Supply Chain Management:
Coordination in a Supply Chain


     Rajendran Ananda
     Krishnan




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Topics to be covered
   Coordination in a Supply Chain
   Lack of Supply chain Coordination and
    the Bullwhip effect
   Obstacle to coordination
   Managerial levers
   Building partnerships and trust
   Continuous replenishment and vendor
    managed inventories
   Collaborative planning, forecasting and
    replenishment
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Lack of Supply Chain Coordination and Bullwhip
Effect
  Supply chain coordination improves if all stages
   of the chain take actions that together increase
   total supply chain profits. Supply chain
   coordination requires each stage of the supply
   chain to take into account the impact its actions
   have on other stages.
  A lack of coordination occurs either because
   different stages of the supply chain have
   objectives that conflict or because information
   moving between stages is delayed and
   distorted.
  Different stages of a supply chain may have
   conflicting objectives if each stage has a
   different owner. As a result, each stage tries to
   maximize its own profits, resulting in actions that
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Bullwhip Effect
 Fluctuations in orders placed and demand increase
  as we move up the supply chain from retailers to
  wholesalers to manufacturers to suppliers. This is
  called as Bullwhip effect.
 The Bullwhip effect distorts demand information
  within the supply chain, with each stage having a
  different estimate of what demand looks like. The
  result is a loss of supply chain coordination.
 P&G has observed the bullwhip effect in the supply
  chain for Pampers diapers. The company found that
  raw material orders from P&G to its suppliers
  fluctuated significantly over time. Farther down the
  chain, when sales at retail stores were studied, it was
  found that the fluctuations, while present, were small.
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Causes for the bullwhip effect
   Forecasting updating – Multiple forecast updates by
    each entity in the chain leads to significant distortions.
    Each member of the chain updates forecast based on
    orders received at his end and not based on the demand
    raised by the end customer.
   Order batching – Each member of the chain has his own
    economies of scale in production and transportation
    resulting in planning practices leading to order batching.
   Price fluctuations – Discounts or price promotions result
    in forward buying, causing much distortion. Further
    frequent price changes affect the ordering pattern of the
    buyer.
   Shortage gaming – In a situation of shortages the
    suppliers usually resort to rationing, which in turn provides
    incentives to buyers to inflate orders.
   Long lead time – Long lead times increase the planning
    horizon of other partners in the chain. Further, each
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    partner is forced to keep large amounts of safety stock,
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The effect on Performance of Lack of
Coordination
A supply chain lacks coordination if each stage
  optimizes only its local objectives, without
  considering the impact on the complete chain.
  Total supply chain profits are thus less than what
  could be achieved through coordination.
 Manufacturing Cost – Increases manufacturing
  cost. As a result of the Bullwhip effect,
  manufacturer must satisfy a stream of orders
  that is much more variable than customer
  demand. Manufacturer can respond to the
  increased variability by either building excess
  capacity or holding excess inventory, both of
  which increases the manufacturing cost.
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   Inventory Cost – Bullwhip effect increases
    inventory cost. To handle the increased
    variability in demand, manufacturer has to carry
    a higher level of inventory, than would be
    required in the absence of the Bullwhip effect.
   Replenishment Lead Time – Increases
    replenishment lead times. Increased variability
    makes scheduling at manufacturers much more
    difficult and the available capacity and inventory
    cannot supply the orders coming in.
   Transportation Cost – Increases transportation
    cost. Transportation requirements fluctuate
    significantly over time and thus surplus
    transportation capacity needs to be maintained
    to cover high demand periods.
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 Labor cost for shipping and receiving –
  Increases labor costs. Labor requirements
  fluctuate with orders and thus manufacturers
  have the option of either carrying excess labor
  capacity or varying labor capacity, both of which
  increases total labor cost.
 Level of product availability – Hurts the level
  of product availability and result in more
  stockouts in the supply chain. Large fluctuations
  in orders make it difficult for manufacturer to
  supply all distributor and retailer orders on time.
 Relationships across the Supply Chain –
  Has a negative effect on performance at every
  stage and thus hurts the relationships between
  different stages of the supply chain.
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Obstacles to coordination in a Supply Chain
Any factor that leads to either local optimization
  by different stages of the supply chain or an
  increase in information delay, distortion and
  variability within the supply chain, is an obstacle
  to coordination
INCENTIVE OBSTACLES
 Local optimization within functions or
  stages of a supply chain – Incentives that
  focus only on the local impact of an action result
  in decisions that do not maximize total supply
  chain profits. For eg. If the compensation of a
  transportation manager at a firm is linked to
  average transportation cost per unit, manager is
  likely to take actions that reduce transportation
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  cost even if they increase inventory cost or hurt
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   Sales Force Incentives – In many firms, sales force
    incentives are based on the amount the sales force
    sells during an evaluation period of a month. The
    sales typically measured by a manufacturer are the
    quantity sold to distributors or retailers (sell-in), not
    the quantity sold to final customers (sell-through).

