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The Use Of Supply Chain Management In Manufacturing Organisation To Control Inventory Levels While Providing Adequate Service To Customers (A Case Study Of Eastwind Foods)

Abstract

The   research provides an appraisal of the use of supply chain management in manufacturing organization to control inventory levels while providing adequate service to customers.

It elucidate supply chain management, inventory control and determine inventory levels required to ensure customer satisfactory service.

Chapter one

INTRODUCTION

Supply-chain management and it encompasses all of those integrated activities that bring product to market and create satisfied customers. The Supply Chain Management Program integrates topics from manufacturing operations, purchasing, transportation, and physical distribution into a unified program. Successful supply chain management, then, coordinates and integrates all of these activities into a seamless process. It embraces and links all of the partners in the chain. In addition to the departments within the organization, these partners include vendors, carriers, third party companies, and information systems providers Within the organization, the supply chain refers to a wide range of functional areas. These include Supply Chain Management-related activities such as inbound and out bound transportation, warehousing, and inventory control. Sourcing, procurement, and supply management fall under the supply-chain umbrella, too. Forecasting, production planning and scheduling, order processing, and customer service all are part of the process as well. Importantly, it also embodies the information systems so necessary to monitor all of these activities. Simply stated, the supply chain encompasses all of those activities associated with moving goods from the raw-materials stage through to the end user.”

Advocates for this business process realized that significant productivity increases could only come from managing relationships, information, and material flow across enterprise borders. One of the best definitions of supply-chain management offered to date comes from Bernard J. (Bud) La Londe, professor emeritus of Supply Chain Management at Ohio State University. La Londe defines supply-chain management as follows: “The delivery of enhanced customer and economic value through synchronized management of the flow of physical goods and associated information from sourcing to consumption. “As the “from sourcing to consumption” part of our last definition suggests, though, achieving the real potential of supply-chain management requires integration not only of these entities within the organization, but also of the external partners. The latter include the suppliers, distributors, carriers, customers, and even the ultimate consumers. All are central players in what James E. Morehouse of A.T. Kearney calls the extended supply chain. “The goal of the extended enterprise is to do a better job of serving the ultimate consumer,”. Superior service, he continues, leads to increased market share. Increased share, in turn, brings with it competitive advantages such as lower warehousing and transportation costs, reduced inventory levels, less waste, and lower transaction costs.

The customer is the key to both quantifying and communicating the supply chain’s value, confirms Shrawan Singh, vice president of integrated supply-chain management at Xerox.

“If you can start measuring customer satisfaction associated with what a supply chain can do for a customer and also link customer satisfaction in terms of profit or revenue growth,” Singh explains, “then you can attach customer values to profit & loss and to the balance sheet.”

The best companies around the world are discovering a powerful new source of competitive advantage. It’s called supply-chain management and it encompasses all of those integrated activities that bring product to market and create satisfied customers.The Supply Chain Management Program integrates topics from manufacturing operations, purchasing, transportation, and physical distribution into a unified program. Successful supply chain management, then, coordinates and integrates all of these activities into a seamless process. It embraces and links all of the partners in the chain. In addition to the departments within the organization, these partners include vendors, carriers, third party companies, and information systems providers.

1.1      BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY

The fundamental objective  of supply chain management  is to “add value”.

An example is the fish fingers. During the Supply Chain Management ’98 conference in the United Kingdom , a participant in a supply chain management seminar stated that total time from fishing dock through manufacturing, distribution, and final sale of frozen fish fingers for his European grocery-products company was 150 days. Manufacturing took a mere 43 minutes. That suggests an enormous target for supply chain managers. During all that time, company capital is– almost literally in this case–frozen. What is true for fish fingers is true of most products. Examine any extended supply chain, and it is likely to be a long one. James Morehouse, a vice president of consulting firm A.T. Kearney, reports that the total cycle time for corn flakes, for example, is close to a year and that the cycle times in the pharmaceutical industry average 465 days. In fact, Morehouse argues that if the supply chain, of what he calls an “extended enterprise,” is encompassing, everything from initial supplier to final customer fulfillment, could be cut to 30 days, that would provide not only more inventory turns, but fresher product, an ability to customize better, and improved customer responsiveness. “All that add value,” he says. And it provides a clear competitive advantage. Supply Chain Management becomes a tool to help accomplish corporate strategic objectives reducing working capital, taking assets off the balance sheet, accelerating cash-to-cash cycles, increasing inventory turns, and so on.

1.2    STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM

The problem confronting the research is to appraise the use of supply chain management in manufacturing organization to control inventory levels while providing adequate service to customers; A case study of  east wind foods.

1.3   RESEARCH  QUESTION

1            What is supply chain management

2            What is inventory level and how can supply chain management be used to control inventory while providing        adequate service to customers

1.4    OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY

1      To appraise  the nature of supply chain management.

2       To determine the use of supply chain management  to control         inventory level while providing   adequate service to customer

1.5    SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY

The study shall analyze supply chain management and project its importance in controlling inventory level while providing adequate service to customers.

It shall also serve a veritable source of information  on issues on supply chain management.

1.6     STATEMENT OF THE HYPOTHESIS

1     H0    Inventory control and customer service in East-Wind                      foods is low

H1   Inventory control and customer service in East-Wind                 foods is high

2      H0    Supply chain management  in East-Wind foods is not                    significant

H1    supply   chain management in East-Wind foods is                          significant

3      H0    The impact of supply chain management  on inventory                   control and customer service in east wind foods is low

H1    The impact of supply chain management on inventory           control and customer service  in east wind foods is high

1.7        SCOPE OF THE STUDY

1      The study provides an appraisal of the use of supply chain management in manufacturing organization to control inventory levels while providing adequate service to customers

1.1      DEFINITION OF TERMS

SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT 

The supply chain encompasses all of those activities associated with moving goods from the raw-materials stage through to the end user.”

Advocates for this business process realized that significant productivity increases could only come from managing relationships, information, and material flow across enterprise borders. One of the best definitions of supply-chain management offered to date comes from Bernard J. (Bud) LaLonde, professor emeritus of Supply Chain Management at Ohio State University. La Londe defines supply-chain management as follows: “The delivery of enhanced customer and economic value through synchronized management of the flow of physical goods and associated information from sourcing to consumption

SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT DEPARTMENTS

Company’s Supply Chain Management department functions include

   Inventory management

   Transportation service procurement

   Materials handling

   Inbound transportation

   Transportation operations management

   Warehousing management

Moreover, the Supply Chain Management department is expected to increase its range of responsibilities, most often in line with the thinking that sees the order fulfillment process as one co-ordinate set of activities. Thus the functions most often cited as planning to formally include in the Supply Chain Management department are:

   Customer service performance monitoring

   Order processing/customer service

   Supply Chain Management budget forecasting

On the other hand, there are certain functions which some of us might feel logically belong to Supply Chain Management which companies feel are the proper domain of other departments. Most difficult to bring under the umbrella of Supply Chain Management are:

   Third party invoice payment/audit

   Sales forecasting

   Master production planning

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