About Jeff Harrop

Jeff Harrop

Supply Chain Sherpas

Climbing would be a great, truly wonderful thing if it weren’t for all that damn climbing. – John Ohrenschall

The people in our biz generally fall into one of two broad categories: Supply Chain Strategy Consultants and System Integrators.

To oversimply things just a bit, Supply Chain Strategy Consultants work with VPs to make sure the folks at the top “see the big picture”. They generally operate at around 10,000 feet at the lowest and aren’t directly involved in any detailed or technical stuff.

System Integrators (as their name would suggest) ensure that new technology and legacy systems will talk to each other. Their job is not “thought leadership” per se, but rather understanding their clients’ requirements and getting through the detailed development and implementation tasks.

So for a supply chain transformation project to be successful, conventional wisdom would suggest that you would need a Supply Chain Strategy Consultant to help with the big picture stuff and a System Integrator to handle the details.

If you were to take each of these folks with you on an Everest expedition and found yourself on a plateau trying to figure out your next move, here’s the advice you would get:

Strategy Consultant (over the radio from a safe warm lodge): “The summit is the goal. Make sure your pace is not too fast or too slow and let me know if you need me to send up more oxygen tanks.”

System Integrator: “I’ve surveyed the plateau and we can go straight up to the next plateau, skirt around to the south face for a bit to find an easier climb upward or pitch camp for the night.”

They have both provided valuable input, but what exactly should you do next?

This is where the Sherpa comes in. Conventional wisdom is defied by the fact that the Sherpa is not a “strategy guy” nor is he a “details guy”. He’s both.

Every trip up the mountain is unique, but the Sherpa knows exactly where the summit is and that there are several paths to it. Having been up the mountain many times, the Sherpa is continually considering weather conditions, experiences from previous climbs and the strengths and weaknesses of the folks in this particular expedition every step of the way.

Put him anywhere on the mountain and he not only knows multiple paths to the summit, but he also knows which is the “right” next move for a particular expedition on a particular day.

The Sherpa is a humble servant who not only contributes his knowledge and experience to the climb, but is also right there with you testing every foothold and weathering every snow squall. It is not “his climb”, but “the team’s climb”. (Everybody knows who Sir Edmund Hillary is, but – without going to Google – can you name his Sherpa? If you knew it right away, kudos! If you give up, click here. As for me, I needed Google).

A supply chain transformation project is a lot like scaling Everest. The feat is monumental, the conditions change constantly and you’ll need a team with a diverse skill set to make it to the top.

While it’s certainly possible to make it to the top without a Sherpa, I wouldn’t recommend it.

The Retailer’s Path to Flowcasting

 

Nobody trips over mountains. It is the small pebble that causes you to stumble. Pass all the pebbles in your path and you will find that you have crossed the mountain. – Unknown

holygrail

Flowcasting is quite a destination.

Every item in every store has a sales forecast. The rest of the supply chain planning problem utilizes a single set of numbers – from the point of sale to the point of manufacture – based on the expected sales at the shelf.

Future inventory needs, equipment, manpower and financial projections are simple, intuitive expressions of the plan that gets created by item/store and in units. It’s like having data warehouse level of detail, except all the dates are in the future instead of the past.

At that final destination, the line drawn between retailers and suppliers becomes a porous membrane – the retailer becomes the selling arm of the supplier and the supplier becomes the manufacturing arm of the retailer. A common plan between them is used to detect trouble and opportunities in advance and to simulate various plans of attack to reshape the future before it arrives.

So how do we get there from where we are now?

For retailers, there’s a 4 step path to follow.

Step 1: Integrate Replenishment

All of the capabilities enabled by Flowcasting start with the most elemental level of planning: discrete items in specific stores by unit by day. The first step is to build a planning process within the retail organization that will create this primary information.

Even though this is the first step, it is by far the most involved for a retailer, as it often involves challenging many internal processes and relationships that have been used for decades.

However, it also delivers enormous benefits to a retailer in terms of improving on shelf availability and inventory productivity.