INFORMATION-PROCESSING OBSTACLES
 Forecasting based on Orders and not Customer
  Demand – When stages within a supply chain make
  forecasts that are based on orders they receive, any
  variability in customer demand is magnified as orders
  move up the supply chain to manufacturers and
  suppliers. Each stage views its primary role within the
  supply chain as one of filling orders placed by its
  downstream partner and not the actual customer
  order. Thus each stage views its demand as the
  stream of orders received and produces a forecast
  based on this information.         https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
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 Lack of Information sharing – Lack of information
  sharing between stages of the supply chain magnifies
  the bullwhip effect. For eg. A retailer such as Walmart
  may increase the size of a particular order because of
  a planned promotion. If the manufacturer is not aware
  of the planned promotion it may interpret the larger
  order as a permanent increase in demand and thus
  manufacturers and suppliers will have a lot of
  inventory right after Walmart finishes its promotion.
OPERATIONAL OBSTACLES
 Ordering in Large Lots – When a firm places orders
  in lot sizes that are much larger than the lot sizes in
  which demand arises, variability of orders is
  magnified up in the supply chain. Firms may order in
  large lots because there is a significant fixed cost
  associated with placing, receiving or transporting an
  order and supplier offers quantity discounts based on
  lot size.
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 Large Replenishment Lead times – Consider a
  situation in which a retailer has misinterpreted a
  random increase in demand as a growth trend. If the
  retailer faces a lead time of two weeks, it will
  incorporate the anticipated growth over two weeks
  when placing the order.
 Rationing and Shortage Gaming – Rationing
  schemes that allocate limited production in proportion
  to the orders placed by retailers lead to a
  magnification of the bullwhip effect. This can occur
  when a high demand product is in short supply.
One commonly used rationing scheme is to allocate
  the available supply of product based on orders
  placed. Under this rationing scheme, if the supply
  available is 75% of the total orders received, each
  retailer receives 75% of its orders. This rationing
  scheme results in a game in which retailers try to
  increase the size of their orders to increase the
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PRICING OBSTACLES
 Lot-size based quantity discounts – Lot size based
  quantity discounts Increase the lot size of orders placed
  within the supply chain and thus magnify the bullwhip
  effect.
 Price fluctuations – Trade promotions and other short-
  term discounts offered by a manufacturer result in
  forward buying, by which a wholesaler or retailer
  purchases large lots during the discounting period to
  cover demand during future periods. Forward buying
  results in large orders during the promotion period
  followed by very small orders after that.

