Week 3: Logistics and Operations
Performance (Bowersox et .al., 2020)
Measurement System Objectives
Performance Assessment
functional perspective
customer accommodation
supply chain comprehensive
Benchmarking
Learning outcomes
Recognise supply chain and logistics system level
performance goals and alternative perspectives of
performance measurement
Explain how operations and logistics decisions
affect performance at the organisational and
supply network levels
Measurement System Objectives
Monitoring (tracking) system performance and
reporting outcomes to management
Controlling via appropriate standards and
modifying (improving) when actual < standard
Directing (motivating and rewarding) staff
towards meeting higher performance goals
The overall aim is to improve shareholder value;
via improvement of system performance?
Shareholder Value Focus
Measures Increased Lowest
• Perfect Order Customer Landed
• Dwell Time
Service Total Cost
• Inventory Days
• Total Landed Cost
OPERATIONAL EXCELLENCE
ASSET UTILIZATION
Measures
Fixed Working • Cash-to-cash cycle time
Capital Capital • Segment profitability
• Return on assets
Reduction Reduction
• Free cash spin
Balanced Scorecard
(Kaplan and Norton, 1992)
Shareholder value
(profitability + ROI)
Financial Perspective
How do we look to shareholders?
Service Efficiency
Quality Customer Perspective Operations Perspective Productivity
Satisfaction How do customers see us? What must we excel at? Defects rate
Innovation and Learning Perspective
Can we continue to improve and create value?
Superior value proposition
Process improvement
Performance Assessment
Functional Perspective
warehousing, transport, order processing
expressed in aggregate form (e.g. as a % of sales/volume)
Customer Accommodation
perfect order, absolute performance, customer satisfaction
emphasizes customer requirements/relationship aspect
Supply Chain Comprehensive Metrics
overall logistics/supply chain performance
promotes a collaborative, integrated approach to SCM
Logistics and Supply Chain Performance
Operations and Logistics Performance goals
efficient processing of orders
swift and even flow of material (products)
fast and on-time delivery of product
optimum utilisation of capacity
Supply Chain Performance goals
efficiency
speed
responsiveness
Performance Measures
Functional Perspectives
warehousing, transport, order processing
expressed in aggregate form (e.g. as a % of sales)
Customer Accommodation
perfect order, absolute measures, customer satisfaction
emphasizes customer perspective
Supply Chain Comprehensive Metrics
overall logistics/supply chain-wide performance
promotes a collaborative and integrated approach to SCM
Performance Assessment
Functional:
Costs - $ spent on specific activities
Customer Service – availability, operational
performance and service reliability
Quality – damage frequency and accuracy levels
Productivity – ratio of output to input of resources
Asset Management – utilization of capital investments
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE METRICS
Customer Service Cost Management Quality Productivity Asset Management
Fill rate Total cost Damage frequency Units shipped per Inventory turns
employee
Stockouts Cost per unit Order entry accuracy Units per labor dollar Inventory levels,
number of days supply
Shipping errors Cost as a percentage of Picking/ shipping Orders per sales Obsolete inventory
sales accuracy representative
On-time delivery Inbound freight Document/ invoicing Comparison to Return on net assets
accuracy historical standard
Backorders Outbound freight Information availability Goal programs Return on investment
Cycle time Administrative Information accuracy Productivity index Inventory classification
(A,B,C)
Delivery consistency Warehouse order Number of credit Equipment downtime Economic Value Added
processing claims (EVA)
Response time to Direct labor Number of customer Order entry
inquiries returns productivity
Response accuracy Comparison of actual Warehouse labor
versus budget productivity
Complete orders Cost trend analysis Transportation labor
productivity
Customer complaints Direct product
profitability
Sales force complaints Customer Segment
profitability
Overall reliability Inventory carrying
Overall satisfaction Cost of returned good
Cost of damage
Cost of service failures
Cost of backorder
Performance Assessment
Customer Accommodation:
Perfect Order – measures the effectiveness of the
firms overall integrated logistics performance
Absolute Performance – indicators are not
averaged, but rather absolute
Customer Satisfaction – collecting, monitoring
and measuring information from the customer
Are these measures extreme ???
