Location Strategy
Location Strategy
Location Strategy
Location Strategy
Özgür Kabak, Ph.D.
Location Strategy
What's located?
Sourcing points
Plants
Vendors
Ports
Intermediate points
Warehouses
Terminals
Public facilities (fire, police, and ambulance stations)
Service centers
Sink points
Retail outlets
Customers/Users
Location Strategy
Key Questions
How many facilities should there be?
Where should they be located?
What size should they be?
𝑋= 7,901/1,260 = 6.27
𝑌= 5,538/1,260 = 4.40
COG Method
Example
COG
COG Method
Example
The total cost for this location is found by:
𝑇𝐶 = 𝑉𝑖 𝑅𝑖 𝐾 (𝑋𝑖 − 𝑋)2 +(𝑌𝑖 − 𝑌)2
𝑖
K is the map scaling factor to convert coordinates into
miles.
i Xi Yi Vi Ri TC
1 0.6 7.3 8000 0.02 509,706
2 8.6 3 10000 0.02 271,526
3 2 3 5000 0.05 561,597
4 5.5 2.4 3000 0.05 160,417
5 7.9 5.5 4000 0.05 196,859
6 10.6 5.2 6000 0.05 660,529
2,360,633
Multiple Location Methods
A more complex problem that most firms have.
It involves trading off the following costs:
Transportation inbound to and outbound from the facilities
Storage and handling costs
Inventory carrying costs
Production/purchase costs
Facility fixed costs
Subject to:
Customer service constraints
Facility capacity restrictions
Mathematical methods are popular for this type of problem
that
Search for the best combination of facilities to minimize costs
Do so within a reasonable computational time
Do not require enormous amounts of data for the analysis
Location Cost Trade-Offs
Total cost
Cost
Warehouse
fixed
Inventory carrying
and warehousing
Production/purchase
and order processing
Inbound and
outbound
transportation
0
0
Number of warehouses
Examples of Practical COG Model Use
Location of truck maintenance terminals
i Xi Yi Vi Ri TC
1 0.6 7.3 8000 0.02 509,706
2 8.6 3 10000 0.02 271,526
3 2 3 5000 0.05 561,597
4 5.5 2.4 3000 0.05 160,417
5 7.9 5.5 4000 0.05 196,859
6 10.6 5.2 6000 0.05 660,529
2,360,633
Multiple COG
Example
i Xi Yi Vi
For N = 2 1 0.6 7.3 8000
2 8.6 3 10000
Determine initial locations 3 2 3 5000
4 5.5 2.4 3000
w1(8.6, 3) -- w2(0.6, 7.3) 5 7.9 5.5 4000
6 10.6 5.2 6000
Transportation
i Xi Yi Vi Rj wx wy Distance Cost
1 0.6 7.3 8000 0.02 1.45 4.68 2.76 220,594
2 8.6 3 10000 0.02 8.59 4.26 1.26 125,884
3 2 3 5000 0.05 1.45 4.68 1.76 220,594
4 5.5 2.4 3000 0.05 8.59 4.26 3.61 270,716
5 7.9 5.5 4000 0.05 8.59 4.26 1.42 142,208
6 10.6 5.2 6000 0.05 8.59 4.26 2.22 332,357
1,312,351
Facility
Warehouse p1 p2 c1 c2 c3
Distribution
w 0
Costs
4
per Unit:
3 4 5
1
w2 5 2 2 1 2
Multifacility Location Models
Places are Already Known
Handling = $2/cwt.
Capacity = 60,000 cwt.
Fixed = $100,000
/ c wt Customer C1
$ 4
$0/cwt.
.
50,000 cwt.
cwt
$2/
$5
Warehouse W1 $3
Plant P1 /cw
/cw
Production = $4/cwt. t.
t.
Capacity = wt.
/c
60,000 cwt. $1 Customer C2
t.
100,000 cwt.
cw
$4/
$5/
$2
/c
cwt
t. Warehouse W2 w
c w t
/
.
$2
Handling = $1/cwt.
Capacity =
Plant P2
Unrestricted
Production
Capacity = $4/cwt.
