
Intelligent Manufacturing November 1996 Vol. 2
No. 11
The theme of streamlining processes from supplier to manufacturer to
vendor to customer dominated the 1996 APICS International Conference
and Exhibition held in New Orleans last month. From discussions of
how best to implement it to a record 185 booth exhibits showing off
the latest software advancements, there was no shortage of
information for the crowd of some 6,500 attendees regarding the
increasing emphasis being placed on the supply chain and its
importance to the manufacturing process.
The Heart of the Matter
APICS gathered a focus group of industry professionals deeply
involved with the implementation of supply chain management (SCM) in
an effort to drill down into the meat of the SCM issue to decide not
only what the process means to today's manufacturer, but its
viability for the future of manufacturing. Martin Mirsky of the
Supply Chain Process Technology Center at Dow Chemical; Louis
DiFrancesco with Bowman Distribution; David Roth, vice president of
Manugistics; Elaine Whittington of G&E Enterprises; and Dick
Bourke of Bourke Arnold Enterprises served on the panel of the focus
group with Steve Melnyk of Michigan State University moderating.
Among the first conclusions reached by this group is that SCM differs
from purchasing in that it (SCM) correctly utilizes supplies and
makes suppliers and customers part of the same team. This
incorporation of more players directly into the heart of the supply
chain also brings about the biggest challenge for manufacturers --
optimization of the increased communication which inevitably occurs
with such cooperation. This amplified communication is moving
manufacturing toward a more collaborative type of enterprise, and
manufacturers must be prepared to deal with this.
Fortunately, the widespread use of the Internet will help facilitate
this abundance of communication, particularly on a global level. In
becoming more of a global enterprise practitioner, as well as
integrating other players more closely into its supply chain
processes, a manufacturer must establish a high degree of trust with
his partners and customers. This "open kimono" approach of total
trust comes prominently to the fore in most global and heavily
integrated implementations of SCM.
Another aspect of increasing the global orientation of the supply
chain involves the difference of opinions on matters which may have
long been considered standardized within a company. But in becoming a
global concern, an international customer's definition of quality or
success must also become your own definition.
Likely the most important concern to arise within the focus group is
that current SCM, operating at tactical and strategic levels and
handling everything in the manufacturing process from source to
customer, allows for more decision making at different levels, making
the operation of a supply chain more of a balancing act than an
optimization. Thus, while SCM provides manufacturers with many of the
processes they've been clamoring for to streamline their operations,
it also leaves them open to a number of other concerns not previously
faced. However, the bottom line that has driven SCM to this point and
will continue to drive it in the future is that it has proven time
and again to help firms keep up with competition in markets where an
entire product life cycle may be as short as one year.
Going Beyond the Hype
Nearly 100 lectures offered at the APICS conference provided a chance
for attendees to go beyond the hype of the latest software offerings
and get to their core concerns -- improving processes and thereby
improving profits. Gary Gossard's (USC School of Engineering and
Stanford Executive Manegement Program) lecture on Improving Inventory
Performance and Bottom-Line Profits focused on how many comprehensive
manufacturing planning and distribution management systems have
yielded disappointing results. He believes the reason for this lies
in the fact that most of these systems are all quantity driven (e.g.,
MRP).
To truly affect the bottom line, Gossard contends that one must shift
his focus from looking at quantities and begin looking at dollars.
For Gossard, a true dollar-based performance measure involves:
1) establishing inventory classes based on future dollar
requirements;
2) setting target inventory levels for the various classes of
inventory;
3) measuring the dollars invested in good, bad and marginal
inventories;
4) setting specific objectives for inventory reduction;
5) analyzing data in poor quality categories to identify the best
opportunities; and
6) using the performance measure to monitor continuous improvement
over time.
