Supplies, MaterialsB) Parts suppliers, metal shapers, tire makers, etc.
C) To make a profit and establish relationships with automakers and other customers
D) Shippers might want to make more profit while people using the shipper want to keep costs down
E) It can slow or shut down the movement of parts and supplies, like with a hurricane or volcano eruption
A) The service, paperwork, pens, mail service, etc.
B) Yes. Each firm is trying to provide a service for a profit . . . the loan, underwriters, etc.
C) The goods of service supply chains are more abstract whereas they are more physical and tangible with product supply chains
Shipping. It used to be just cars and trucks but now they use bigger trucks and planes
A vertical company would have a singular supply chain system. A horizontal one would probably have a supply chain system for each smaller company, or they would go outside the company.
Absolutely. They would tend to have their own system and it needs to be fluid and work well
6) Lack of metal for the cans, a bad peach crop, a breakdown or crash of a peach shipment, etc.
7) Having things close means lack of geographic distance from the main base. Having them distributed means less time to get to customers and less impact if one warehouse goes down and is unable to ship. Other warehouses can pick up the slack.
Chapter Two
Question One
A) They have an array of products, some with high margins and some with low margins. The customer base of SteelWorks has a wide array of desires and needs and thus this is seemingly creating the inventory issues.
B) They sell a wide array of products. Not based on the data provided, due to the separate and different nature of the two organizations in question
C) Entirely too much. They can do the 20% reduction if they do it the right way
D) Yes. There needs to be a tracking of the time and money spent by that division.
2) Perhaps the best way to is to reduce variability where it is possible. If not, there has to be adjustment to the variability that is or could happen or customers will have to back-order or cancel (which is already happening 30% of the time)
3) Inventory levels provide a response time for when customer service receives a request for a part. A balance has to be struck between having enough inventory on hand but not too much
4) Lead time would indicate how much time is needed to provide the order as requested and promised. Less lead time would mean higher variability and thus the need for higher inventory levels.
5) Managing the service level and expectations in a way that expands the time window promised and delivered would create more lead time and thus reduce the need for higher inventory
6) The first of those is safety stock . . . this is what the distributor needs to keep on hand when preparing for deviations from average demand during lead time. The latter is the expected level of inventory immediately after receiving the order, or the maximum level. The first one was the minimum.
7) The first is the expected level of inventory when receiving an order and the latter speaks to...
Second, greater education about the values and benefit of this approach to managing projects needs to be completed (Brady, Maylor, 2010). Third, the inertia and lack of motivation to change needs to be quantified and shown to managers to see how their lack of commitment and urgency are hurting their businesses. All of these factors center on the value of time and its precious nature as a resource (Brady,
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