Entries in Supply Planning (3)

Wednesday
Feb052014

Latest Manufacturing Headlines and the PMI

The New York Times published an article in the February 3rd 2014 New York Times: Markets Sink as Manufactuirng Data Weighs on Investors. Stocks on Wall Street slumped on Monday, with the S.&P. 500-stock index hitting its lowest level since October, after weaker-than-expected data on the American factory sector provided investors with the latest reason to book profits. The United States manufacturing sector grew at a slower pace in January as new order growth plunged by the most in 33 years, while spending on construction projects barely rose in December.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Jun212011

Best of the Best!

Last week we attended the APICS & IBF Best of the Best Sales & Operations Planning (S&OP) Conference in Chicago Illinois. This was a 2-day event of educational sessions filled with practical lessons from the supply and demand sides of sales and operations planning (S&OP). 

We attended this event as an exhibitor introducing DemandCaster® our comprehensive demand and supply planning software as a service. This was our first such event. Prior to this our sales and marketing activities were largely limited to word of mouth. Additionally, we thought that events such as these did not attract our target market of smaller manufacturers and distributors. We decided to give it a try because our offering is so different that we hoped to introduce DemandCaster® to a wider audience.


We were quite pleased with the response and noticed that though we were in the company of some very sophisticated and excellent offerings, our combination of price, capability, and expertise really stood out from the rest. Additionally, we met a number people from some great companies that fit our niche. Because they were attending the conference to learn how to implement S&OP within their organization, it was a pleasure having the opportunity to learn more about their business and explain how DemandCaster® can translate their business data into optimal demand and supply plans that drive smarter, more effective sales and operations planning (S&OP) processes.


This event was a great experience and we are already planning for the next one!


Mark Gavoor, VP of Consulting, Ara Surenian, President and Developer of DemandCaster, and Jolene Pratt, Marketing Director

Monday
Apr252011

The Taught String Theory

In the April Issue of our newsletter we introduced our “Taught String Theory” which illustrates how effective data sharing can integrate the demand and supply processes of customers and suppliers—as if tied together with a taught string. We are including it here for those that do not subscribe to our newsletter.


Simply put, by your customer pulling on their supply, you are prompted (and so are your vendors) to respond immediately to each others needs. Those actions in turn adjust the slack created by manual order entry and purchase order processes, as well as MRP, keeping the “string” taught, but agile.  


A Real Application


One of our DemandCaster® clients, a manufacturer of high-precision components, was unable to meet the stocking requirements of their largest customer, who had placed their supply management system on-line. The solution for our client seemed simple at first: keep all the managed items at their customers desired stocking level. But in reality, because of long lead times, and their customer’s constantly changing requirements, our client was unable to stay ahead of requirements and began managing by exception. More specifically:



  • Reorder points and safety stocks were not calibrated to changing customer demand, causing their WIP to grow due to the constant starting and stopping in production.

  • Stock-outs and shortages increased to nearly 50% of managed SKU’s.   


The first solution to address their problem was to create a series of complex spreadsheets to help them compile and analyze data. That process, however, required roughly two hours a day to prepare and was not easy to use.


Sharing Data to Improve Collaboration


Clearly our client needed a stronger tool that would help them access real-time information about their customer’s requirements.


Using DemandCaster®, we integrated our client’s customer’s shared stock availability and demand plans with the client’s ERP-system data. That connection enabled a vastly different level of collaboration between client and customer, allowing our client to:



  • Carefully calibrate the replenishment plan based on the changing needs of the customer.

  • Trigger replenishment orders to maintain stock at contracted levels, based on consumed stock and shared forecast data.

  • Eliminate buffering of orders and lost time between the customer issuing a PO, receipt of that PO, and our client acting on it.


Application of Lean

We also implemented a lean process to reduce batch sizes and cumulative lead times, thereby increasing speed and flexibility. The information was then used in DemandCaster® to calculate optimal kanban quantities to manage the replenishment process and capacity. The current open-shop orders and subsequent planned orders were then transposed in the DemandCaster® capacity module to allow for viewing of constraints—and thus proactively manage bottlenecks either by rescheduling planned replenishment orders or increasing capacity (adding hours or outsourcing operations).

Within four months, our client dramatically improved performance across a number of key metrics:



  • Reducing stock-outs and shortages to 3% of managed SKU’s

  • Reducing WIP more than 50%.

  • Eliminating two hours of lost time they were able to re-apply to managing the process.

  • And, their customer was blown away with our clients seamless effort to integrate demand with supply.


Ease of Use and Trust are the Linchpins


Though we used DemandCaster®to illustrate the power of collaboration, in some cases spreadsheets will suffice. The key is understanding the purpose of collaboration and making it easy for your partners to engage in an open and trusting manner. If the process is too hard to manage or there is a lack of trust in the information that is provided, any hope of realizing the benefit of collaboration will be immediately lost. In most cases technology makes the process easy and minimizes inconsistencies in data. Making the collaboration process work is up to you… and your customers.