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Tài liệu tiếng Anh (cao học) Chapter 1 Professional supply management

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Chapter 1
The Progression to

Professional
Supply
Management
1-1
Key Concepts

Purchasing, Supply Management, and
Supply Chain Management Defined
»
Increasing Importance of Purchased Materials.

Supply Management’s Impact on the
Bottom Line
»
Increased Sales
»
Faster to Market or Time-Based Competition

Supply Management and Return on
Investment

The Progression to Proactive Supply
Management
1-2
What Is a Profession?

A calling requiring specialized knowledge and
often long and intensive preparation



including instruction in skills and methods as
well as in the scientific, historical, or scholarly
principles underlying such skills and methods,

maintaining by force of organization or concerted
opinion high standards of achievement and
conduct,

and committing its members to continued study
and to a kind of work which has for its prime
purpose the rendering of a public service.
(Source: Webster's Third International Edition)
(Source: Webster's Third International Edition)
1-3
Purchasing: A Dynamic Profession

Is purchasing a profession?

Do the required skills have a historic
foundation?

Does the supply management profession
render a public service?

Is the profession undergoing changes?
1-4
Six Key Business Functions
(Supply Management’s Role in Business)
1. Creation, the idea or design function, frequently

based on research and development
2. Finance, the capital acquisition, financial
planning and control function
3. Personnel, the human resources and labor
relations function
4. Supply, the acquisition of required materials,
services, and equipment
5. Conversion, the transformation of materials into
economic goods and services
6. Distribution, the marketing and selling of goods
and services produced
1-5
Evolution of Purchasing Function

Purchasing: a Dynamic Profession

Origins of Purchasing and Supply
Management

Transition to Supply Management
»
Wider in Scope
»
Value-Adding Benefits
»
Strategic Focus

Value Adding Benefits ‑

Strategic Focus

1-6
Supply Management

A Five Stage Process
»
Identification of item or service required
»
Identification of best supplier
»
Establishment of a fair and reasonable price
»
Creation of an enforceable agreement
»
Management of the relationship

Supply Management utilizes Strategic
Sourcing
1-7
Strategic Sourcing

Strategic sourcing is understanding the markets
you're purchasing from inside and out…

…and learning from your own organization and
your suppliers' organizational processes,…

…working as a mediator between suppliers and
your organization,…

…and capturing information and using it to

improve relationships.

Strategic sourcing requires two-way continuous
improvement process work from each
organization
1-8
Four Principles of Strategic Sourcing
1. Define the total value of the relationship
between purchaser and suppler,
2. Develop solutions based on a deep
understanding of the supplier's economics and
business dynamics,
3. Use differentiated purchasing tactics in order to
optimize the economic relationship for both
purchaser and suppliers, and
4. Imbed the required changes in the organization
so the purchaser achieves not only a near-term
measurable performance improvement but also
the ability to continuously improve
1-9
Four Step Process of Implementation

Research the industry economics and
dynamics of the team's assigned
commodity;

Evaluate sourcing strategies and
suppliers' capabilities;

Structure the supply relationship jointly

with suppliers and develop action plans to
build the required infrastructure;

Implement the plan and organize for
continuous improvement
1-10
Increasing Importance of Purchased Materials

The Five Ms of Business: Machines,
Man/Womanpower, Material, Money,
Management
»
Materials costs have increased

As a percentage of the cost of goods sold
»
Labor costs have decreased
»
Machine power has replaced much of human
(and horse) labor over the last 150 years

The result?
»
Materials costs are increasingly the focus of
management
1-11
Power Source Relationships: The Reduction of
Labor Content in Products
Figure 1-1
Figure 1-1

1850 1900 1950
2% 2%
50% 50%
98% 98%
Machine Power
Horse and Human
Key
1-12
Supply Management and the Bottom Line

Purchased items account for a large
percentage of the cost of goods sold.

Outsourcing allows firms to focus on their
core competencies.
»
Organizations outsource when they decide to
purchase something they had been making in-
house.