Another manufacturing issue that looks to affect not only a company's
bottom line, but future viability, is the environment. Steve Melnyk
(Michigan State University, East Lansing) examined ERM
(environmentally responsible manufacturing) in a lecture that started
from the basis that ERM is increasingly forcing a fundamental
rethinking of the manufacturing system, the goals and objectives
driving it, and the way in which we measure and evaluate the
effectiveness and efficiency of both this system and the firm as a
whole.
The types of action available to achieve ERM, according to Melnyk,
are: redesign of the product or process; substitution of a source
that creates environmental waste with another material not as likely
to create the same type of problem; reduction of waste by reducing
the level of use of materials that create waste streams; rebuilding
an engine or process in order to restore it to its original, optimal
condition; remanufacturing a product or process back to its original
condition with no parts being reduced to raw materials; reuse;
prolonged use; separating waste streams in order to allow more
efficient processing of them; spreading risks -- passing on the
responsibility of proper disposal to another firm that is better
equipped to handle the task; and accepting risks and problems.
The benefits of a proactive stance on environmental matters help
protect a company against increasing legislation and liability
implications. In addition, by keeping abreast of environmental
matters, a company can reduce the amount of regulatory requirements
and reporting it must perform.
Forecasting represented one specific aspect of improved supply chain
processes that received a great deal of attention at the conference.
Joseph Shedlawski's (Wyerth-Lerderle Vaccines and Pediatrics, Pearl
River, N.Y.) lecture examined the importance of accurate forecasting
in remaining competitive. The biggest forecasting pitfalls Shedlawski
identified were: forecasting the wrong things by forecasting
everything; individual decision making; second guessing;
overreaction; conflicting purposes; sudden, unpredictable change;
failure to recognize all sources of demand; and lack of timely
monitoring. The optimal method of forecasting, according to
Shedlawski, involves the determination of what to forecast, the
modularization of options bills; assignation of responsibility;
measuring the forecast; monitoring the forecast method; honoring, but
not worshipping, the time fence; not just predicting but affecting;
sales and operational planning; and two numbers -- a target and an
error -- but using only one set of such numbers.
On the topic of integrating vendor-managed inventory (VMI) into
supply chain decision-making, Mary Lou Fox (Manugistics, Rockville,
Md.) spoke of how VMI leverages advanced technology and
trading-partner relationships to enable the flow of information and
inventory throughout the entire supply chain. VMI provides visibility
into demand at the trading-partner level to improve the flow of
products, eliminate inefficiencies, and lower costs. By incorporating
demand and distribution planning, VMI provides integrated,
enterprise-wide answers to problems in the supply chain. Benefits
from VMI include: improved customer service, reduced demand
uncertainty, reduced inventory and reduced costs. Some of the larger
companies currently implementing VMI include Johnson & Johnson,
Black & Decker, and Schering-Plough.
The effect of the Theory of Constraints (TOC) on the supply chain
also received a fair amount of attention at the conference. Dierdre
Bradbury Jacobs' (Avraham Y. Goldratt Institute, New Haven, Conn.)
lecture on using the TOC to bring a project in on time focused on how
the TOC addresses the handling of resource dependencies and the
placement of time buffers to cover statistical fluctuations. Also,
Thomas B. McMullen Jr. examined TOC and how its philosophies,
practices, decision processes, measurements, logistics, and systems
architectures all work together to provide an infrastructure for
agile manufacturing.
Numerous other lectures, including Scheduling to Keep Your Customers
Happy, Making Supply Chains Agile for Niche Products, Direction of
Supply Chain Optimization Technologies, and Improved Supply Chain
Management Through Mathematical Modeling, all served to underscore
this conference's focus on improving processes and educating
manufacturers.
The APICS '96 Conference neatly dovetailed with the lecture motifs
closely mirroring the exhibit themes on the convention hall floor.
These two outlets of information served to illustrate how the links
to the future of manufacturing are being joined by taking
established, functional procedures like supply chain management and
integrating them with burgeoning technologies such as the Internet
and newer manufacturing thought processes (i.e., vendor managed
inventory and the Theory of Constraints) to enable a more timely and
satisfying execution of manufacturing processes.
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