= 60,000 cwt. Customer C3
Fixed = $400,000
Capacity = 50,000 cwt.
Unrestricted Inventory carrying cost =
100(Throughput)0.7
Multifacility Location Models
Heuristics
Heuristic 1
For each market we choose the cheapest
warehouse to source demand.
c1, c2, c3 would be supplied by w2.
For this warehouse choose the cheapest plant;
60,000 units from p2
the remaining 140,000 from p1.
Total cost = 2*50,000 + 1*100,000 + 2*50,000 + 2*60,000
+ 5*140,000 = 1,120,000
Multifacility Location Models
Heuristics
Heuristic 2
For each market area, choose the warehouse where the
total delivery costs to and from the warehouse are the
lowest; that is, consider inbound and outbound
distribution costs.
Thus for market area c1, consider the paths
p1-w1-c1, p1-w2-c1, p2-w1-c1, p2-w2-c1.
The cheapest is p1-w1-c1, so choose w1 for c1.
using a similar analysis, we choose w2 for c2 and w2 for c3.
This implies that warehouse w1 delivers a total of 50,000 units
while warehouse w2 delivers a total of 150,000 units.
The best inbound flow pattern is to supply 50,000 from plant p1
to warehouse w1, supply 60,000 units from plant p2 to
warehouse w2, and supply 90,000 from plant p1 to warehouse
w2.
The total cost for this strategy is 920,000.
Multifacility Location Models
Optimization Model
Places are already known
Minimize total transportation cost
0X(p1,w1)+5X(p1,w2)+4X(p2,w1)+2X(p2,w2)
+3X(w1,c1)+4X(w1,c2)+5X(w1,c3)+2X(w2,c1)+1X(w2,c2)+2X(w2,c3)
s.t.
X(p2,w1)+X(p2,w2)≤60,000 Plant 2 capacity
X(p1,w1)+X(p2,w1)=X(w1,c1)+X(w1,c2)+X(w1,c3) Whs.1 input/output
X(p1,w2)+X(p2,w2)=X(w2,c1)+X(w2,c2)+X(w2,c3) Whs.2 input/output
X(w1,c1)+X(w2,c1)=50,000 Customer 1 demand
X(w1,c2)+X(w2,c2)=100,000 Customer 2 demand
X(w1,c3)+X(w2,c3)=50,000 Customer 3 demand
Multifacility Location Models
Optimization Model
EXCEL Solver
Multifacility Location Models
Optimization Model
Result
Total Cost: $ 740,000
w1 w2 c1 c2 c3
p2 0 60000 w2 0 60000 0
Retail Location
Contrasts with plant and warehouse location.
Factors other than costs such as parking, nearness to competitive
outlets, and nearness to customers are dominant
Methods
Weighted checklist
Often many of the factors that are important to retail location are not
easily or inexpensively quantified
Judgment is an integral part of the decision
Good where many subjective factors are involved
Quantifies the comparison among alternate locations
Spatial-Interaction Model
The gravity model to determining the drawing power, or overall
desirability, of a site
The basic idea is that two competing cities attract trade from an
intervening town in direct propotion to each city’s population but inverse
proportion to square distance between cities and town.
A Hypothetical Weighted Factor Checklist
for a Retail Location Example
Factor Factor
Weight Score
(1 to 10) Location Factors (1 to 10) Weighted Score
8 Proximity to competing stores 5 40
5 Space rent/lease considerations 3 15
8 Parking space 10 80
7 Proximity to complementary stores 8 56
6 Modernity of store space 9 54
9 Customer accessibility 8 72
3 Local taxes 2 6
3 Community service 4 12
Proximity to major transportation
8 7 56
arteries
Total Index 391
Y 80
70
C2 RB
60
Time (minutes)
50
C3
40
30
C1 RA
20
10
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
Time (minutes) X
Other Methods for Retail Location
Regression Analysis (to forecast the revenues that a
specific site can expect
Covering models (particularly useful for locating
emergency services such as police and fire stations)
Game Theory (suggested when competition is a key
factor)
Location-Allocation models such as goal
programming and integer programming (see
example at the blackboard)
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Final Exam