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Module Iv - Sourcing & Pricing: Supply Chain Management

The key sourcing processes include supplier scoring and assessment, supplier selection and contract negotiation, design collaboration, and sourcing planning and analysis. Supplier scoring and assessment involves evaluating suppliers on criteria like quality, costs, and capabilities. Supplier selection involves choosing suppliers through competitive bidding or auctions. Contract negotiation then establishes the business agreement. Sourcing planning analyzes sourcing needs.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
113 views35 pages

Module Iv - Sourcing & Pricing: Supply Chain Management

The key sourcing processes include supplier scoring and assessment, supplier selection and contract negotiation, design collaboration, and sourcing planning and analysis. Supplier scoring and assessment involves evaluating suppliers on criteria like quality, costs, and capabilities. Supplier selection involves choosing suppliers through competitive bidding or auctions. Contract negotiation then establishes the business agreement. Sourcing planning analyzes sourcing needs.

Uploaded by

nithish patkar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 35

S U P P L Y C H A I N M A N A GEM E N T

MODULE IV –SOURCING &


PRICING
Role of Sourcing……..
 Purchasing or procurement
 Is the process by which companies acquire
 Raw materials
 Components

 Products
 Services or
 Other resources

 From suppliers to execute their operations


 Entire set of processes required to purchase goods
& service
Role of Sourcing……..
 Most significant decision will be whether to
 Outsource the function or
 Perform it in-house

 Outsourcing results in activities performed a third party


 WW Grainger
 Consistently owned & managed its DC
 Outbound transport from DC outsourced

 For LTL transport, Grainger owns some truck (hybrid


model)
 Dell
 Credited with improving profit by keeping retail function
in house & selling directly to customers
Role of Sourcing……..
 P&G
 Never sold detergents directly to customer
 Motorola
 Uses a distributor to sell cell phone in Latin America
 In US doesn’t use distributor model

Outsourcing Vs Off-shoring
 Offshoring is maintains the ownership but moves the
production facility offshore
 Outsource – hiring outside firm to perform an
operations rather than executing the operations within
the firm.
Role of Sourcing……..
Two major questions that need to be addressed
 Will the third party increase the supply chain
surplus relative to performing the activity in
house?
 To what extent do risks grow upon outsourcing?
Sourcing Process
Sourcing processes include:
Supplier scoring and assessment
Supplier selection and contract
negotiation
Design collaboration
Procurement

Sourcing planning and analysis


In-house or Outsource
How do third parties increase SC surplus
 Capacity aggregation
 Aggregating demand across multiple firms
 Gaining production economy of scale
 Dell
 Outsource design & production of the processors to INTEL

 But if the volume is sufficient (large & stable) may


not outsource
 No automobile manufacturer outsource production
of its best selling cars
In-house or Outsource
How do third parties increase SC surplus
Transportation aggregation by transportation
intermediaries
 Aggregation to a higher level than any shipper
 Eg: UPS, Fed Ex
 Transport intermediaries aggregates shipment across
multiple shippers
 Especially when it is geographically distributed
 Shippers transportation flow is highly unbalanced –
coming into Vs. leaving the region
 Wall Mart – this may add least value
In-house or Outsource
How do third parties increase SC surplus
Transportation aggregation by Storage
intermediaries
 Stock products from multiple manufacturers and sell
it to many customer
 Helps in aggregating inbound and outbound
transportation
 Less effective if the demand & supply grows
 Decrease in Supermarkets using distributor as they
get full truckloads delivered
In-house or Outsource
How do third parties increase SC surplus
Warehouse aggregation
 Growth achieved in terms of
 Lower real estate cost
 Lower processing cost
 Need arises if
 Needs are small

 Needs fluctuate over time

 Required when you are entering new geography


 If need stabilises then may not be of great use
In-house or Outsource
How do third parties increase SC surplus
Procurement aggregation
 Economy of scale in production
 Inbound transportation
 If you are big manufacturing firm then marginal
impact on the entire SC cost
In-house or Outsource
How do third parties increase SC surplus
Information aggregation
 Aggregation to a higher level can be achieved
through having function in-house
 This reduces search cost for customers
 If you are buying from single supplier then
information aggregation may not help much
In-house or Outsource
How do third parties increase SC surplus
Receivables aggregation
 Will lower the collection cost
 If retailer sells product of multiple manufacturer,
collectively they can outsource receivables
 If retailing is fragmented then the SC cost may go up
–developing countries
In-house or Outsource
How do third parties increase SC surplus
Relationship aggregation
 Intermediaries to reduce the no. of relationship
between multiple buyers & sellers
 This increases the size of each transactions
 Decreased no. of transactions
 Reduction in number of transaction doesn’t mean
reduction in cost
In-house or Outsource
How do third parties increase SC surplus
Lower Costs & Higher quality
 Benefits come from specialisation & learning
 Low cost location which the firms doesn’t
 Lower labor cost & overhead cost
In-house or Outsource
Risk of using a third party
 The process is broken
 Lost control of the process
 If it is a broken SC process
 First get the process under control

 Do a cost –benefit analysis & then outsource

 Underestimation of the cost of coordination


 With multiple entities
 Coordination has to be the core strength
 Eg: Nike & i2 Technologies
In-house or Outsource
Risk of using a third party
 Loss of internal capabilities & growth in the
third party power
 Better to in-house if outsourcing will significantly increases the
third party ‘s powers
 For Eg: HP & Motorola
 Reluctant to outsource procurement & design
 Even though the contract manufacturer has capabilities

