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Measures and Trust in SCM 
Eli Schragenheim 
elyakim@netvision.net.il
The IT Vision for Supply Chains 
• It is predicted that in the future the main 
competition would be between supply chains 
• Every supply chain has to react very fast to the 
changing tastes and wishes of consumers 
• The stumbling block to fast reaction of any supply 
chain is lack of information 
• Current IT technology is capable of very fast B2B 
communication that would provide full collaboration 
throughout the supply chain
A Hole in the IT Vision 
• Suppose that company S identifies a rising 
demand for product P produced by Vendor V 
and the relevant information is communicated to 
V in no time 
– Would Vendor V immediately start to produce 
according to the forecast by company S? 
• Take into account that V is paid so-and-so days after 
S places an order and gets the delivery 
• Does V trust S? Who would suffer if the optimistic 
forecast does not materialize? 
• Is S truly interested in communicating all the 
relevant information to V?
An Inherent Problem in supply chains 
• The idea behind SCM is that by acting as one 
system better results for all would be achieved 
– Can it work when some links have not implemented the 
systemic rules within their own organizations? 
• Every organization that is part of a supply chain 
looks for its own benefit 
– Hence, every link must profit from acting within the 
supply chain’s one big system rules 
– This kind of business relationship is frequently referred 
to as “collaboration” 
– Can it work without a win-win culture? 
– And there is a need to establish trust between all the 
links
Business Rules in SCM 
• The current common business rule: the 
vendor receives an order and is paid some time 
after delivery 
– Being exposed to updated information won’t 
impact the vendor’s decisions 
– The vendor has no say regarding the size of the 
order 
• If it is too small – then sales will be lost 
• If it is too high, it will take very long time until the next 
order is received 
• It is not clear how the vendor can profit from a faster 
response 
– On one hand the next link might be able to sell more 
– On the other hand the next link might order less
Demand for 
P10 goes up 
Seler: 
How much to order? 
Producer: 
How fast to respond? 
Can you deliver 300 P10 
in a wek? 
It'l take 
3 weks 
I ned it 
faster 
The best I 
can do is 
two weks 
Al right, two 
weks, and then 
make it 500 units
Business Rules in SCM 
• A new emerged business rule: vendor managed 
inventory (VMI) 
– The vendor is responsible for the inventory at the client 
– The client draws from the inventory when the need arises 
and this triggers payment to the vendor 
– All the risk is now placed on the vendor 
• Now the vendor has a lot to gain from a fast response 
– Financial benefits to the vendor would occur if and only if 
sales would go up 
• This is possible only when it enables the seller to spot new 
opportunities relying on fast and reliable response 
– In the former scheme the seller would refrain from holding 
inventory for such opportunities 
• And less sales are lost due to shortages
The TOC visionary business rules 
• The objective: 
– Allow the seller to grab any opportunity that is 
beneficial to all the links in the chain 
– Motivate all the links to respond quickly to any 
market trend 
– Institute a win-win culture over the entire chain 
– Let those who have the best knowledge and 
intuition make the decisions 
– Each link gets more
The TOC visionary business rules 
• The TOC business rule: 
– Each producer in the link manages his finished 
goods inventory at the next link 
– Payment is made immediately following each 
daily sale by the seller 
– Every producer gets: 
• The truly variable costs (TVC) invested by the 
producer 
• A percentage of the throughput (T) 
It is in everybody’s interest not to cannibalize 
any sales and not to ignore any optional sale
Supporting the TOC Scheme 
• Every link within the chain should manage its 
operations based on replenishment to the buffers 
– The inventory at the next link is a buffer 
– Every producer would maintain its own centralized 
buffer when the products go to several supply chains 
• Using buffer management as a sensitive tool to 
identify changes in the market demand 
• Information on each sale should flow immediately to 
every link in the chain 
• But, there is a need to validate that every link in the 
chain is doing what it should do to allow more 
business to come in
How to maintain trust between 
different organizations? 
