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B200 SEMESTER 2 PROCESSES Module
Prepared by Iman El Sabaa
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Logistics and Competitive strategy
Chapter Eleven By Martin Christopher
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What is logistics Logistics is the process of strategically managing the procurement, movement and storage of materials, parts and finished inventory (and the related information flows) through the organization and its marketing channels in such a way that current and future profitability are maximized through the cost-effective fulfillment of orders.
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Logistics and competitive advantage
Firms can achieve competitive advantage through: Differentiation, in the eyes of the customer, from its competition And By operating at a lower cost and hence at greater profit.
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Competitive advantage and the 3Cs
CUSTOMER Needs seeking benefits At acceptable prices VALUE VALUE Assets and Utilisation Assets and Utilisation Cost differentials COMPANY COMPETITOR
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Logistics and competitive advantage
A position of enduring superiority over competitors in terms of customer preference may be achieved through logistics. Successful companies either have productivity advantage or they have a ‘value’ advantage or a combination of the two.
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Logistics and competitive advantage
Productivity Lower cost profile Differential plus Value
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Productivity advantage
There is substantial evidence to suggest that big is beautiful when it comes to cost advantage. This is partly due: to economies of scale to the impact of the "Experience Curve". See p 151
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Productivity advantage
In this regard Logistics management can provide a multitude of ways to increase efficiency and productivity and hence contribute significantly to reduced unit costs.
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Value advantage Customers don’t buy products, they buy benefits, these benefits may be intangible (image or reputation) In other words Products are purchased for the promise of what they will “deliver”.
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Value advantage Adding value through differentiation is a powerful means of achieving a defensible advantage in the market. But How it could be achieved? Value segments approach Services augmented offers
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Productivity and Value advantage
Successful companies will often seek both productivity and a value advantage. Available options are:
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Productivity and Value advantage
Marketing logistics’ strategic goal would be
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Gaining competitive advantage through logistics
Competitive advantage cannot be understood by looking at a firm as a whole. It stems from the many discrete activities a firm performs. In this regard; we can use the value chain analysis to disaggregates a firm in to its strategically relevant activities
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Gaining competitive advantage through logistics
Margin
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Gaining competitive advantage through logistics
Competitive advantage grows out of the way in which firms organize and perform these discrete activities within the value chain. (More cheaply or better than its competitors)
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Gaining competitive advantage through logistics
Productivity advantage: Capacity utilization, inventory reduction, closer integration with suppliers. Value advantage: Superior customer services
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Gaining competitive advantage through logistics
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The mission of logistics management
It is to plan and co-ordinate all activities necessary to achieve the desired levels of delivered service and quality at lowest possible cost. Logistics must therefore be seen as the link between the market place and the operating activity of the business.
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The fig illustrates total system concept
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The mission of logistics management
The previous fig suggests that the needs of customers are satisfied through: The co-ordination of the materials and information flows that extend from the market place, through the firm and its operations and beyond that to supplier.
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The supply chain and competitive advantage
The supply chain is the network of organizations that are involved( through upstream and downstream linkages) in the different processes and activities that produce value (goods or/and services). Recall the value system in Ch 5 Buyer VC Supplier VC Firm VC Channel VC
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The supply chain and competitive advantage
Supply chain management in this regard should be after integrating outside boundaries of the firm to include both suppliers and consumers
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The supply chain and competitive advantage
The main challenge would be: Integrating and coordinating the flow of materials from suppliers (often off shore) and managing the distribution of final products through multiple intermediaries.
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The supply chain and competitive advantage
The difference between logistics and supply chain management p157 Achieving an integrating supply chain p fig 11.9 Scope of supply chain management fig 11.8 p158 Very important
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Fundamentals of supply chain management
Views the supply chain as a single entity It calls for strategic decision making because of its impact on overall costs and market share provides a different perspective on inventories which are used as a balancing mechanism of last not first resort. Requires high level of integration
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The changing logistics environment
The customer service explosion (Services excellence, appropriate delivery systems, committed employees) Time compression (logistics lead time) ORDER CASH Globalization of industry (offshore) Organizational integration (Material, production, and marketing managers)
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The challenge of logistics management
To achieve the goal of competitive advantage through both cost reduction and service enhancement. Organizations need to accelerate the movement through the supply chain and to have more flexible Logistics systems and this could be achieved through:
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The challenge of logistics management
- Cutting short the pipeline (Unneeded inventory) - Improve the pipeline visibility (Organizational barriers removals, better coordination) - Managing logistics as a system
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We covered so far Definition of logistics
Logistics and competitive advantage (Productivity and Value advantage) Competitive advantage and value chain management The mission of logistics management The supply chain and competitive advantage The changing logistics environment The challenge of logistics management
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Activities Identify the fundamentals of supply chain management, and how they do function. Explain the characteristics of the most challenging factors, in the area of logistics. How can we use logistics to add value and obtain competitive advantage
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End of chapter Eleven
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Reverse Logistics Chapter Twelve By Richard A.Lancioni
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Introduction Why organizations might need to organize the flow of materials back from customers? A requirement to reclaim material for recycling (Waste management) Recall the defective product.
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Introduction The trend will continue for the following reasons:
Fast-changing technology necessitating frequent changes in product design. New laws being enacted worldwide, requiring the recall of defective products and the recycling of solid waste.
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The concept of backward distribution
What is backward distribution? What are its major obstacles? The lack of an orderly reverse distribution system Absence of needed information The high cost of collection and transportation.
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Urgency, scope and effectiveness of the recall process
Urgency Classes of recalls could be: Imminently hazardous(100% recall) Dangerous nature, possible of causing illness and possible be life-threatening Conscious or unconscious violation of regulations (Mislabeled or misbranded) or Quality failures
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Urgency, scope and effectiveness of the recall process
Scope and Effectiveness of recalls depends on: The nature of the product and the level of penetration in the distribution system. Number of units manufactured and length of the product life. The ability to locate and notify consumers.
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Locating the product Where we can find the product in the distribution system? Manufacturer’s or Primary distributor's warehouse Middlemen (wholesalers -Retailers) Hand of consumers Level of complications and cost
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Mechanism for locating products
There are different ways of locating the products: Durable products (invoices, bills or warranty cards) Nondurable products ( Record keeping- Recall advertisement)
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Retrieval of products Process of retrieving could be through:
The company’s field salesforce. The retailer or other middlemen. Outside collection specialists.
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Retrieval of products Effective retrievals require:
Motivated customer (Incentives, education, legislations) Good relationships with participants in the distribution process (needed information and guidelines)
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Read Pages Reverse distribution as a part of logistics strategy Facility network Communications and order processing Transportation and traffic management Logistics costing
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A reverse distribution model P171-172
Transportation Warehousing Inventory control Material handling Order processing See fig 12.2
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We covered so far The need for it?
The concept of backward distribution Urgency, scope and effectiveness of the recall process Mechanism for locating products Retrieval of products A reverse distribution model
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Activities Discuss the major elements which are involved in a product recall Explain why the concept of Reverse Logistics is important for the firms in the future Solve activity 15 in your study guide p52
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End of Chapter Twelve
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Thank You
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