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Supply Chain Management: From Vision to Implementation. Chapter 3: Process Thinking: Supply Chain Management’s Foundation. Process Management. It’s a shift from competing on what we make to how we make it. David Robinson, President CSC Index on the need for process thinking
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Supply Chain Management: From Vision to Implementation Chapter 3: Process Thinking: Supply Chain Management’s Foundation
Process Management It’s a shift from competing on what we make to how we make it. • David Robinson, President CSC Index on the need for process thinking • Functional thinking limits cooperation and impedes creative thinking. • Process management promotes collaboration, facilitating customer satisfaction at low cost.
Process Management Process Management requires companies to: • Recognize the limiting nature of functional structures • Instill process thinking throughout the company • Process integration remains rare • Michael Hammer estimates less than 10% of companies have made a serious and successful effort • Requires major changes to measurement, job design, management roles, and organizational structure
Process Thinking • Process thinking aligns decisions with corporate strategy and coordinates actions across functions. • Each process consists of a set of flows and value-added activities. • Information Flow • Physical Flow • Financial Flow
Value-Added Process Materials Acquisition New Product Development
Systems Thinking Systems thinkingis the holistic process of considering both the immediate local outcomes and the longer-term system-wide ramifications of decisions. It requires: • A Holistic View • Information Availability and Accuracy • Cross-Functional and Interorganizational Teamwork • Measurement • Systems Analysis
A Process View of a Company Decisions made throughout an organization should focus on using available resources to create customer value. • Customer focus defines the company’s value proposition and drives competency. • Competency guides functional decision making. • Competency development dictates resource allocation. • Information and performance systems align efforts on the system’s goal.
Strategic Linkage • The role of strategy is to direct the use of resources to develop the correct competencies to drive the firm’s value proposition. • Value Proposition – the value that the firm promises to deliver to the customer. • Competencies – the skills and processes that collectively deliver the promised value. • Core Competency – what the company is so good at that it drives competitive advantage.
Generic Strategies • Cost Leadership – ability to deliver at a cost below competitors • Differentiation – ability to deliver some unique value which reduces price sensitivity • Quality • Delivery • Flexibility • Innovation • Survival often requires low cost and high quality.
Resource Management Every company must manage five resources: • People – determine the productivity and quality of the system; provide the creativity and passion that determines success; requires education and training • Technology – includes hardware and software; used effectively improves productivity • Materials – all goods and services used in the value-added process for the creation of output • Infrastructure – physical bricks and mortar assets used in the value creating process. • Capital – necessary to finance continuing operations • Coordinated decision making regarding resource allocation across functions is the key to competitive advantage.
Information Sharing Communicates strategic objectives and organizational roles. Typical types and uses of data are: • Customer-related - defines goals, value propositions, and competencies • Firm capabilities and processes - strengths and weaknesses so that an effective strategy can be developed and implemented • Competitors' strategies and capabilities - anticipate competitive threats as well as competitors’ reactions to the company’s own strategic moves • External operating environment - identify potential threats and opportunities such as new markets or the emergence of a new technology • SC operating information - used to make good day-to-day decisions: how many and type of suppliers needed to support the production schedule • "Success stories" - creates momentum for process integration
Performance Measurement Performance measurement systems must: • be aligned with strategic objectives; and • clearly communicate expectations and responsibilities. Well designed performance systems: • create understanding of strategic and tactical objectives • promote behaviors consistent with achieving objectives • document actual results, monitoring progress toward goals • benchmark capabilities vis-à-vis competitors’ abilities and customers’ expectations • motivate continuous improvement