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What is SCM 1 Supply Chain Management Day 1 agenda Who Am I • Syllabus Who are you getting up to speed / Introduction

What is SCM 1 Supply Chain Management Day 1 agenda Who Am I Syllabus Who are you getting up to speed / Introduction

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What is SCM 1

Supply Chain Management

• Day 1 agenda• Who Am I• Syllabus• Who are you• getting up to speed / Introduction

What is SCM 2

Who am I

• Mark - casual but professional• Work experience

– McJobs / Project Manager = purchasing

• NAPM / ISM chapter in Salem – next meeting 4/19/05• Research – SCM is the area I am an “expert” in

– There are not many of us in the country / world – Throughout the term my research will be part of class

• Teaching – Because this is a new and growing area the information

changes. Which means that when I learn new things you will as well. But it also means that the schedule is more like an outline. Things will change.

What is SCM 3

Syllabus

Mark Pagell, Ph.D.

400E Bexell Hall

737-6036

541-431-3950 (home in Eugene)

[email protected]

Office hours:

Tuesday 9-10

Thursday – 2-3

Otherwise by appointment – the pop-in is unlikely to work out

What is SCM 4

Syllabus continued

• Course-pac is required and in the library – VR308• Rules on academic honesty will be strictly enforced• If you have special needs see me ASAP• Slides will be on the web in materials folder (subject to

change – we are switching to a new set-up) • 2 tests

– NOT multiple choice– May be take home?– Can cover anything we cover in class (including readings and

guests)

– Test 1 25% of grade– Test 2 (final) 30% of grade

What is SCM 5

Syllabus

• Participation is expected – this is an elective course– 10% of grade– Get either 0,5 or 10 points based on criteria in syllabus- not going

to argue over a single point. – Attendance does not equal participation

• Team projects- requires significant work – you will not do this (well) at the last minute– 35% of grade– You will be in a group - and you will be held accountable for your

behavior in the group– 3 parts – 1&2 milestones – 3 final project. Grade is based on final

project. Will not be able to wait till last minute to do. – This is a big project that will require input form the entire group as

well as serious research - librarian

What is SCM 6

Syllabus

• Grades:– A: 90% or above

– B: 80-89.5%

– C: 70-79.5%

– D: 60-69.5%

– F < 60%

– Will discuss pluses and minuses if you really want them?

• Schedule- tentative

What is SCM 7

Who are you?

• Name• Career goal – what do you want to do when you

leave OSU?• What you hope to get out of this class

• Form groups

What is SCM 8

Introduction – agenda

• Supply Chain Management ?• Traditional views of the value creation process• Non-traditional (but becoming accepted) views of

the value creation process• The functions that participate directly in value

creation– operations

– purchasing

– logistics• Note on terminology

What is SCM 9

Reading 1

• First “article”

– This is the best advertisement for this class / material

– At any given time in business there is one area that is getting the most attention- because it is the area that firms can leverage the most

– For most companies the supply chain is the last place left to really gain a competitive advantage

• There is a reason for this- it is messy and this is the only article you will ever see with the words sexy and SCM in it.

What is SCM 10

Reading 1 – last article

• Not very well written• Good synopsis of the course – and a good outline

for your commodity study– Strategic role of SCM – what business is the

organization in ?

– Resource acquisition

– Building and maintaining relationships

– Make verses buy – and the role of SCM even if we do decide to make something

What is SCM 11

Examples of SCM efforts

• Reading one gives many examples of activities being undertaken to leverage the supply chain

• Jeep - this is the state of the art for JIT and SCM in the USA

– JIS / 420 trucks a day / modular construction /supplier selection based on previous relationship /

• Smart car – also state of the art– Suppliers’ plants hooked into final assembly / hang on body

panels -DFM /no paint booths / pay on build

• Wal-Mart– Vendorville / partnering mode – working together

• Steelmakers and new types of contracts

What is SCM 12

Some other examples

• GE jet engines article in 12/30/02 Fortune – see reading 4– Work with customers (mainly Boeing)

– Work with suppliers- and have unique incentives – suppliers pay to be revenue sharing partners

