Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach: Prepared by Daniel A. Glaser-Segura, PHD
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach: Prepared by Daniel A. Glaser-Segura, PHD
Learning Objectives
You should be able to:
Describe the hierarchical operations planning process in terms of materials planning & capacity planning Describe MRP, closed-loop MRP, MRP-II & ERP Know how to compute available-to-promise quantities. Know how to perform an MRP explosion. Distinguish dependent from independent demand inventories. Describe the four basic types of inventories & their functions. Understand the EOQ model
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
Introduction
Scheduling & inventory management influence how assets are deployed. Problem: A missed due date or stock-out may cascade downstream, affecting the supply chain. Operations managers are continuously involved in balance capacity & output. Here we will discuss: Hierarchical operations planning process Dependent & independent demand Basic types of inventories Various inventory management approaches
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
Operations Planning
Operations planning is usually hierarchical & can be divided into three broad categories: Long-range- Aggregate Production Plan (APP) involves the construction of facilities & major equipment purchase Intermediate- Shows the quantity & timing of end items (i.e., master production schedule- MPS) Short-range- detailed planning process for components & parts to support the master production schedule (i.e., materials requirement planning- MRP)
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
Operations Planning- Cont. Planning Closed-loop MRP- incorporates the aggregate production plan, the master production schedule material requirements plan, capacity requirements plan. Manufacturing resource planning (MRP-II) incorporates the business & sales plans with the closed-loop MRP system. Distribution requirement planning (DRP) describes the timephased net requirements from warehouses & distribution centers customer demand minus any on hand in-transit inventories.
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Master Production Scheduling-Cont. SchedulingThe MPS is the production quantity to meet demand from all sources & is used for computing the requirements of all time-phased end items. Frequent changes to the MPS may create system nervousnessSituation where a small change in the upper-level-production plan causes a major change in the lower-level production plan. Many firms use a time fence system to deal with system nervousness. A time fence separates the planning horizon into two segments Firmed Segment (AKA as a demand time fence), from current period to several weeks into future. Can only be altered by senior management. Tentative segment (AKA planning time fence), from end of the firmed segment to several weeks farther into the future.
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Master Production Scheduling-Cont. SchedulingAvailable-to-Promise (ATP) QuantitiesThe MPS decides whether additional orders can be accepted for difference between confirmed customer orders & the quantity the firm planned to produce. Three basic methods of calculating the available-to-promise quantities: 1. Discrete available-to-promise 2. Cumulative available-to-promise without look ahead, & 3. Cumulative available-to-promise with look ahead.
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Independent Demand
The demand for final products & has a demand pattern affected by trends, seasonal patterns, & general market conditions.
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Materials Requirement Planning- Cont. PlanningTerms used in Materials Requirement Planning- Cont. 8. Time bucket: Time period used on the MRP. Days or weeks. 9. Explosion: The process of converting a parent items planned order releases into component gross requirements. 10. Planning factor: Number of components needed to produce a unit of the parent item. 11. Firmed planned order: Planned order that the MRP computer logic system does not automatically change when conditions change to prevent system nervousness. 12. Pegging: Relates gross requirements for a part to the planned order releases the reverse of the explosion process. 13. Low-level coding: assigns the lowest level on the bill of materials to all common components to avoid duplicate MRP computations. 14. Lot size: The order size for MRP logic 15. Safety Stock: Protects against uncertainties in demand supply, quality, & lead time.
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Capacity Planning
Excess (or insufficient) capacity prevents firm from taking advantage of the efficiency of manufacturing planning & control system. Resource Requirement Planning (RRP), a long-range capacity planning module, checks whether aggregate resources are capable of satisfying the aggregate production. Resources considered include gross labor hours & machine hours. Medium-range capacity plan, or rough-cut capacity plan (RCCP), used to check feasibility of MPS. Converts MPS from production needed to capacity required, then compares it to capacity available. Capacity requirement planning (CRP) is a short-range capacity planning technique that is used to check the feasibility of the material requirements plan.
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach by Wisner, Leong, and Tan. 2005 Thomson Business and Professional Publishing
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