasonality of demand, projected price increases or potential shortage of product
Psychic stock
Associated with retail sale and the belief, that customer purchases are stimulated by inventory that they can see
Inventory management
Key area of decision making in logistic system
Inventory decisions influence other activities (warehousing, transportation, material handling)
Different organisational functions have different expectation
→ Marketing: Inventory can cover entire customer demand to avoid potential stockout situations
→ Finance: Minimization of costs associated with inventory holding
Inventory preparation
High levels of inventory (overstock)
→ High inventory carrying costs and low (or no) stockout costs Low levels of inventors
→ Low inventory carrying costs and some (high) stockout costs
Inventory holding carries greatest cost after value has been added throughout manufacturing
Storing finished goods is more expensive than maintenance of raw materials and materials in progress
80-20 rule
Inventories aren’t of equal value to a firm
→ Different items on stock should be managed in different ways Its important to determine the relative importance of each item
Rule: 80% of sales come from 20% of products
→ 20% of sales come from 80% of products Identify the 20% generating 80% of sales
Helps to reduce storage of very slow moving products
ABC-analysis
A: Products with highest criticality (20% of products, make 75%-80% of value)
B: Products with moderate criticality (15%-20% of products, make 20% of value)
C: Products with lowest criticality (60%- 65% of products, make 5% of value)
Dead stock (D): Products with no sales (during a 12-month period)
Location of products
Grouped in warehouse, depending on the frequency of sales
→ Frequently sold product is located closest to the place of issue
→ Less frequently sold product is located further away
→ Occasionally sold product is located at the end
Just-in-time (JIT)
Supplying raw materials, material and parts for production to the manufacturing place, art exact time that they are needed
Reduce inventory levels by reducing safety stock
→ Must also ensure constant availability of goods and business continuity
Consequences of JIT go far beyond inventory management
Requirement for suppliers: Deliver high quality materials to the production line
→ Defective materials result in disruption of production process
→ View supplier as partners (basis of cooperation in supply chain)
Vendor managed inventory (VMI)
Used in supply from manufactures to distributors to retailers
Size and timing of replenishment orders are responsibility of suppliers
Suppliers have access to the distributors / retailers’ sales and inventory data
→ Accomplished by electronic data interchange or the internet
Warehousing management
Warehousing: Storage of products (raw materials, parts, good-in-process, finished goods) at and between point of origin and consumptions
Warehousing management: Prepare, maintain, and monitor places where products can be stored for a particular period
→ Inside the company (resources owned by the company)
→ Outside the company (contracted from another company, changing or fixed space for a specified time)
Transportation at zero miles per hour
Warehousing and transportation are substitutes for each other
Warehousing can be referred to as “transportation at zero miles per hour”
Regrouping function: Acculumate
Bring similar stocks together from different sources
→ Concerns quantity of product
Regrouping function: Allocate
Break larger quantities into smaller quantities
Regrouping function: Assort
Build variety of different product to resale to customers
→ Concerns assortment of product
Regrouping function: Sort out
Separate products into grades and qualities desired by target markets
Warehouses
Place dedicated to store goods
→ Purpose: Maximize usage of available storage space
Distribution centres
Place dedicated for quick movement of products
→ Purpose: Maximize amount of product entering and leaving this place
Fulfilment centres
Special type of distribution centre that is dedicated on e-commerce orders
→ Purpose: Process order, collect ordered product and send delivery in the shortest possible time
Crossdocking centres
Receipt and shipment of product are often completed the same day or overnight without storage
→ Purpose: Send different products orders combined in one direction
Transport
Actual, physical movement of goods and people between two points using different tools
Key activity: Successful operation of any supply chain (carries good, as they move along the supply chain)
Influences or is influenced by other types of logistics activities (e.g. inventory management, packaging, (un)loading, location of manufacturing)
Types of transportation
→ One mode: one type of transport
→ Multi- / intermodal: More types of transport used (usually one loading unit used throughout the entire route) "
Air transport
High speed transport
Expensive (high prices even for small deliveries)
Used for high-value and lower-volume products
Often combined with road transport
Used in need of fast (urgent) delivery
Examples: Car parts / accessories, electronic / electrical equipment, clothing, documents, vehicles for official visits
Road transport
Most popular in delivering good directly to the recipient
Often combined with other mentioned types of transport (using fulfilment and crossdocking centres)
Susceptible to disruption caused by road traffic / weather conditions
Capacity is limited by road restrictions (permissible weight, size, …)
Examples: Dry freight, foodstuffs, refrigerated product, liquid product, animals / livestock, automobiles, steel
Railway transport
Less flexible than road transport unless the costumer is located on a rail line or has a rail siding
→ More flexible than air, water and pipeline transport
Often combined with road and pipeline transport Superior to air and road transport in case of capacity, but not as good as pipeline or water transport
Tend to carry lower-value and high-volume shipments of bulk-type commodities
→ Transport gained access to manufactured and packed product (higher value) due to intermodal
Examples: Coal, chemicals, farm products, non-metallic minerals
Water transport
Carries greater volumes than railway and road transport
Inexpensive compared to rail or road transport
Often combined with road, railway, and pipeline transport
Inland water carriers focus on lower-value bulk commodities that can be handled by mechanical means (pumps, scoops, conveyors)
Examples: petroleum, petroleum related products, coal, food / farm products, industrial chemicals, minerals, stone
Pipeline transport
No vehicle-related disruption (accidents) or weather conditions
Slowest form of transportation
Often combined with railway or road transport to delivery directly to the customer
Pumping stations enable the flow of liquid goods
Capable to transport very large product volumes (ease of flow continuity)
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