• The win-win agreement is not enough to ensure 
high performance 
• We need to measure the performance of each 
link to establish an overall control that the actions 
taken truly support the global chain 
– The downstream links need to ensure fast response 
to any market opportunity 
– The upstream links need to validate that sales are 
generated from what is already in the system 
• Note that maintaining trust is needed also for the 
other business rules
How should a seller measure the 
performance of the vendor? 
• Criteria 
– Every delay in measured, not just being late but 
also by how many days 
– The financial value of the sale should be 
measured as well 
• Throughput-Dollar-Days (TDD) 
– Every day a delay is noted the full T value of the 
order is added to a counter of TDD 
– When the order is late by 5 days, its full T value 
is added to the counter 5 times
How should a seller measure the 
performance of the vendor? 
• A common problem at the seller’s site 
– Orders that cannot be fulfilled may not have 
been registered, even though the specific 
sale was actually lost 
– Hence, the full damage caused by the 
unavailability of products cannot be directly 
measured
How should a seller measure the 
performance of the vendor? 
• The TDD measurement in this case could be 
directed to the red-line level of the parts 
– The red-line level (emergency level) is defined 
in the buffer management methodology 
– It is usually a certain percentage of the 
replenishment buffer 
– The red-line represents a very high probability 
of losing sales 
– Hence, when the on-hand stock is below the 
red-line level – the TDD counter ticks
An example: Product P10 
T per unit = $60 
Replenishment level = 100 un. 
Red-line level = 30 un. 
Seller 
Inventory ready for 
immediate sale 
Fast replenishment 
Producer 
On 4/15/2002: 
On hand stock = 17 un. 
Additional TDD due to P10: (30-17)*60 = 780 dollar-dOany 
s4/16/2002 the on hand stock went down to 5 units 
Additional TDD = (30-5)*60 = 1500 dollar days 
Total TDD due to P10 = 1500 + 780 = 2280 dollar-days
The TDD as a measure of the performance of a 
vendor to a seller 
• The vendor is responsible for full availability of his 
products at the seller’s site 
• The replenishment and red-line levels are agreed 
between the seller and the vendor 
• Whenever the on-hand stock is below the red level 
the TDD counter ticks 
– The full throughput value of the parts that are missing is 
added to the periodical TDD measurement 
– When no stock is available at the seller, the full T value of 
the whole emergency level as added every day 
– This measure rises VERY fast when response time drops 
– The measure institutes the right priorities given both the 
financial aspects and the duration of the delay
The TDD measurement for a vendor of a 
producer 
• The differences between a producer who measures 
his vendor and a seller who measures the vendors 
– The producer knows when lack of materials 
causes a delay in the internal operations 
– The financial damage of missing a part is more 
problematic to measure 
• The part might participate in a variety of end-items 
sold by the supply chain 
• Hence, for every part the vendor is responsible for a 
“typical end-product T” should be defined 
• We still assumes that delay in the producer’s 
operation might cause missing a final sale, even 
though this is much less straightforward
The TDD measurement for a vendor of a 
producer 
• The vendor is responsible for full availability of 
his products as raw materials at the producer’s 
site 
• Whenever the producer needs to release 
materials to the floor and a specific part is 
missing the TDD counter ticks 
– The exact amount of units missing multiplied by 
the typical T for the end-products is added every 
day to the periodical TDD
Link C 
Inventory B 
Link B 
Inventory A 
Link A 
Whenever C needs materials 
and they are not found in 
Inventory B, the TDD 
counter in increased by the 
T of the end items 
Link C measures B’s 
performance according 
to the periodic TDD
Measuring the performance of the seller 
• Every link in the chain that is not the seller likes 
to judge the performance of the seller 
– This is true even for the traditional business rules 
– The main focus is how fast products that are stocked 
at the seller’s site are being sold 
• And what products are NOT sold! 
• Every producer that is judged according to TDD 
has to invest capacity and materials in an effort to 
maintain very low TDD and gain from the supply 
chain sales 
– Hence, there is a need to measure the investment
The finished 
gods inventory 
represents an 
investment on 
the producer's 
part 
What products 
do not sel wel? 
How much money 
is stuck in slow 
products? 