BEHAVIORAL OBSTACLES
1. Each stage of the supply chain views its actions locally
   and is unable to see the impact of its actions on other
   stages.
2. A lack of trust among supply chain partners causes
   them to be opportunistic at thehttps://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink
                                       expense of overall
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Managerial Levers to Achieve Coordination
  Aligning of goals and incentives
  Improving Information Accuracy
  Improving operational performance
  Designing pricing strategies to stabilize orders
  Building partnerships and trust
 ALIGNING OF GOALS AND INCENTIVES
  Aligning Incentives across Functions – To
   ensure that the objective any function uses to
   evaluate a decision is aligned with the firm’s
   overall objective. All facility, transportation and
   inventory decisions should be evaluated based
   on their effect on profitability and not total costs.
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   Pricing for Coordination – A manufacturer can
    use lot-size based quantity discounts to achieve
    coordination for commodity products if the
    manufacturer has large fixed costs associated
    with each lot. Manufacturers can use buy-back,
    revenue sharing and quantity flexibility contracts
    to spur retailers to provide levels of product
    availability that maximize supply chain profits.
   Altering sales force incentives from Sell-in
    to sell-through – Any change that reduces the
    incentive for a salesperson to push product to
    the retailer reduces the bullwhip effect.
    Managers should link the incentives for the
    sales force to sell the units to the end customer
    (sell through) and not to the retailer (sell in).
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IMPROVING INFORMATION ACCURACY
 Sharing point of sales data – A primary cause for the
  Bullwhip effect is the fact that each stage of the supply
  chain uses orders to forecast future demand. If retailers
  share POS data with other supply chain stages, all
  supply chain stages can forecast future demand based
  on customer demand.
 Implementing       Collaborative      Forecasting                  and
  planning – Once point-of-sale data are shared, different
  stages of the supply chain must forecast and plan jointly
  if complete coordination is to be achieved.
 Designing single stage control of Replenishment –
  Designing a supply chain in which a single stage
  controls replenishment decisions for the entire supply
  chain can help diminish the bullwhip effect as the
  problem of multiple forecasts https://www.facebook.com/ialwaysthink and
                                        is eliminated
  coordination within the supply chainprettythings
                                        follows.
IMPROVING                       OPERATIONAL
  PERFORMANCE
 Reducing Replenishment Lead time – By
  reducing the replenishment lead time,
  managers can decrease the uncertainty of
  demand during the lead time. Specially
  beneficial for seasonal items because it
  allows for multiple orders to be placed in the
  season with a significant increase in the
  accuracy of the forecast.
 Reducing Lot Sizes – A reduction of lot
  sizes decreases the amount of fluctuation
  that can accumulate between any pair of
  stages of a supply chain, thus decreasing the
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 Rationing based on past sales and sharing
  information to limit Gaming – Managers can design
  rationing schemes that discourage retailers from
  artificially inflating their orders in the case of a
  shortage. Turn-and-earn approach is to allocate the
  available supply based on past sales rather than
  current retailer orders. It removes any incentive a
  retailer may have to inflate orders thus dampening the
  bullwhip effect.
DESIGNING PRICING STRATEGIES TO STABILIZE
  ORDERS
 Moving from lot Size-based to Volume-Based
  Quantity Discounts – Offering volume-based
  quantity discounts eliminates the incentive to increase
  the size of a single lot because volume-based
  discounts consider the total purchases during a
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  specified period rather than purchases in a single lot.
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Stabilizing Pricing – Managers can dampen
 the bullwhip effect by eliminating promotions
 and charging an EDLP(Every Day Low Pricing).
 The elimination of promotions removes forward
 buying by retailers and results in orders that
 match customer demand.
BUILDING STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIPS AND
 TRUST
Sharing of accurate information that is trusted by
 every stage results in a better matching of
 supply and demand throughout a supply chain
 and a lower cost. A better relationship also
 tends to lower the transaction cost between
 supply chain stages.
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Building Strategic Partnerships and
Trust within a Supply Chain
 A trust-based relationship between two stages of a
  supply chain includes dependability of the two
  stages, and the ability of each stage to make a leap
  of faith. Trust involves a belief that each stage is
  interested in the other’s welfare and will not take
  actions without considering their impact on the other
  stages.
 There are two views regarding how cooperation and
  trust can be built into any supply chain relationship:
1. Deterrence based view – In this view the parties
    involved use a variety of formal contracts to ensure
    cooperation.
2. Process-based view – With this view, trust and
    cooperation are built over time as a result of a
    series of interactions between the parties involved.
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Coordination and trust within the supply
  chain help improve performance for the
  following reasons:
1. When stages trust each other, they are
    more likely to take the other party’s
    objectives into consideration when
    making decisions.
2. Action oriented managerial levers to
    achieve coordination become easier to
    implement. Sharing of information is
    natural between parties that trust each
    other.
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There are two phases to any long-term supply chain
  relationship.
 Design phase – Ground rules are established and the
  relationship is initiated.
 Management phase – Interactions based on the ground
  rules occur and the relationships as well as the ground
  rules evolve.

Designing a Relationship with Cooperation and Trust
Key Steps in designing a relationship
Step I Assessing the value of the relationship – The first
  step in designing a supply chain relationship is to clearly
  identify the contribution of each party as well as the
  mutual benefit that the relationship provides. The next
  step is to identify the criteria used for evaluating the
  relationship as well as the contribution of each party.
  Equity defined as fair dealing measures the fairness of
  the division of the total profits among the parties involved.
  Thus, a supply chain relationship is likely to be
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  sustainable only if it increases total profits and this
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Step II. Identifying operational roles and
 decision rights for each party –When
 identifying operational roles and decision
 rights for different parties in a supply chain
 relationship, managers must consider the
 resulting interdependence between the
 parties. A source of conflict may arise if the
 tasks are divided in a way that make one
 party more dependent on the other. The
 allocation of tasks results in a sequential
 interdependence if the activities of one
 partner precede the other. In reciprocal
 interdependence, parties come together
 and exchange information and inputs in both
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Effective Interdependence on SC
Relationships
        High

                      Partner Relatively
                                                   High level of
                           Powerful
                                                   Interdependence
                                                   Effective Relationship

Organization’s
Dependence
(contracts)
                        Low level of                 Organization
                     Interdependence                 Relatively Powerful