When the step of integrating replenishment is complete, the following things are true:

  • – Sales forecasts and replenishment plans exist and are recalculated daily for every item in every store – including the slowest of the slow sellers
  • – The individual item/store replenishment plans are used to calculate replenishment needs for all DCs and vendors upstream with no additional forecasting beyond the sales forecasts that drive item/store replenishment.
  • – There is tight collaboration between Supply Chain and Merchandising/Operations when promotions, line transitions and store network changes are being planned. The output of these collaborations are expected impacts on future sales by item/store/week, which are reflected in the operational item/store replenishment plans and shared throughout the supply chain. If available, planogram data is used in the plans.
  • – Replenishment schedules (with planned ship dates) are shared with all suppliers for a minimum horizon of 6 months in weekly buckets with at least a weekly update frequency.
  • – All planned orders are released for execution with a single commit time – including orders for promotions and pipeline fills.

Step 2: Integrate Operations

Once projections of volume in units exist at and among all items in all locations, they can be expressed in other units of measure and aggregated to estimate the usage of non-inventory resources in the supply chain:

  • – Inbound volumes by location in cube, weight and number of receipts.
  • – Outbound volumes by location in cube, weight or picks.
  • – Storage requirements by location in cube or storage locations.
  • – Lane volumes between locations in cube, weight or pallets.
  • – Labour requirements by location by area for shipping, put-away and receiving (including the stores).

When the step of integrating operations is complete, the following things are true:

  •  -The Distribution and Transportation departments review the projections (translated into their language) weekly and identify exceptions when resources are expected to be over or under utilized.
  • – Plan their execution based solely on the due dates for every shipment or receipt.
  • – Exceptions are resolved by either:
    • – Reallocating resources or pre-planning additional capacity long before the product starts to move
    • – Collaborating with the Supply Chain Planning and/or Merchandising groups to change the plans for promotions or new product launches or co-ordinate the bypassing of nodes during high volume weeks (e.g. vendor direct-to-store in certain regions during peak weeks).

Step 3: Retail Sales & Operations Planning

After Steps 1 and 2 are complete, the building blocks are in place for Sales & Operations Planning (S&OP) within the retail enterprise. S&OP has been the norm in manufacturing for decades, so best practices have been well documented and can easily be adapted to a retailer with the first two building blocks in place.

When a retailer has successfully adopted S&OP, the following things are true:

  • – Meetings are held monthly where all of the numbers developed during the first two steps are dollarized and compared to the annual business plan. The meeting is chaired by the CEO and there are seats at the table for the Merchandising, Supply Chain and Finance VPs. Attendance is not optional. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss and debate prior period results, future period projections and comparisons to the business plan.
  • – Gaps between the operational plans and the business plan (as well as strategies to close them) are cascaded downward throughout the organization to develop and implement changes to the operational plans. As the plans filter to the lower levels, these teams are also having their own “mini S&OP” meetings to discuss the same topics at a lower level of granularity.
  • – The operational plans (set by item/location/day in units) is directly tied to the retailer’s business plan.

Step 4: Joint Business Planning

With the first 3 steps complete, the retailer has “all of their ducks in a row” and is now in a position to bring their key trading partners into the fold. Unlike collaboration strategies of the past where retailers and suppliers try to compare and reconcile their independently created plans, we now have the ability to create a single plan which covers all activities the retailer and supplier perform together in order to get product into a customer’s hands.

When a retailer is successfully conducting JBP, the following things are true:

  • – S&OP style meetings are conducted at various levels of the organization with representation from key suppliers
  • – The retailer and all suppliers are using a single set of numbers in a common system for all of their planning activities. As a key trading partner sharing extremely valuable information, the supplier automatically removes the retailer’s planned shipments in their available to promise calculation – inventory for the retailer is protected.
  • – The competition is very worried.

Splitting Hairs?

“Just definitions either prevent or put an end to a dispute.” – Nathaniel Emmons

Lora Cecere, a well-known supply chain industry consultant and author of the Supply Chain Shaman blog recently made the following prediction about Flowcasting:

“Distribution-centric industries are not all pull. The flows are a combination of push and pull based on demand shaping programs. As a result, flowcasting may be a good tool for turn-based volume, but lacks the depth of analytics to help with promoted goods and new product launch.”