 Leakage of sensitive data & Information


 Ineffective Contracts
Third Party & Fourth Party
Logistic Providers
Third Party Logistics (3PL) Provider
 Performs one or more of the logistics activities
 Relating to the flow of
 Product
 Information
 Funds
 That could be performed by the firm itself
 Most of the 3PLs started out focusing one of the
function in SC
 UPS – small package carrier
 Schneider – truck load carrier
Third Party & Fourth Party
Logistic Providers
Third Party & Fourth Party
Logistic Providers
 Over the years basic functions have become
commoditized
 UPS started with outbound transportation, has now
expanded to include
 Warehousing
 Information technology
 The trend of outsourcing broader range of SC
services has been growing since late 1990s
 Today customers are looking for players that can
manage virtually all aspects of their SC
Third Party & Fourth Party
Logistic Providers
 This has led to the concept of a Fourth Party logistics
(4PL) provider
 4PL first defined by Andersen Consulting (now
Accenture) as
 “An integrator that assembles the
 resources, capabilities & technology
 of its own organization and other
organizations
 to design, build & run
 comprehensive SC solutions”
Third Party & Fourth Party
Logistic Providers
 Whereas 3PL target functions
 4PL targets management of the entire process
 4PL –general contractor who manages other 3PLs,
truckers, forwarders, customer brokers & others
 Initially when the idea formulated Andersen
conceived a neutral 4PL that did not own any
logistics assets itself
 The reality was different
Third Party & Fourth Party
Logistic Providers
 The fundamental advantage that 4PL provides comes
from the greater visibility & coordination
 This requires use of sophisticated information
technology
 Given the
 high cost of development or purchase of this technology
 Expertise required for implementation
 4PL can increase surplus by spreading this cost
across multiple customers
Third Party & Fourth Party
Logistic Providers
 As SC become more global, 3PLs enjoying the
advantage
 This has led to series of mergers, with large 3PLs
getting even larger
 They are even asked to take partial manufacturing
responsibilities
Key sourcing related processes

Supplier Scoring & Assessment

Supplier Selection & Contract Negotiation

Design Collaboration

procurement

Sourcing Planning & analysis


Supplier Scoring & Assessment

 Replenishment Lead Time  Pricing Terms


 On-Time Performance  Information
 Supply Flexibility Coordination Capability
 Delivery Frequency /  Design Collaboration
Minimum Lot Size Capability
 Supply Quality  Exchange Rates, Taxes,
 Inbound Transportation Duties
Cost  Supplier Viability

13-26
Supplier Selection & Contract Negotiation

Before selecting suppliers, a firm must decide whether to


use single sourcing or multiple suppliers
The selection of suppliers is done using a variety of
mechanisms:-
 offline competitive bids
 reverse auctions, or direct negotiations
Supplier selection should be based on the total cost of
using a supplier and not just the purchase price
In many supply chain settings, a buyer looks to
outsource a supply chain function such as production or
transportation

13-27
Supplier Selection & Contract Negotiation

Potential suppliers are first qualified and then


allowed to bid on how much they would charge to
perform the function
When conducting an auction based primarily on unit
price, it is thus important for the buyer to specify
performance expectations along all dimensions other
than price

13-28
Supplier Selection & Contract Negotiation

Sealed-bid first-price auctions - Each potential supplier to submit a


sealed bid for the contract. These bids are then opened and the contract is
assigned to the lowest bidder

English auctions - The auctioneer starts with a price and suppliers can
make bids as long as each successive bid is lower than the previous bid.
The supplier with the last (lowest) bid receives the contract

Dutch auctions - The auctioneer starts with a low price and then raises it
slowly until one of the suppliers agrees to the contract at that price

Second-price (Vickrey) auctions - Each potential supplier submits a


bid. The contract is assigned to the lowest bidder but at the price quoted by
the second-lowest bidder

13-29
Supplier Selection & Contract Negotiation

Buyers should structure auctions to minimize their


cost and have the lowest-cost supplier(s) win with
their bid
 Open auctions such as the English auction are
likely to achieve this outcome

13-30
Supplier Selection & Contract Negotiation

Buyback or returns contracts


Open auctions such as the English auction are likely
to achieve this outcome
The manufacturer specifies a wholesale price along
with a buy back price at which the retailer can
return any unsold units at the end of the season

13-31
Supplier Selection & Contract Negotiation

Revenue – sharing contracts


The manufacturer charges the retailer a low
wholesale price and shares a fraction of the
retailer’s revenue
Even if no returns are allowed, the lower wholesale
price decreases the cost to the retailer in case of an
overstock
The retailer thus increases the level of product
availability resulting in higher profits for both the
manufacturer and the retailer.
13-32
Supplier Selection & Contract Negotiation

Quantity flexibility contracts


The manufacturer allows the retailer to change the
quantity ordered after observing demand
Increase the average amount the retailer purchases
and may increase total supply chain profits

13-33
Supplier Selection & Contract Negotiation

Contracts to coordinate supply chain costs

Differences in costs at the buyer and supplier can lead to


decisions that increase total supply chain costs

Example: Replenishment order size placed by the buyer. The


buyer’s EOQ does not take into account the supplier’s costs

A quantity discount contract may encourage the buyer to


purchase a larger quantity (which would be lower costs for the
supplier), which would result in lower total supply chain costs

13-34
Supplier Selection & Contract Negotiation

Contracts to increase agent effort


There are many instances in a supply chain where
an agent acts on the behalf of a principal and the
agent’s actions affect the reward for the principal

Example: A car dealer who sells the cars of a


manufacturer, as well as those of other
manufacturers

13-35

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