A dollar saved in materials cost is usually
considered a dollar increase in profit
1-13
Supply Management’s Impact on Net
Income and the Bottom Line
Increased Sales:

Faster to Market

Improved Quality


Pricing Flexibility

Innovation
Lower Total Cost:

Acquisition Cost

Processing Cost

Quality Cost

Downtime Cost

Risk Cost

Cycle Time Cost

Conversion Cost

Non-value Added Cost

Supply Chain Cost

Post Ownership Cost
Figure 1-2
Figure 1-2
1-14
Return on
Investments

10.0%
Total assets
$4,000,000
Sales
$5,000,000
Divided by
Profit
margin
8%
Asset turnover
rate
1.25
Multiply
Cash
$300,000
Account
receivable
$300,000
Inventories
$500,000
Assets
Labor
$700,000
Materials
$2,300,000
Overhead
$800,000
Operating cost elements
($515,000)
($3,685,000)($2,185,000)

(10.3%)
(1.26)
($3,975,000)
($1,075,000)
($475,000)
(13.0%)
What if we
decrease
materials cost
by 5%?
(or $115,000)
Sales
$5,000,000
Net income
$400,000
Divided by
Fixed assets
$2,900,000
Current assets
$1,100,000
Plus
Other costs
$800,000
Sales
$5,000,000
Cost of
Goods Sold
$3,800,000
Minu
s

Plus
Supply Management and Return on Investment
Figure 1-3
Figure 1-3
1-15

The Impact on ROI of Reducing Materials Costs
vs. Increasing Sales

If the same profit increase were to be
generated by increasing sales, what sales
increase would be required?

At the existing 8% profit margin, the
following calculation provides the
answer…

Profit increase = new sales X .08

$115,000 = new sales X .08

new sales = $1,437,500
1-16

The Impact on ROI of Reducing Materials Costs
vs. Increasing Sales

therefore…

($1,437,500 / $5,000,000) X 100 = 28.8%


or a sales increase of 28.8% is required to
match the profit increase generated by a
5% reduction in materials cost
1-17
A Definition of Supply Chain Management

Supply Chain Management is a set of
approaches utilized to efficiently integrate
suppliers, manufacturers, warehouses, and
stores,…

…so that merchandise is produced and
distributed at the right quantities, to the right
locations, and at the right time,…

…in order to minimize system wide costs

…while satisfying service level requirements.
1-18
Source: Simchi-Levi, Kaminsky, and Simchi-Levi, Designing
Source: Simchi-Levi, Kaminsky, and Simchi-Levi, Designing
and Managing the Supply Chain, Irwin, McGraw-Hill, 2000.
and Managing the Supply Chain, Irwin, McGraw-Hill, 2000.
The Supply Chain
Mother
Earth
Original
Equipment
Manufacturers

(OEM)
Extractors
Miners
Harvesters
Converters
(suppliers)
Figure 1-4
Figure 1-4
Materials and Service
Information/Funds/Relationships
1-19
The Value Chain
Mother
Earth
Original
Equipment
Manufacturers
(OEM)
Extractors
Miners
Harvesters
Converters
(suppliers)
Marketers
Distributor
s
End Customer
(the source
of funds)
Figure 1-5

Figure 1-5
Materials and Service
Information/Funds/Relationships
1-20
The Supply and Value Networks

Flexible virtual systems linked by
communication systems and alliances.

Simultaneous activities.

Focus is on the ultimate customer to
deliver:
»
Value creation through innovation
»
Value delivery through order fulfillment
»
Value maintenance through after sales service
1-21
The Extended Enterprise

When a group or network of firms
collaborate in partnership (alliance)
fashion, this is sometimes referred to as a
strategic network, virtual corporation, or
extended enterprise

When the group of firms view each other
as partners and collaborate effectively for

the good of the larger group, then they
leave established an extended enterprise
characterized by virtual integration
1-22
Implementing Strategic SCM
Figure 1.6
1-23
Concluding Remarks

Purchasing is the foundation of Supply
Management and a basic activity common
to all organizations.

Effective Supply Management has an
overwhelming impact on the firm’s bottom
line giving organizations a competitive
edge.

Supply Management provides tremendous
career opportunities
1-24
END

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