The faster the 
seler suceds 
to sel the more 
efective is the 
investment 
Seler 
Inventory ready for 
immediate sale 
Producer
Inventory-Dollar-Days - 
measuring the flow 
• Every area that contains inventory can be measured 
according to: 
– The value of the item – only the raw material purchasing 
costs are considered 
– The number of days each item remains in the area 
• Every item in the measured area carries inventory 
dollar days equal to its value in dollars multiplied by the 
number of days it remains in the area 
• The IDD is a snapshot: how much money is stuck in 
the area and for how long
Basic calculation of the IDD for an area 
A measured area where 
inventory items spend 
some time 
10 items, 
each worth 
$50 go in 
The 10 items 
go out after 
14 days 
On the first 
day the IDD 
for these items 
is 500 DD 
On day 14 
the IDD for 
these items is 
700 DD 
On day 15 
the IDD for 
these items is 
0 DD
Using the IDD measurement 
• Each producer should measure the following 
areas: 
– Raw materials from vendors that are not 
managing their materials 
– WIP 
– Every finished goods area that is controlled by 
the producer 
• Under the TOC supply chain vision the area 
that truly measures the performance of all the 
downstream link is: 
– From the completion area in the shop until the 
supply chain sells it
Link C 
Inventory B 
Link B 
Inventory A 
Link A 
TDD 
measurement 
TDD 
measurement 
Every day link A 
adds to the IDD 
measure, the value of 
all its inventory in 
the supply chain
IDD and Inventory Turns 
• Inventory turns is the current common 
measurement of the effectiveness of inventory 
in the system 
– It measures the average of how much inventory 
waits in a certain area 
– The dollar value of the inventory is specified 
separately 
– Being an average, it misses pointing to the 
problematical area, and it does not give a clue 
regarding the variability 
– The combined effect of time (delays) and money 
is given only at a very global level
Summary 
• The TOC vision for supply chains provides a 
new business scheme for real collaboration 
between the links 
• All the current business rules for supply chains 
should maintain trust among all parties 
• Trust needs to be supported by a 
measurement system that motivates all the 
parties to do what is good for the chain as a 
whole 
• The measurements need to contain both time 
and money
Summary 
• Throughput-dollar-days (TDD) measures the 
performance of the vendors by accumulating 
the full dollar value of every late order and the 
length of time it was delayed 
• Inventory-dollar-days (IDD) measures the flow 
through the supply chain by measuring how 
much inventory-money is being held at each 
area, thus blocking the flow 
• IDD should be used, among other uses, to 
check how fast products are being sold
Summary 
• Both the TDD and IDD measurements have 
uses that stretch beyond measuring the 
performance of the links in the supply chain 
• The TDD is an operational performance 
measurement of the damage caused by failing 
to meet the market requirements 
• The IDD is a measure of effectiveness of the 
operational policies to achieve as low TDD as 
possible

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Measures and trust in scm

  • 1. Measures and Trust in SCM Eli Schragenheim elyakim@netvision.net.il
  • 2. The IT Vision for Supply Chains • It is predicted that in the future the main competition would be between supply chains • Every supply chain has to react very fast to the changing tastes and wishes of consumers • The stumbling block to fast reaction of any supply chain is lack of information • Current IT technology is capable of very fast B2B communication that would provide full collaboration throughout the supply chain
  • 3. A Hole in the IT Vision • Suppose that company S identifies a rising demand for product P produced by Vendor V and the relevant information is communicated to V in no time – Would Vendor V immediately start to produce according to the forecast by company S? • Take into account that V is paid so-and-so days after S places an order and gets the delivery • Does V trust S? Who would suffer if the optimistic forecast does not materialize? • Is S truly interested in communicating all the relevant information to V?