To be fair, she was actually speaking about JDA’s Flowcasting software (which got its moniker in the RedPrairie merger), but based on the wording, one could also attribute her comment to the Flowcasting idea.

Whether or not you agree or disagree with her sentiment boils down to how you define the following:

  • Distribution-centric
  • Push and pull
  • Demand
  • Promoted goods
  • New product launch

Ask any 10 supply chain people to define these terms and you’re likely to get at least 6 different answers. While Lora is an experienced and respected supply chain expert in the manufacturing space, I’ve spent my entire career in retail. I have often found that I speak a different dialect from my upstream supply chain brethren.

How you define each of these terms is critical to determining your view about what a supply chain does, why it exists and how it operates.

Distribution-Centric

Each successive step in the supply chain (manufacturing, distribution, transportation, merchandising) adds cost to a product and increases its value to the consumer. However, a key tenet of Flowcasting is that value is not fully realized in the supply chain until the product reaches the point of final consumption. In that regard, any company that manufactures, distributes, hauls or sells product that is meant to be purchased by a consumer should not consider themselves as part of a “distribution-centric industry”. Distributing the product is only one part of the process – if products are not purchased by the end consumer, then everyone – from the manufacturer to the retailer – will be out of business in short order. By my definition, all of the players should consider themselves part of a “consumption-centric” industry.

Push and Pull

By a wide margin, these are the two most overused words in the supply chain lexicon. We assume that everyone has the same definition, but if consensus has been reached on what these words actually mean, I have yet to hear it.

My definition of “push and pull” is an extension from my definition of “retail supply chain”. The way I look at it, the supply chain hasn’t done its job until the customer has made the purchase. In that context, the notion of a “push” supply chain sounds a bit absurd. I imagine a customer wheelling a shopping cart through a retail store while the staff fill the cart – against the customer’s will – with product that she doesn’t want. The point is that if you believe the supply chain ends with a customer purchase (and you also believe that the customer must choose to buy it), then the idea of “pushing” product is really a shell game – in the end, the supply chain can only be driven by a “pull”. In the case where supply exceeds demand (to be discussed later), the only option to get the product completely out of the supply chain is to “encourage a pull” from the consumer through markdowns and clearance pricing.

In the case where supply is constrained, decisions need to be made as to where to locate the product where profit will be maximized. This can mean forward positioning the product to DCs and allowing the stores that are selling it quickly to “pull” it the rest of the way. Flowcasting fully accounts for the constrained supply scenario and provides the most up-to-date information possible to properly ration when this occurs (i.e. when a customer facing stocking point has a stockout in its future, the “pull” is disabled until such time as the location is back in stock, which may not ever happen for short lifecycle products).

The point here is that there’s more to managing a supply chain than just replenishing the inventory and if the whole plan is not based on expected sales at the store shelf, then it will not be possible to do forward looking capacity planning, S&OP and joint business planning with a single set of numbers, all of which are necessary to maximize sales while minimizing supply chain resource usage.

Demand

For any enterprise that participates in making, distributing or merchandising product that will eventually find its way into a consumer’s hands, “demand” (or more specifically “independent demand”) must mean expected sales at the store shelf. When a manufacturer considers demand to be “customer order demand on the DCs or plants”, they are talking about dependent demand which does not exist without expected sales at the shelf. In the Flowcasting philosophy, managing dependent demand is a waste of time and a huge driver of inefficiency in the supply chain. As Dr. Joseph Orlicky (the father of Manufacturing Resource Planning) once quipped: “Never forecast what you can calculate.

Promoted Goods

I’ll make a distinction here between “regularly selling goods on promotion” and “promoted goods”.

Regularly selling goods on promotion are easily planned in Flowcasting through an update to the forecast to account for the expected lift in sales during promoted weeks. The increased forecast “pulls” product to the correct locations just in time based on inventory levels, rounding rules and all the normal stuff that drives the supply chain for these same items during non promoted periods (with the exception that safety stock may increase ahead of the promotion to execute display setups).