– Partner with companies who they sometimes compete with

• Move to digital film– Easy to make Movies (Blair Witch)

– Some argue quality suffers – Speilberg is an example

– Is inevitable- because of distribution / logistics

– Good example of optimizing the entire chain as opposed to part

• Timber harvesting and preparation at Weyerhaeuser

What is SCM 13

Definitions

• “The process of planning and controlling the efficient, effective flow and storage of goods, services, and related information from the point of origin to the point of consumption” (CLM)

• “… the planning and control of all factors that will have an impact on getting the correct product where it is needed, on time and at the optimal cost” (Daskin)

What is SCM 14

More definitions

• The supply chain encompasses all activities associated with the flow and transformation of goods from the raw materials stage, through to the end user, as well as the associated information flows. Material and information flow both up and down the supply chain.

• Supply Chain Management is the integration of these activities through improved supply chain relationships, to achieve a sustainable competitive advantage.(Handfield and Nichols)

What is SCM 15

All this means what?

• In general many organizations are needed to create value for a customer

• In almost all of these organizations many functions create value for the customer– Reading one gave examples of these activities

• Managing each function within each organization separately is not likely to optimize the value of the good or service the customer receives.– Bullwhips

– HR at Boeing Wichita

What is SCM 16

There is a problem with all of these definitions

• All assume goods production• Is this a valid assumption?• If not why do you think the authors (and your

professor) focus on goods production?– Hint – think of the processes and outputs needed to

make a car as compared to the processes and outputs needed to do the venture funding for a new company.

• Key point – SCM is just as applicable to service production as goods production

What is SCM 17

Step back

• Lets actually walk through a supply chain

What is SCM 18

Two views of value creation

Inputs transformation: operations

Outputs

Suppliers CustomersOperations

Logistics / Purchasing

Logistics / Marketing

Information Information

What is SCM 19

Why move away from the traditional model

• Inputs operations outputs• What is missing here• What type of thinking does this lead to?• Where does this focus the majority of our effort• In this model a supplier is which of the following:

a cost

a source of raw materials

a potential problem

a potential opportunity

What is SCM 20

Why SCM ?

• Companies have started to get beyond functional silos and NIH syndrome

• Most companies can not do everything• Outsourcing as a pure cost play does not add much• Purchasing becomes strategic –Chrysler• Logistics becomes strategic – Wal-Mart• Information systems become strategic• Leading edge success stories

What is SCM 21

Why you should care ?

• Money - SCM graduates at the few schools with such programs tend to be the highest paid and get the most job offers. People come from all over the world to recruit MSU students in this field.– Undergrad starting salaries average $60,000 (2002)– MBA salaries over $110,000– PSU – claims placement at 98% last year

• Broad knowledge base - managing value creation in many places not just one.

• Most companies do this really badly. The need has been identified but most managers do not have the skills (opportunity)– Some of my recent scary research

What is SCM 22

Key functions in a supply chain

• Operations- anyplace a process is performed to transform something– machining and other traditional factory tasks

– calculation of credit risk in a venture capital supply chain

• Purchasing - anytime we buy a good, service, or information from another organization

• Logistics - moving goods and or information from step to step in a supply chain -and to the end customer

What is SCM 23

A note on terminology

• If you look back at our definitions of logistics and SCM the only real difference is that definitions of logistics do not deal with transformation processes.

• Purchasing, logistics and operations have traditionally been dealt with as different processes and functions - but a supply chain view tends to obscure these differences. So the key point is we are talking about the flows (stuff, information and $$) through a supply chain - regardless of what we call it.

What is SCM 24

More terminology

• Push chains verses demand (or pull chains)• Inbound supply chain

– Often linked with lean production (or JIT)

• Outbound Supply chain (value chain)• Enterprise systems (ERP)• EDI• Channels of Distribution

What is SCM 25

For next week

• Reading 2• Read commodity study and come prepared to ask

questions on Thursday• Your group will have to turn in commodity study

topics by April 5 – I will handle them FCFS• Strategy slides already posted