  • 4. An Inherent Problem in supply chains • The idea behind SCM is that by acting as one system better results for all would be achieved – Can it work when some links have not implemented the systemic rules within their own organizations? • Every organization that is part of a supply chain looks for its own benefit – Hence, every link must profit from acting within the supply chain’s one big system rules – This kind of business relationship is frequently referred to as “collaboration” – Can it work without a win-win culture? – And there is a need to establish trust between all the links
  • 5. Business Rules in SCM • The current common business rule: the vendor receives an order and is paid some time after delivery – Being exposed to updated information won’t impact the vendor’s decisions – The vendor has no say regarding the size of the order • If it is too small – then sales will be lost • If it is too high, it will take very long time until the next order is received • It is not clear how the vendor can profit from a faster response – On one hand the next link might be able to sell more – On the other hand the next link might order less
  • 6. Demand for P10 goes up Seler: How much to order? Producer: How fast to respond? Can you deliver 300 P10 in a wek? It'l take 3 weks I ned it faster The best I can do is two weks Al right, two weks, and then make it 500 units
  • 7. Business Rules in SCM • A new emerged business rule: vendor managed inventory (VMI) – The vendor is responsible for the inventory at the client – The client draws from the inventory when the need arises and this triggers payment to the vendor – All the risk is now placed on the vendor • Now the vendor has a lot to gain from a fast response – Financial benefits to the vendor would occur if and only if sales would go up • This is possible only when it enables the seller to spot new opportunities relying on fast and reliable response – In the former scheme the seller would refrain from holding inventory for such opportunities • And less sales are lost due to shortages
  • 8. The TOC visionary business rules • The objective: – Allow the seller to grab any opportunity that is beneficial to all the links in the chain – Motivate all the links to respond quickly to any market trend – Institute a win-win culture over the entire chain – Let those who have the best knowledge and intuition make the decisions – Each link gets more
  • 9. The TOC visionary business rules • The TOC business rule: – Each producer in the link manages his finished goods inventory at the next link – Payment is made immediately following each daily sale by the seller – Every producer gets: • The truly variable costs (TVC) invested by the producer • A percentage of the throughput (T) It is in everybody’s interest not to cannibalize any sales and not to ignore any optional sale
  • 10. Supporting the TOC Scheme • Every link within the chain should manage its operations based on replenishment to the buffers – The inventory at the next link is a buffer – Every producer would maintain its own centralized buffer when the products go to several supply chains • Using buffer management as a sensitive tool to identify changes in the market demand • Information on each sale should flow immediately to every link in the chain • But, there is a need to validate that every link in the chain is doing what it should do to allow more business to come in
  • 11. How to maintain trust between different organizations? • The win-win agreement is not enough to ensure high performance • We need to measure the performance of each link to establish an overall control that the actions taken truly support the global chain – The downstream links need to ensure fast response to any market opportunity – The upstream links need to validate that sales are generated from what is already in the system • Note that maintaining trust is needed also for the other business rules
  • 12. How should a seller measure the performance of the vendor? • Criteria – Every delay in measured, not just being late but also by how many days – The financial value of the sale should be measured as well • Throughput-Dollar-Days (TDD) – Every day a delay is noted the full T value of the order is added to a counter of TDD – When the order is late by 5 days, its full T value is added to the counter 5 times
  • 13. How should a seller measure the performance of the vendor? • A common problem at the seller’s site – Orders that cannot be fulfilled may not have been registered, even though the specific sale was actually lost – Hence, the full damage caused by the unavailability of products cannot be directly measured
  • 14. How should a seller measure the performance of the vendor? • The TDD measurement in this case could be directed to the red-line level of the parts – The red-line level (emergency level) is defined in the buffer management methodology – It is usually a certain percentage of the replenishment buffer – The red-line represents a very high probability of losing sales – Hence, when the on-hand stock is below the red-line level – the TDD counter ticks
  • 15. An example: Product P10 T per unit = $60 Replenishment level = 100 un. Red-line level = 30 un. Seller Inventory ready for immediate sale Fast replenishment Producer On 4/15/2002: On hand stock = 17 un. Additional TDD due to P10: (30-17)*60 = 780 dollar-dOany s4/16/2002 the on hand stock went down to 5 units Additional TDD = (30-5)*60 = 1500 dollar days Total TDD due to P10 = 1500 + 780 = 2280 dollar-days