      Lo
      w
               Low                                                               High
                               Partner’s Dependence
 (Source:Harvard Business Review- Nov- Dec 1996          Mfr- Retailer Relationships –
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Step III. Creating Effective Contracts
Managers can help promote trust by
 creating    contracts    that   encourage
 negotiations as unplanned contingencies
 arise. Contracts are most effective for
 governance when complete information is
 available and all future contingencies can
 be accounted for. Over time, the informal
 understandings       and      commitments
 between the individuals tend to be
 formalized when new contracts are drawn
 up.
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   Designing effective conflict-resolution
    Mechanisms – Effective conflict-resolution
    mechanisms can significantly strengthen
    any       supply      chain     relationship.
    Unsatisfactory resolution causes the
    relationship to worsen whereas satisfactory
    resolutions strengthen the partnership. A
    good conflict resolution mechanism should
    give the parties an opportunity to
    communicate and work through their
    differences, in the process building greater
    trust.
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   Managing Supply Chain Relationships
    For Cooperation and Trust – Effectively
    managed supply chain relationships foster
    cooperation and trust, thus increasing
    supply chain coordination. In contrast,
    poorly managed relationships lead to each
    party being opportunistic, resulting in a loss
    of total supply chain profits.




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Continuous Replenishment (CRP)and
Vendor Managed Inventories (VMI)
    Bull whip effect can be dampened by                                           2
     practices:
     ◦ 1. CRP (Continuous Replenishment Programs)
     ◦ 2. VMI (Vendor Managed Inventory)
     These two practices assign the responsibility of replenishment
       across the supply chain to a single entity. A single point of
       replenishment decisions ensures visibility and a common
       forecast that drives orders across the supply chain.
     1. Continuous Replenishment Programs (CRP)
      wholesaler or manufacturer replenishes a retailer regularly
       based on POS data. CRP may be supplier, distributor or third
       party managed.
      Driven by Actual withdrawals of inventory from retailer
       warehouses rather than POS data at the retailer level.
     In CRP, the inventory at the retailer is owned by the Retailer
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Vendor managed Inventory- VMI
    Mfr or supplier is responsible for all decisions regarding product
    inventories at the retailer. As a result, the control of the
    replenishment decision moves to the manufacturer instead of the
    retailer.
   In many instances of VMI, the inventory is owned by the supplier
    until it is sold by the retailer.
    Requires the Retailer to share demand information with the
    manufacturer to allow it to make inventory replenishment
    decisions.
    VMI can increase the profit for the entire SC, if both retailer and
    manufacturer margins are considered, while making inventory
    decisions.
   VMI also helps by conveying customer demand data to the
    manufacturer, which can then plan production accordingly. Helps
    improve manufacturer forecasts.
   For eg. K-Mart (with about 50 suppliers) has seen inventories
    drop by 30 to 40 percent after implementing VMI.

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Collaborative Planning, Forecasting,
and Replenishment (CPFR)
  “ A business practice         that combines the
   intelligence of multiple partners in the planning
   and fulfillment of consumer demand”
 According to      Voluntary Inter Industry & Commerce
  Standards Association – VICS”, Since 1998, over 300
  companies have implemented the process
  Successful CPFR can only be built on a foundation in
  which the two parties synchronize their data and establish
  standards for exchanging information.



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Contd.
   Buyers and sellers in a supply chain may
    collaborate along any or all of the following four
    supply chain activities:
      1. Strategy and Planning – In a Joint Business plan, they
       identify significant events such as promotion, new product
       introduction, store opening/ Closing, Inventory plan that affect
       demand and supply.
      2. Demand and supply Management- Collaborative Sales
       forecast is first done which projects the best estimate of
       customer’s demand at the point of sale and then converted to
       collaborative order plan that determines future orders and
       delivery requirements.
      3. Execution – After forecasts, converted to actual orders-
       then production, shipping, receiving, and stocking of products
      4. Analysis - Identifying Exceptions and evaluating metrics
       that are used to assess performance.
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Common Scenarios – Deployment of
CPFR
1. Retail event Collaboration – Promotions and other
  retail events have a significant impact on demand. In
  such a setting, collaboration between retailers and
  suppliers to plan, forecast and replenish promotions is
  very effective.
2. DC Replenishment collaboration – The two trading
  partners collaborate on forecasting DC withdrawals or
  anticipated demand from the DC to the manufacturer.
3. Store Replenishment Collaboration – Trading partners
  collaborate on store level point of sales forecasts.
4. Collaborative assortment Planning – Fashion apparel
  and other seasonal goods follow a seasonal pattern of
  demand. Thus collaborative planning in these categories
  has a horizon of a single season and is performed at
  seasonal intervals and forecasts rely more on industry
  trends, macroeconomic factors and customer tastes.
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Implementation of CPFR
  Johnson & Johnson and Super drug, a
 chain in UK implemented CPFR over the
 three month trial period and observed:
    ◦ Inventory level at its DCs dropped by13%
    ◦ Product availability increased by1.6%
     Sears implemented CPFR in 2003
     and saw significant benefits :
    - Stock levels improved by 4.3%
    - DCs to store fill rate improved by10.7%
    - Overall Inventory levels fell by 25%.

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Thank   You




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