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Applications of CRM and SCM Rev: Feb, 2012 Euiho (David) Suh, Ph.D. POSTECH Strategic Management of Information and Technology Laboratory (POSMIT: http://posmit.postech.ac.kr) Dept. of Industrial & Management Engineering POSTECH Contents ※ Discussion Questions 1 CRM in Financial Services 1) Economics of Information 2) ECRM 3) Conclusion 2 The Bullwhip Effect 3 RFID in SCM 4 Case Study Discussion Questions ■ What do you think makes the traditional economics of information into the new economics of information? ■ What do you think is the special characteristics of CRM in “financial services” comparing to other industry field? ■ Why does Manufacturer order take the biggest demand order variability? ■ If you are a CEO, how can you solve the big demand order variabilities? ■ What are the key components of RFID? What role do they? ■ What do you think obstacles to implement RFID in SCM? 3 1. CRM in Financial Services Economics of Information 1) Economics of Information ■ The traditional economics of information – Reach • Access, connection – Richness • Depth, detail ■ The new economics of information – Connectivity • Relative easy and cheap to connect to global networks, resulting in the PC and mobile phone emerging as ubiquitous devices – Convergence • Digital technology are converging : wireless application protocol – Interactivity • • • • Human and technical communication Data gathering Collaborative problem-solving Negotiation 4 1. CRM in Financial Services ECRM 2) ECRM ■ E-business – The integration of e-business activities within the framework of all existing and future commercial activities ■ Channel management – The channel of greatest impact or economy anytime, anywhere, and anyone – Integrated and interactive channels of access and distribution ■ Relationships – Real commercial relationships built on service excellence, value and convenience ■ Management of the total enterprise – Total back-office/front-office process integration 5 1. CRM in Financial Services E-business 2) ECRM ■ E-business – Internal • Use technology to reengineer business processes – External • Use technology in how the organization interfaces with business partners whether they are customers or suppliers ■ New business models – innovative products and services – – – – – Establishing e-banks with no presence in the physical world E-billing or electronics bill presentation Banks establishing online purchasing sites Issuing e-bonds Virtual wallets 6 1. CRM in Financial Services E-business - Internet banking 2) ECRM ■ Electronic banking – Security First Network bank(1995,10) ■ UK’s Barclays Bank, Germany’s Commerzbank, Bayerische banks, Norway’s Christiana bank, Credit suisse ■ MeritaNordbanken Finland’s largest bank Telephone banking (1982) PC banking(1984) Mobile payment service(1992) E business network(1996) Internet banking, e-billing, internet TV(1998) Basic banking, stock trading, investment fund transactions, purchase and sales bonds, account opening, credit cards ordering……. – ATM, telephone, GSM mobile, PC, internet TV, WAP – – – – – – – 7 E-business - The new business Ecosystem 1. CRM in Financial Services 2) ECRM ■ Reduce cost of business – Transaction cost –In-branch teller(1.20)>ATM(0.40)>telephone(0.20)>PC banking(0.20)>internet banking (0.01) < source data monitor 1999 > ■ Increase service levels – Reposition existing products and services, devise new offerings, increasing the quality of service : PC, mobile phone, pay bills, loan ■ Reduce entry barriers – ‘pirates’ can infiltrate the value chain of traditional players ■ Extend global reach – A financial institution with a presence on the internet is a global player ■ Challenge brands – Strong brands instantly convey solid trust and trust is integral to effective customer relationships – Confidentiality and security ■ Bundling and unbundling products and services – Cross-subsidization of products and services – unbundled, competitive necessity, customer power ■ Dislocation of location – The concept of location is irrelevant ■ Returns power and control back to the customer – Rise in customer power 8 Channel Management (1/3) ■ Channel management – It is a term that refers to the way that a business or supplier of products uses various marketing techniques and sales strategies to reach the widest possible customer base – The channels are all of the various outlets by which the product is marketed and sold to customers – When done properly, channel management motivates those channels to sell the product and ultimately develops a better relationship between customer and product – This is achieved by identifying the goals for each distinctive channel and then implementing various marketing strategies to