“Perfect Order” achievement
Dimensions of “perfect order”
Correct order entry
Correctly formatted EDI and transaction codes
Items are available
Ship date allows delivery
Order picked correctly
Paperwork complete and accurate
Timely arrival
Shipment not damaged
Correct invoice
No error in payment processing
Perfect Order” achievement
The “Perfect Order” Defined
Complete orders delivered to customers requested
date and time in perfect condition, including all
documentation.
.97 x.97 x.97 x.97 x.97 x.97 x.97 x.97 x.97 x.97=.73
Perfect Orders should be assessed at Each Stage
in the supply chain
Can you really capture the data?
Best Practice: 60-70% Zero Defects !
Performance Assessment
Supply Chain Comprehensive:
Cash-to-Cash Cycle Time
Inventory Days of Supply
Dwell Time
On-shelf In-stock Percent
Supply Chain Total Cost
Supply Chain Response Time
Supply Chain: Cash-to-Cash Cycle Time
Cash-To-Cash Cycle (conversion) Time
cash-to-cash = total inventory days of supply +
days sales outstanding – days payables
outstanding
time required to convert a dollar spend on inventory
into a dollar collected from sales revenue
Influenced by logistics as well as marketing, pricing
and terms of sales
example
Source:
https://link.springer.com/chapter/
10.1007/978-3-642-17271-7_3
A retailer maintains a 30 days supply of inventory,
enjoys 30 days’ trade credit from its suppliers and
sells to end-customers on cash-only transactions
What is the cash-to-cash cycle time?
Supply Chain: Inventory Days of Supply
Inventory Days Of Supply
The total inventory in the supply chain - inbound, plant
and all stocking locations in the channel - expressed as
calendar days of supply based on recent actual daily
rate of sales (or forecast rate of sales).
ECR study: in many supply chains for consumer
processed food -120 days supply of finished goods !
Supply Chain: other metrics
Dwell Time: the ratio of time inventory sits idle in a
supply chain vs. being productively used or positioned
On shelf in stock %: the percentage of time a product is
on the shelf in a store (supermarket!)
Total Supply Chain Cost: total landed cost – recognizes
that costs should not be shifted from one organization in
the chain to the another
SC Total Cost - Total Landed Cost
Total SC
Cost
Raw Production Final Assembly Distribution Retail
Material of (manufacture)
Sourcing Components incl. transportation
Supply Chain Response Time (SCRT)
The (theoretical) time to recognize a fundamental
shift in final customer demand, internalize that
finding in all supply chain members, re-plan, and
increase/decrease output (auto industry – SUV)
Suppose that one of your recently introduced
products becomes the most successful product in its
category – taking 50% market share when your
forecast was for only 20%. How long before you
actually recognize this? How long before you can
arrange production capacities, procurement and
distribution arrangements to accommodate it?
Selection of Performance Metrics!
Source: Griffis et al. 2007; Griffis et al. 2004
Selection of Performance Metrics!
Source: Griffis et al. 2007; Griffis et al. 2004
Selection of Performance Metrics!
Source: Griffis et al. 2007; Griffis et al. 2004
Benchmarking
Benchmarking is also an important aspect of
supply chain performance measurement
Reveals best practice
Choice of benchmark
internal and external
competitors and non-competitors
related and non-related industries
Benchmarking operations and logistics processes ???
SCOR Model
Supply Chain Management Reference Model
a process reference model developed by the
Supply Chain Council in 1997
Objective
to measure SCM performance and identify
opportunities for improvement
Provide a structure for linking business
objectives to SCM operations
Represents
supply chain processes, performance measures,
best practices and software requirements
Structure/Key Components
Standard descriptions of process elements
plan, source, make, deliver, return (closed-loop)
Benchmark metrics
reliability, responsiveness, flexibility, cost,
asset utilization
Best-in-Class management practices
Mapping of software products
SCOR Model (for self-study!)
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yeVPZmdhfgE