  • 16. The TDD as a measure of the performance of a vendor to a seller • The vendor is responsible for full availability of his products at the seller’s site • The replenishment and red-line levels are agreed between the seller and the vendor • Whenever the on-hand stock is below the red level the TDD counter ticks – The full throughput value of the parts that are missing is added to the periodical TDD measurement – When no stock is available at the seller, the full T value of the whole emergency level as added every day – This measure rises VERY fast when response time drops – The measure institutes the right priorities given both the financial aspects and the duration of the delay
  • 17. The TDD measurement for a vendor of a producer • The differences between a producer who measures his vendor and a seller who measures the vendors – The producer knows when lack of materials causes a delay in the internal operations – The financial damage of missing a part is more problematic to measure • The part might participate in a variety of end-items sold by the supply chain • Hence, for every part the vendor is responsible for a “typical end-product T” should be defined • We still assumes that delay in the producer’s operation might cause missing a final sale, even though this is much less straightforward
  • 18. The TDD measurement for a vendor of a producer • The vendor is responsible for full availability of his products as raw materials at the producer’s site • Whenever the producer needs to release materials to the floor and a specific part is missing the TDD counter ticks – The exact amount of units missing multiplied by the typical T for the end-products is added every day to the periodical TDD
  • 19. Link C Inventory B Link B Inventory A Link A Whenever C needs materials and they are not found in Inventory B, the TDD counter in increased by the T of the end items Link C measures B’s performance according to the periodic TDD
  • 20. Measuring the performance of the seller • Every link in the chain that is not the seller likes to judge the performance of the seller – This is true even for the traditional business rules – The main focus is how fast products that are stocked at the seller’s site are being sold • And what products are NOT sold! • Every producer that is judged according to TDD has to invest capacity and materials in an effort to maintain very low TDD and gain from the supply chain sales – Hence, there is a need to measure the investment
  • 21. The finished gods inventory represents an investment on the producer's part What products do not sel wel? How much money is stuck in slow products? The faster the seler suceds to sel the more efective is the investment Seler Inventory ready for immediate sale Producer
  • 22. Inventory-Dollar-Days - measuring the flow • Every area that contains inventory can be measured according to: – The value of the item – only the raw material purchasing costs are considered – The number of days each item remains in the area • Every item in the measured area carries inventory dollar days equal to its value in dollars multiplied by the number of days it remains in the area • The IDD is a snapshot: how much money is stuck in the area and for how long
  • 23. Basic calculation of the IDD for an area A measured area where inventory items spend some time 10 items, each worth $50 go in The 10 items go out after 14 days On the first day the IDD for these items is 500 DD On day 14 the IDD for these items is 700 DD On day 15 the IDD for these items is 0 DD
  • 24. Using the IDD measurement • Each producer should measure the following areas: – Raw materials from vendors that are not managing their materials – WIP – Every finished goods area that is controlled by the producer • Under the TOC supply chain vision the area that truly measures the performance of all the downstream link is: – From the completion area in the shop until the supply chain sells it
  • 25. Link C Inventory B Link B Inventory A Link A TDD measurement TDD measurement Every day link A adds to the IDD measure, the value of all its inventory in the supply chain
  • 26. IDD and Inventory Turns • Inventory turns is the current common measurement of the effectiveness of inventory in the system – It measures the average of how much inventory waits in a certain area – The dollar value of the inventory is specified separately – Being an average, it misses pointing to the problematical area, and it does not give a clue regarding the variability – The combined effect of time (delays) and money is given only at a very global level
  • 27. Summary • The TOC vision for supply chains provides a new business scheme for real collaboration between the links • All the current business rules for supply chains should maintain trust among all parties • Trust needs to be supported by a measurement system that motivates all the parties to do what is good for the chain as a whole • The measurements need to contain both time and money
  • 28. Summary • Throughput-dollar-days (TDD) measures the performance of the vendors by accumulating the full dollar value of every late order and the length of time it was delayed • Inventory-dollar-days (IDD) measures the flow through the supply chain by measuring how much inventory-money is being held at each area, thus blocking the flow • IDD should be used, among other uses, to check how fast products are being sold
  • 29. Summary • Both the TDD and IDD measurements have uses that stretch beyond measuring the performance of the links in the supply chain • The TDD is an operational performance measurement of the damage caused by failing to meet the market requirements • The IDD is a measure of effectiveness of the operational policies to achieve as low TDD as possible