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Third Annual NAPMNCA Bootcamp Seminar

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Title: Third Annual NAPMNCA Bootcamp Seminar


1
Third Annual NAPM-NCA Bootcamp Seminar
Critical Factors of CPFR Collaborative Planning
Forecasting and Replenishment
Presented by Carol Marks, C.P.M. Lewis and
Associates 3616 Forest Lake Drive Florence, South
Carolina 29501
2
Session Overview
  • The Case for Change
  • SCM Evolution
  • CPFR History
  • CPFR Defined
  • CPFR Model (VICS)
  • Scenarios
  • Technology
  • Barriers
  • Case Studies
  • Readiness Evaluation
  • Resources

3
The Case for Transformational Change
  • Supply Chain Efficiency?
  • The U.S. consumer goods industry alone currently
    holds about 250 billion worth of excess
    inventory to address customer service and product
    availability problems.
  • Source Surgency, Boston, MA

4
The Case for Change
  • Grocery Manufacturers of America, Food Marketing
    Institute and the Food Business Forum 2002 study
    reports
  • Advances in supply chain management, initiatives
    of Efficient Consumer Response (ECR) and category
    management and the investments of inventory
    tracking technology have not, by in large,
    reduced the overall level of out of stocks on
    store shelves from what was reported in previous
    studies. Out of stocks range from 5-10 with
    faster selling and promoted products exceeding
    10.

5
The Case for Change
  • A.T. Kearney Study
  • In the North American market, supply chain
    inefficiencies result in annual lost sales of 40
    billion, or 3.5 of sales.
  • 30 of items in retail catalogs have data errors.
  • 60 of invoices generated errors and 43 of
    invoices resulted in deductions.
  • For new products, it can take up to four weeks
    for complete and accurate data to reach the
    retailers procurement systems.

6
The Case for Change
  • Three forces driving change in business and
    industry
  • Globalization
  • Industry consolidation
  • Technology

7
A Year 2008 Forecast of Purchasing and
SupplyDemand-Pull Procurement
  • Demand-pull systems will use Internet technology
  • Will have upstream and downstream views
  • Will pull information from suppliers and
    customers
  • WWW will be the front end for proprietary links
  • Other systems will integrate through the web

Source Joint Research by CAPS, and A.T. Kearney
8
The Challenge
  • Creating long term value and a sustainable
    competitive advantage
  • Transforming inefficient supply cost structures

9
Historical Purchasing Perspective
  • The entrepreneur
  • The traditional purchasing agent
  • Discrete orders/independent demand
  • End of month, quarter BIG orders
  • Blanket orders
  • The huge production planning department
  • MRP, etc.
  • Various forms of JIT
  • Adversarial relationships

10
Supply/Demand Equilibrium
11
Reality
12
Reality Risk Factors
  • Overreactions, unnecessary interventions
    (reacting to a single data point), second
    guessing, mistrust, incorrect information
    throughout the supply chain.
  • Bullwhip effectrecognizes that end user demand
    usually remains more consistent than suppliers
    far removed from the final customer in the supply
    chain
  • Bottom line, reduce variability in each link of
    the supply chain

13
The Vision
  • Collaborative Planning, Forecasting and
    Replenishment (CPFR)

14
CPFR History
  • First conceived and described and publicized by
    the Voluntary Interindustry Commerce Standards
    (VICS) Association. Founded in 1986. First
    guidelines published in 1998. Roadmap 1999.
    Direct approval from Global Commerce Initiative
    (GCI) and Uniform Code Council (UCC). Major
    revision to model in 2004.
  • First project in the US was Wal-Mart and Warner
    Lambert. Project supported by SAP, Manguistics
    and Benchmarking Partners (now Surgency). First
    applied to Listerine mouthwash.
  • Rapid adoption in Japan by retailers,
    wholesalers, suppliers and public trading
    exchanges.

15
History
  • By 1996, more than 30 companies participating
    including PG, Nabisco, Warner Lambert, Hewlett
    Packard, Levi-Strauss and Co., Wal-Mart and
    K-Mart.
  • PG had five projects running in 2002

16
CPFR Defined
  • Collaborative Planning, Forecasting and
    Replenishment (CPFR) is a business practice that
    combines the intelligence of multiple trading
    partners in the planning and fulfillment of
    customer demand. CPFR links sales and marketing
    best practices, such as category management, to
    supply chain planning and execution processes to
    increase availability while reducing inventory,
    transportation ad logistics costs. (VICS)
  • CPFR is an initiative among all participants in
    the supply chain intended to improve the
    relationship among them through jointly managed
    planning processes and shared information.
  • CPFR is a revolutionary business system where
    trading partners have visibility into one
    anothers critical demand, order forecasts and
    promotional forecasts using technology and a
    standard set of business processes.
  • CPFR is designed to better align supply and
    demand through trading partner data interchange,
    exception based management, and structured
    collaboration to eliminate issues and constraints
    in fulfilling consumer expectations.

