Please see attachments. Due Tues, 7/10.
Read “Executive Insight” in Michael Hugos: Essentials of Supply Chain Management, answer the following questions:
· How does information technology add value to supply chains?
· How does simulation software solve problems arising in logistics and supply chain management?
· How would you apply information technology to a supply chain to improve business performance?
2-3 pages. APA citations.
Executive Insight
Supply chain decisions are more vital than ever before and also more complex than ever before. How will companies address these challenges? One way is through the use of software and techniques for supply network design and simulation modeling. Tolga Yanasik and Thibault Quiviger specialize in the use of these tools and they describe some situations and the benefits they were able to deliver.
Consider the task faced by a large steel maker that is creating its five year investment plan. It must decide where to invest, which factories to revamp, and what production capacity to reduce in its 27 plants in Europe. Its product portfolio is made up of 16,000 different products, and many of them are processed on different production lines in different countries. The team in charge of this process is also concerned with the effect of different price policies contemplated for the different products and how this could modify their investment plan.
Or consider a carmaker that is going to re-engineer its global supply chain operations to build a competitive advantage against its competitors. The questions that both of these companies must answer are similar and are questions such as:
·
• Which product must be built on demand, which must be built on stock?
· • Where to locate the different distribution centers?
· • How much stock will be necessary to guarantee 95 percent service level to every customer with a delivery lead time of X days?
· • Out of the total supply chain inventory, how much will be safety stock?
In another case, a company or port authority is planning to build a new container terminal. And it must decide about the new layout of the terminal, the number of cranes, the size of the parking lot for the waiting trucks, the number and location of weigh bridges and, most important, the number and layout of the customs gates it must negotiate with the country’s government.
Simulation modeling can be used to answer the questions in all three of these situations. We will illustrate some tools and methodologies that can be used by companies to make rational decisions about their production and distribution strategies. We will address three different levels of planning: strategic, tactical, and operational. The difference between each level is the time horizon that drives different decision processes. For our discussion we will define these time horizons as follows:
· • Strategic: One year to five years, depending on the industry dynamics.
· • Tactical: One month to one year
· • Operational: One day to one month
Strategic Supply Chain Design
The purpose of strategic design is to minimize the total cost of the supply chain under capacity constraints. Using network design tools and quantitative methodologies, people can answer the following questions:
· • Which product must be produced in which unit?
· • Where should I build a new distribution center?
· • Where to locate the inventories and how much to guarantee a certain service level?
· • What is the most carbon efficient network?
· • Is it better to build on demand or to build on stock?
· • What is the impact of adding a new product in my Supply Chain?
· • What if I reduce my product portfolio complexity in terms of total cost, customer service, and inventory level across the supply chain?
· • At which stage of the supply chain should I hold safety stock? What about sharing this cost with my suppliers and customers and optimizing the overall inventory level?
Simulation software packages allow people to build a mathematical model representing the current and potential supply chain, with all of its products, production sites, and distribution sites that are relevant for the decision-making process. People can define the constraints on the supply chain (target service levels, maximum capacity of each plant, transport options, etc.) and quantify these constraints. Costs can then be entered into the model and used to help answer design questions.
In this model, physical facilities and operating policies are put in place to tackle different problems such as:
· • Factory production scheduling in the face of shifting product demand
· • Managing production lead times that are longer than committed product delivery lead times to end customers
· • Coping with supply uncertainty and demand uncertainty
For example, management of inventories to cope with demand uncertainty (also known as safety stocks), is complex because every stage in the supply chain usually builds up its own safety stock to guarantee a given service level. It can be mathematically demonstrated that this approach is not optimum and tends to build up too much inventory in the supply chain. One can show in simulations that it is possible to reduce the overall value of safety stock in the chain while increasing the service level to the supply chain end customers.