In contrast, “promoted goods” (by my definition, not necessarily Lora’s) are items that are limited-run, short lifecycle items (perhaps with special displays) that are not planogrammed in the store. They are placed on the sales floor, sell out and are discontinued. Again, I fail to see how this is different from the short lifecycle product scenario. Before 10,000 units of a promoted product is made or bought, there needs to be a plan to sell it. Where will it sell? When will it sell? How did we arrive at 10,000 units? At what price will we sell it to make it a profitable venture but still not have any carryover stock? These are all “pull” questions. If they can be answered before commitments are made to make or purchase the product – and they certainly should be – then there’s no reason why a promoted item cannot be planned as a “pull” for all of the reasons mentioned previously.

New Product Launch

Flowcasting is the only process that can plan the expected sales of a new product discretely and independently (with regard to both magnitude and timing) from the “pipeline fill” requirements to ensure that both merchandising and safety stock needs are met and sales are supported with the correct timing for both.

If a product is a “new variation on an existing product”, then a forecast can easily be created by copying and scaling existing sales history. If it’s something that the world has never seen before and is completely unlike anything else, then additional guesswork and collaboration is needed to produce a forecast. In either case, the assumptions driving the sales forecast are documented and executed within the Flowcasting process.

When sales materialize in an unexpected way (i.e. higher or lower than expected for any selling location), Flowcasting automatically replans the supply chain and alerts people to the mismatch on the day it begins to happen.

Short of an actual crystal ball that can predict the future with 100% accuracy all the time, I’m not sure there’s a better way to manage a new product launch, at least in a world where retailers and manufacturers are working closely together in a single process, which is a trend that’s accelerating.

I’m certainly no shaman myself, but I have only one prediction: A lot more discussion and debate about this over the next few years.

Customers Like Me

 

“I have never been especially impressed by the heroics of people who are convinced they are about to change the world. I am more awed by those who struggle to make one small difference after another.”                           – Ellen Goodman

What does “customer service” really mean?

Many retailers subscribe to the notion that world class customer service is achieved through acts of heroism.

Nordstrom’s, for example, has built a reputation on its customer service folklore. In one case, a customer came into a store with a receipt to return a used set of tire chains. Without a moment’s hesitation, the clerk refunded the customer’s money and took the chains back – even though the receipt wasn’t from Nordstrom’s. The clerk refunded the customer from her own pocket, then on her lunch break, took the customer’s receipt and the tire chains back to the store where it was originally purchased to get her own money back.

Home Depot has a website called www.orangeblooded.net  where their employees can post the details of their customer service exploits. In one such account, 3 employees used a forklift to open a storm drain in their parking lot and climbed down 15 feet to retrieve a set of keys that a customer had dropped.

Employees making home deliveries to customers on their own time.

Staff spending hours with customers to share product knowledge and make sure they have everything they’re looking for.

Driving to a customer’s home to teach him how to use some new gizmo that he just bought and can’t figure out how to use.

These are great stories and there’s no doubt that the customers involved are now customers for life.

But what about customers like me?

According to published studies on retail out-of-stocks over the last 15+ years (not to mention my personal experience), on the average shopping trip, I walk out of the store with only 92% of the items on my list. Even worse, if I’m enticed into the store by a flyer or promotion, 15% of the time the product isn’t there when I show up.

Don’t get me wrong, retailers whose employees go the extra mile for customers should be fiercely proud and praise of those deeds should be bellowed from the highest rooftop.

I’m just saying that heroism isn’t the only definition for world class customer service.

Time is the world’s most valuable non-renewable resource. For 99.9% of my shopping trips, I don’t need a hero. I need to be able to get into the store, get what’s on my list and get out as quickly as possible without having to come back later or go somewhere else after being confronted with an empty shelf.

It won’t make any headlines, but the greatest customer service experience I can have is to walk into a store, easily find everything on my list and then leave without having to speak to anyone.