17
Collaboration
A SHARED PROCESS of creation between two or more
parties with diverse skills and
knowledge delivering a unified approach
that provides the optimal framework for CUSTOMER
satisfaction definition courtesy of
VICS
18
Creating Value
  • Significant improvements in reaction time to
    customer demand
  • Enhanced sales forecasting
  • Direct lines of communication
  • Increased sales
  • Reduced inventories
  • Reduced costs

19
Removing Constraints
  • Using a single demand plan to affect supply
    process constraints.
  • Example manufacturing--make to demand
  • Agilitymatching supply with demand. Focus on
    speed.
  • Two key factors availability of technology and
    software applications and the increasing
    willingness of supply chain members to work in
    alliance.

20
SCM
21
CPFR Model
  • Eight Collaboration Tasks
  • Collaboration arrangement
  • Joint business plan
  • Sales forecasting
  • Order planning/forecasting
  • Order generation
  • Order fulfillment
  • Exception management
  • Performance assessment

VICS Model
22
(No Transcript)
23
The CPFR Process Model
Seller
CollaborativePlanning
FRONT END AGREEMENT
Once
JOINT BUSINESS PLAN
Qtr.

CollaborativeForecasting
CREATE SALES FORECAST IDENTIFY
EXCEPTIONS RESOLVE EXCEPTIONS
Wk, Mo
CREATE ORDER FORECAST IDENTIFY
EXCEPTIONS RESOLVE EXCEPTIONS
Buyer
Wk, Mo
GENERATE ORDER
24
Collaborative ActivitiesInternal and External
  • Retail Industry
  • Strategy and Planning
  • Setting the business goals, requirements,
    responsibilities and other ground rules, product
    mix and placement, event plansjoint business
    plan
  • Demand Supply Management
  • POS demand, order/shipment requirements. Sales
    forecasting and order forecasting (based on sales
    forecast, inventory, lead time, etc.
  • Execution
  • Place orders, deliver shipments, receive and
    stock, record sales transactions, make payments
  • Analysis
  • Monitor planning and executing activities for
    exceptions, aggregate results, calculate key
    performance metrics. Communicate for continuous
    improvement

25
CPFR Scenarios
  • Four Standard Scenarios or industry standard
    approaches to specific processes
  • Retail Event Collaboration
  • Promotions and events create swings in demand
  • Great financial opportunity
  • DC Replenishment Collaboration
  • Traditionally handled by a single trading
    partner/single lead time
  • Uses multiple horizons beyond a single lead time
  • Enables make to demand policy
  • Order or series of orders over a time horizon
  • Designed to increase the efficiency of the flow
    of product
  • Store Replenishment Collaboration
  • Traditionally same as DC
  • Collaborate on POS forecasts
  • Focus on closest link to customer directly
    influences shelf availability
  • Collaborative Assortment Planning
  • For apparel and seasonal goods

26
CPFR Technology
  • Process does not fundamentally depend upon
    technology, but real time access and accurate,
    timely information flow is a must and must
    integrate with enterprise systems.
  • Shared solution
  • Peer-to-peer
  • Extranet, Exchange or third party hosting
  • Service Bureaus--UCCnet
  • Builds on EAN.UCC standards
  • EDI, XML facilitate mapping
  • Must address process integration,
    industry-specific data formats and software
    applications of all trading partners
  • Enterprise applications
  • SAP, i2, Manguistics, Oracle

27
CPFR Technology
28
CPFR Basics
  • CPFR methodology establishes guidelines for
    enterprises to integrate their planning processes
    across corporate boundaries.
  • Effective CPFR builds on synchronized product
    data and electronic commerce messaging standards.
  • CPFR should always be superimposed on an existing
    demand planning and replenishment process
  • CPFR is compatible with VMI and conventional
    ordering processes
  • CPFR is distinguished by who takes the lead in
    sales forecasting, order planning/forecasting and
    order generation

29
Key Barriers to CPFR
  • Demonstrated advantages
  • Complexity of implementation
  • Trust
  • Security
  • Technology
  • Current/disparate systems
  • Organizations current internal processes not
    aligned
  • Cultural barriers
  • Economic barriers
  • Regulatory barriers

30
Organizational Changes Required
  • Traditional silos may have to become category,
    commodity or customer-specific teams to bring
    together
  • Merchandise Planners
  • Manufacturer demand planning personnel
  • Sales representatives and buyers
  • Customer Service and logistics

31
CPFR n-Tier
  • Not just between two trading partners, but
    establishing collaboration with all upstream
    partners in a supply chain.
  • Raw materials, manufacture, retail, ultimate
    customer
  • Inputs to the process would include not only
    strategy and goals for the partnership, but also
    specifications for the product being delivered,
    and inventory and capacity allocations to the
    partnership.