The further downstream in a supply chain, the higher is the value of the inventory and safety stock. And the more upstream safety stock is accumulated, the lower the value of these stocks. Yet safety stock held closer to the end customer guarantees a higher service level. The challenge is to find the optimum locations and quantities of different products and components to hold in the supply chain so as to guarantee target service level for the end customer and also minimize value of safety stocks. In many cases, simulations show how to reduce safety stocks by 30 percent or more while increasing service levels by 10 to 20 percent. Simulation shows this performance is achieved by reducing the safety stocks in the intermediate stages of the supply chain while increasing them in the final stage of the supply chain so as to increase service levels for the end customer.
Use of Simulation for Tactical Planning
In tactical supply chain planning, uncertainty is mainly driven by demand uncertainty, but there may be other sources of uncertainty: process times, availability of equipment, and complex interactions between workflows sharing limited resources (people, equipment, loading docks, etc.) making it hard to precisely know the overall system capacity. In these conditions, simulation can be of great help.
Simulators help managers to measure the consequences of these different sources of uncertainty in the supply chain operation. Let’s consider here the example of a container terminal in Turkey. The container shipping business is booming in Turkey; a company is expanding its container terminal close to Istanbul in order to follow up on the container market demand. This company is already running another car export business, cars from the Renault Plant located close to the port and an import of steel slab for a neighboring plant.
Exhibit 4.4
below shows a proposed layout for the facility. The proposed layout is overlaid on a Google Earth picture of the existing facility
EXHIBIT 4.4 Google Earth
Simulation is a powerful tool to study facility operations and workflows in scenarios of high variability. Logistics is very much subject to this variability because of the interactions between these workflows which often cannot be controlled. When considering the different product flows, capacity computation is not simple because of factors such as: different product flows share some common resources (roads, custom tolls, weigh bridges); arrival of trucks is not constant during the day, nor during the week; weighing time and custom control times are very variable; and boat arrival times are unstable because of the crossing of the Bosphorus where many boats are queuing.
Using simulation, it was possible to verify:
· • The current layout proposed was not optimal and could not absorb peak traffic
· • No new investment was required: changing the layout to make it more flexible was enough to absorb the different traffic peaks
· • Investment saved versus contemplated countermeasures: $4M
· Use of Simulation in Warehouse Operations
· Very similar to manufacturing plants, simulation offers many benefits to warehouses. With the aid of simulation, logistics engineers can calculate how a new picking or replenishment strategy will affect the service levels or the utilization of lift trucks. Since logistics operations are exposed to more variation than factory production operations, it’s crucial to monitor the behavior of these operations during extreme situations.
· Simulation is a highly useful tool for calculating the effect of possible variations. It enables engineers to pinpoint zones of congestion and improve the layout of warehouses to respond to this congestion. Three-dimensional simulation is especially important when designing and installing automation systems such as conveyors, sorters, or palletizers in a warehouse (see
Exhibit 4.5
).
· EXHIBIT 4.5 Three-dimensional Simulation
·
· Conclusion
· We have shown different techniques and uses of simulation to optimize supply chain investments and operations. We looked first at the strategic level because that’s where the big money and big savings are to be found. Often supply chain managers are stuck in day-to-day operations. They tend to start from their daily experiences and try to extrapolate supply chain strategies. The difficulty of this approach lies in managers becoming focused on incremental changes to existing ways of working and failing to see the larger picture or try new ideas. Supply chains must be tailored to fit business strategy, not the other way around. Simulations of supply chain design and operations enable people to break out of preconceived ideas and try new approaches. Continuous simulation to find new ways to structure and operate supply chains is vital for companies that wish to keep up with the rapid rates of change in the global economy.
· Tolga Yanasik is a principle in the supply chain engineering firm of Dijitalis in Istanbul, Turkey. He specializes in the creation of simulation models for analysis of supply chain operations and optimization tools for efficient planning. (
www.dijitalis.com
)
· Thibault Quiviger is principal in the firm of Enetek in France. He specializes in the use of mathematical methods for simulation modeling and analysis. (
www.enetek.eu
)
Reference:
Hugos, Michael H.. Essentials of Supply Chain Management, 3rd Edition. 3. VitalSource Bookshelf. John Wiley & Sons (P&T), 2011-07-11, 07/08/2012.