make sure that those goals are attained, all while staying consistent to the overall brand of the business 9 1. CRM in Financial Services Channel Management (2/3) 2) ECRM 10 1. CRM in Financial Services Channel Management (3/3) 2) ECRM ■ Channels and customer contact points 11 1. CRM in Financial Services Relationship management 2) ECRM ■ High levels of customer satisfaction are associated with increased retention of customers ■ Relationships builds more easily when there is two-way communication ■ By engaging in an interactive dialogue customer preferences can be determined ■ Retained customers are inevitably more profitable ■ The challenge for an organization in to move to a situation where the customer starts buying from you rather than being sold to ■ Financial services organizations – Who best customers are – How to keep them – How to increase ‘share of wallet’ by knowing what other service or product they can sell to them – Have a customer-centric or one-to-one relationship – Increase shareholder value ■ Require information that can help make the best decisions to create and manage the right relationships, risks, costs, markets ■ Redesign core product offerings ■ Devise appropriate channel strategies 12 1. CRM in Financial Services Management of the Total enterprise 2) ECRM ■ Imperative to have total-office/back-office integration ■ Customer-facing functions – – – – Sales, marketing, call centers and other on-line support Become organizationally integrated with back-office processes Run on separate mainframes and must be accessed through widely varying interfaces Move from data centric point solutions to customer-centric enterprise solutions 13 1. CRM in Financial Services Conclusion 3) Conclusion 14 What is the Bullwhip Effect? (1/2) 2. The Bullwhip Effect ■ Definition – Phenomenon in which the demand order variabilities in the supply chain are amplified as they moved up the supply chain from end-consumers through distribution and manufacturing to raw material suppliers 15 What is the Bullwhip Effect? (2/2) 2. The Bullwhip Effect 16 Example (1/5) 2. The Bullwhip Effect ■ Procter & Gamble – Product : Pampers • Brand of baby products – Bullwhip Effect in this case • Smooth consumer demand • Fluctuating sales at retail stores • Highly variable demand on distributors • Wild swings in demand on manufacturing • Greatest swings in demand on suppliers 17 Example (2/5) 2. The Bullwhip Effect ■ Procter & Gamble : Pampers Consumer Sales at Retailer Consumer demand 1000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 41 39 37 35 33 31 29 27 25 23 21 19 17 15 13 11 9 7 5 3 0 1 100 Retailer's Orders to Distributor 1000 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 18 41 39 37 35 33 31 29 27 25 23 21 19 17 15 13 11 9 7 5 0 3 100 1 Retailer Order 900 Example (3/5) 2. The Bullwhip Effect ■ Procter & Gamble : Pampers Retailer's Orders to Distributor 1000 Retailer Order 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 31 33 35 37 39 41 31 33 35 37 39 41 29 27 25 23 21 19 17 15 13 11 9 7 5 3 0 1 100 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 19 29 27 25 23 21 19 17 15 13 11 9 7 5 0 3 100 1 Distributor Order Distributor's Orders to P&G 1000 Example (4/5) 2. The Bullwhip Effect ■ Procter & Gamble : Pampers Distributor Order Distributor’s Orders to P&G 1000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 41 39 37 35 33 31 29 27 25 23 21 19 17 15 13 11 9 7 5 3 0 1 100 P&G's Orders with 3M 1000 900 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 20 40 37 34 31 28 25 22 19 16 13 10 7 4 0 1 P&G Order 800 Example (5/5) 2. The Bullwhip Effect ■ Procter & Gamble : Pampers Consumer Sales at Retailer Consumer demand 1000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 41 39 37 35 33 31 29 27 25 23 21 19 17 15 13 11 9 7 5 3 0 1 100 P&G's Orders with 3M 1000 Bullwhip Effect 900 700 600 500 400 300 200 21 40 37 34 31 28 25 22 19 16 13 7 4 0 10 100 1 P&G Order 800 Causes of Poor Compensation & Remedies (1/4) ■ Cause 1 : Demand forecast updating – Every manager will project demand based on what he/she sees. Managers at different levels project demand differently – Safety stock complicates matters ■ Remedies for Demand forecast updating – Making point-of-sale (POS) data available up supply chain • Point-of-sale data Information on retailer order passed upstream (Sharing information) • Using EDI (Electronic data interchange) Structured transmission of data between organizations by electronic means • Using Internet – Vendor managed inventory (VMI) • Business models in which the buyer provides certain information to a supplier – Shorten lead-times – Sell directly to consumer 22 2. The Bullwhip Effect Causes of Poor Compensation & Remedies (2/4) 2. The Bullwhip Effect ■ Cause 2 : Order batching – Periodic ordering (once a month, once a week, etc.) • Cannot handle frequent order processing • Transportation costs – full-truckload cheaper than less-than-truckload rates – Push ordering – Periodic execution of MRP(Material Requirements Planning) or DRP(Distribution Resource Planning) • Sometimes order cycles overlap ■ Remedies for Order Batching – Reduce ordering cost • EDI (Electronic data interchange) • Making ‘blanket orders’ → Using ‘Pull ordering’ • VMI (vendor-managed inventory) 23 Causes of Poor Compensation & Remedies (3/4) 2. The Bullwhip Effect ■ Cause 3 : Price fluctuation – Forward buying (from Special promotions, discounts) • Consumers buy in larger quantities and don’t buy again until their stocks are depleted – Surges in shipments causes premium shipping costs – Larger inventories to handle surges result in damage, deterioration, obsolescence ■ Remedies for Price Fluctuation – Stabilize prices • Reduce wholesale price discounting • Uniform pricing policies – Activity-Based Costing • Conventional accounting practices may not show hidden costs of inventory, storage, special handling, premium transportation, etc. 24 Causes of Poor Compensation & Remedies (4/4) 2. The Bullwhip Effect ■ Cause 4 : Rationing and shortage gaming – When demand exceeds supply, manufacturers ration products on the basis of amounts ordered – Customers exaggerate needs to get more – When demand cools, customers cancel orders, manufacturers stuck with excess ■ Remedies for Rationing and Shortage Gaming – Allocate in proportion to past sales records – Plan ahead, share information – Penalize returns 25 Results and Solutions 2. The Bullwhip Effect ■ Results of the bullwhip effect – – – – – – – – – Excess inventories Problems with quality Increased raw material costs Overtime expenses Increased shipping costs Lost customer service Lengthened lead time Lost sales Unnecessary adjusted capacity ■ Solutions to the bullwhip effect – – – – Improved information flow between firms along the supply chain Stable pricing Small order increments Focused demand on EDI or POS systems and removal of sales incentives 26 Bullwhip Example : Beer Distribution Game’s Supply Chain 2. The Bullwhip Effect Upstream-Order Information 1 day 1 day 2 days Manufacture 2 days Distributor 2 days 2 days Wholesaler 2 days DownstreamShipment 27 Retailer 2 days RFID(Radio Frequency Identification) 3. RFID in SCM ■ Definition – Radio Frequency IDentification(RFID) is a means of identifying a person or object using a radio frequency transmission ■ Key components of RFID – RFID Transponder(RFID tag) • Is the chip that transmit information about the specific unit – RFID reader • handles the communication between the Information System and RFID tag – RFID antenna Tag • activates the RFID tag and transfers data by emitting wireless pulses. Antenna RF Module Reader Host 28 A simple RFID system RFID(Radio Frequency Identification) 3. RFID in SCM ■ RFID Tag Types and frequency 29 RFID(Radio Frequency Identification) 3. RFID in SCM ■ State of RFID technology deployment 30 Advantages Using RFID 3. RFID in SCM ■ Some benefits by embracing RFID – – – – – enhanced visibility along the supply chain accurate and timely asset tracking smart product recycling streamlined or better managed business processes within the company improved productivity by generating the fastest and lowest cost method of acquiring the data Criteria Row-title Before RFID With RFID 16% out of stocks in stores 10-20% increase revenue by 1-3% (at least $400m, 2003) Supply chain cost is 10% of all costs Saving of 6-7%($14bn, 2003) 31 Concerns Surrounding RFID 3. RFID in SCM ■ Fundamental – – – – Not arrived at business benefits (ROI) Limited applications Uncertainty around standards High capital costs ■ Technical – Imperfect reader rates, unproven systems and conflicting problems with assembling low-cost tags – Huge volumes of data that are difficult to manage ■ Organizational – An evolutionary change incorporating legacy systems • how to integrate RFID with existing SCM, CRM and ERP 32 Case Study ■ Domestic Case Click Here 33 Reference ■ O’Brien & Marakas, “Introduction to Information Systems – Fifteenth Edition”, McGraw – Hill, Chapter 7, pp. 265~271 ■ Euiho Suh, “Customer Relationship Management (CRM) in Financial Services”, POSMIT Lab. (POSTECH Strategic Management of Information and Technology Laboratory) ■ Hau L Lee, V Padmanabhan, and Seungjin Whang, “bullwhip Effect (PPT Slide)”, POSMIT Lab. (POSTECH Strategic Management of Information and Technology Laboratory) ■ Jae Sang Moon, “Gaining Competitive Advantages Using RFID in Supply Chain Management (PPT Slide)”, POSMIT Lab. (POSTECH Strategic Management of Information and Technology Laboratory) 34