32
CPFR Case Studies
A More Stable Staples By Editorial Staff, Supply
and Demand Chain Executive Atlanta May
7Logility, a supplier of B2B collaborative
commerce solutions to power e-business and
optimize supply chains, today announced that
Staples Inc. has selected Logility Voyager
Collaborate to conduct a collaborative planning,
forecasting and replenishment (CPFR) pilot with
key suppliers to enhance forecast accuracy,
improve cycle times and reduce inventory
throughout its domestic operations and supply
chain. "We believe that working collaboratively
with our key suppliers will lead to supply chain
improvements that improve the accuracy as it
relates to forecasts and help us better
understand customer demand," said Doreen Romano,
senior vice president of Merchandising Planning
Support for Staples. "To achieve a renewable
competitive advantage, retailers must optimize
forecast planning, logistics services and
supplier relationship management through
collaboration," stated Mike Edenfield, Logility
CEO. "Logility Voyager Collaborate facilitates
the CPFR business process that defines
collaboration between trading partners delivering
measurable results and a more proactive supply
chain."
33
Case Studies
  • West Marine
  • Stanford Graduate School of Business Case Study
  • By 2002, the largest boating supply retail chain
    in the nation with 530 million in sales and
    50,000 products.
  • EB Marine acquisition caused supply chain chaos
  • Problems partial shipments, stockouts, poor
    supplier performance
  • New leadership, vision, plan
  • Initiated CPFR developed 52 week
    forecasts/updated every
  • 24 hours
  • 12 suppliers selected for pilot 150
    participating by the end of 2002
  • Challenge selling CPFR to suppliers and
    internally
  • Supplier performance has improved dramatically,
    but still short of expectations

34
Case Studies
  • Rite Aid
  • Business case Stockouts, supply chain
    efficiencies
  • Challenges Executive buy in, cross and
    inter-company communication
  • Lessons Select companies you have a positive
    relationship with, establish joint scorecard, but
    be willing to adjust
  • Results 16M reduction of out-of stocks at DC
    on-time delivery improved from 93-95 returns
    decreased by 37, logistics costs decreased by
    10-28

35
Case Studies
  • Proctor Gamble Supply Network
  • Vision The Consumer Driven Network
  • Focus is increased sales
  • Real time demand information
  • Replaced POS data with electronic product code
    (EPC) data
  • Using collaborative planning, not forecasting and
    replenishment, which is less complex than CPFR
    since data requirements differ greatly from
    customer to customer and supplier to supplier

36
Resources--VICS
  • The Collaborative Planning, Forecasting and
    Replenishment (CPFR) Committee is a Voluntary
    Interindustry Commerce Standards Association
    (VICS) committee made up of retailers,
    manufacturers and solution providers. This group
    originally developed CPFR, a set of business
    processes that entities within a supply chain can
    use for collaboration on a number of buyer/seller
    functions, all working toward achieving overall
    efficiency in the supply chain.
  • VICS Mission
  • The mission of the VICS Association is to take a
    global leadership role in the ongoing improvement
    of the flow of product and information about the
    product throughout the entire supply chain in the
    retail industry.

Collaborative Planning, Forecasting
Replenishment (CPFR) Committee
37
Next Steps
  • Organizational Evaluation
  • Benefits Calculator
  • Readiness Assessment
  • Current SCM Processes
  • VICS CPFR Roadmap

38
Summary
  • The Case for Change
  • SCM Evolution
  • CPFR History
  • CPFR Defined
  • CPFR Model (VICS)
  • Scenarios
  • Technology
  • Barriers
  • Case Studies
  • Readiness Evaluation
  • Resources

39
Resources and Sources Cited
  • VICS CPFR Committee website www.cpfr.org and
    www.vics.org
  • Readiness Assessment
  • The Collaborative Commerce Standards Institute
    www.ccsi1.org
  • The Uniform Code Council (UCC) Solutions Center
    www.solutionscenter.uc-council.org
  • Collaborative Planning, Forecasting, and
    ReplenishmentHow to Create a Supply Chain
    Advantage, Dirk Seifert, AMACOM, 2003

40
Third Annual NAPM-NCA Bootcamp Seminar
  • Critical Factors of CPFR
  • Collaborative Planning Forecasting and
    Replenishment
  • Questions
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