Supply Chain Management (SCM) is a strategic technique used by businesses across the globe to improve performance. Both manufacturing and service organizations utilize operational performance as an evaluation metric. Implementing SCM effectively is crucial for firms to achieve their performance and growth objectives.
Learn industry best practices on how to Increase Supply Chain Performance below.
The flow of items, information, and money are the three most important factors of supply chain management. The efficiency and profitability of an enterprise are directly proportional to the quality of management of these resources. To Improve the efficiency and productivity of every step in the supply chain it is important to think about the following factors:
· Strategy
· Planning
· Organization
· Management
· Control Activities
How to Forecast Inventory Requirements
Forecasting inventory requirements is a specialized variant of forecasting that focuses on the high end of the range of possible future demand. Traditional methods often rely on bell-shaped demand curves, but this isn’t always accurate. In this article, we delve into the complexities of this practice, especially when dealing with intermittent demand.
Everybody forecasts to drive inventory planning. It’s just a question of how.
Often companies will insist that they “don’t use forecasts” to plan inventory. They often use reorder point methods and are struggling to improve on-time delivery, inventory turns, and other KPIs. While they don’t think of what they are doing as explicitly forecasting, they certainly use estimates of future demand to develop reorder points such as min/max.
What Silicon Valley Bank Can Learn from Supply Chain Planning
If you had your head up lately, you may have noticed some additional madness off the basketball court: The failure of Silicon Valley Bank. Those of us in the supply chain world may have dismissed the bank failure as somebody else’s problem, but that sorry episode holds a big lesson for us, too: The importance of stress testing done right.
Supply Chain Math: Don’t Bring a Knife to a Gunfight
Math and the supply chain go hand and hand. As supply chains grow, increasing complexity will drive companies to look for ways to manage large-scale decision-making. Math is a fact of life for anyone in inventory management and demand forecasting who is hoping to remain competitive in the modern world. Read our article to learn more.
The Supply Chain Blame Game: Top 3 Excuses for Inventory Shortage and Excess
The supply chain has become the blame game for almost any industrial or retail problem. Shortages on lead time variability, bad forecasts, and problems with bad data are facts of life, yet inventory-carrying organizations are often caught by surprise when any of these difficulties arise. So, again, who is to blame for the supply chain chaos? Keep reading this blog and we will try to show you how to prevent product shortages and overstocking.
Call an Audible to Proactively Counter Supply Chain Noise
You know the situation: You work out the best way to manage each inventory item by computing the proper reorder points and replenishment targets, then average demand increases or decreases, or demand volatility changes, or suppliers’ lead times change, or your own costs change.
Problem
What is my inventory position today, on any item? Where are we stocking out and how often? What are my delivery times? Why did we ship late? Do we have too much inventory in one location, not enough in another? What are my real supplier lead times? These are obvious, daily questions, and the answers can reveal underlying root causes that when resolved will improve supply chain performance. But these answers are elusive, often because data is locked up in your ERP and only accessible via limited reporting views or spreadsheets. Creating these reports manually using Excel requires data imports, reformatting, and distribution to key stakeholders, wasting countless hours of valuable planning time. This means that getting updated information, when you need it, is not always possible. Not having access to these answers means that problems reveal themselves only after it is too late, and opportunities for improving the inventory planning process are overlooked, further contributing to poor performance.
Solution
Smart Operational Analytics (SOA™) is a native web reporting solution available on Smart’s Inventory Planning and Optimization Platform, Smart IP&O. It provides a fast, easily understood, current perspective on the state of your inventory, its performance against critical metrics, actual supplier lead times, opportunities to rebalance stocks across facilities, and helps you uncover root causes of operational inefficiencies. SOA automatically refreshes as often as you’d like providing all stakeholders immediate, up-to-date reporting on your operations and performance. You’ll have constant visibility of inventory levels, orders, shipments, and supplier performance to ensure you’ll always be in tune with the state of your operations and resolve issues before they become problems. Enhance visibility. Improve responsiveness. Increase your bottom line.
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Smart Operational Analytics
Inventory Analytics
Quantify inventory value
Inventory segmentation
Inventory classification
Trend metrics over time
Operational Performance
Measure service level performance
Measure fill rate performance
Calculate turns, holding & ordering costs
Trend metrics over time
Supplier Insights
Measure supplier performance
Compare supplier lead times
Rank suppliers across available metrics
Trend metrics over time
Who is Operational Analytics for?
Smart Operational Analytics is for executives, planners, and operations professionals who seek to:
- Measure inventory costs and performance in real time.
- Assess and compare Supplier performance.
- Identify root causes of stockouts, excess inventory, and late deliveries.
- share KPI’s such as service levels, turns, costs, and more across the organization.
What questions can Operational Analytics answer?
- What does my inventory look like? By value, count, classification?
- Is my inventory trending up, down, or the same?
- How much of my inventory is overstocked, understocked, or acceptable?
- Can inventory be transferred from overstocked locations to under stocked locations?
- Can existing supplier orders be cancelled or deferred?
- What are my current turns, service levels, and fill rates and how do they trend over time?
- How many out of stock events occurred this week, this month, this quarter?
- How are my suppliers performing, how do they compare?
- What is my supplier lead time and how has it changed over time?
Inventory and supplier reporting for your enterprise
Smart Operational Analytics empowers you to:
- Benchmark service performance and inventory costs.
- Benchmark supplier performance.
- Assess and Classify Inventory by class, stage, and more.
- Share metrics with the organization.