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Improving Supply Chain Agility of a Medical Device Manufacturer Authors: Xinye Bai and Yaniv Rosenberg Advisor: Dr. Daniel Steeneck MIT SCM Research Fest May 21, 2015 Agenda • • • • • • Introduction Motivation Instruments Supply Chain Analysis findings Results - What hinders the Agility? Recommendations The Sponsor Company • Johnson & Johnson (J&J) – Global healthcare company divided into three sectors: Consumer Products, Pharmaceutical and Medical Devices & Diagnostics – 2014 Annual sales of $74.3b • Depuy Orthopaedics, Inc., a franchise of J&J, manufactures orthopedic surgical implants. Consumer, $14.5 MD&D, $27.5 Pharmaceuticals, $32.3 Motivation Surgical instrument SKU proliferation – 12,000 Long lead time from suppliers – 10 weeks Short Lead Time to distributors – 48 hours Inaccurate forecast – MAPE = 65% High inventory levels, Costs – 5 times the annual cycle $$$ Supplier Strategies Distribution Strategies Inventory Strategies Agile Supply Chain Short Lead Times Low inventory Fast Response Agility – Definition The ability to quickly respond to customers’ dynamic demand while keeping inventory levels and cost low. Virtual Demand Sensitive Agile Supply Chain Network Based Process Integration Instrument Supply Chain Information Flow Material Flow Problem / Opportunity Statement Current Situations Lead time Inventory Cost Symptoms Goal Average 8-12 weeks $250 Million 65% SKUs >one year of inventory 8,000 7,000 6,000 Backorders 17% of slow mover 34% of fast mover 5,000 34 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 - Slow Moving SKUs Fast Moving SKUs 7 Instrument Supply Chain Manufacturing Stage 8 Key Findings: Long Lead Time on Manufacturing process 10 Components …… Order Schedule Setup 1 Day -5 Week Assemble Manufacture 1 Day -10 Week • Capacity constraints • SKU manufacturing knowledge barrier • Minimum of quantity (MOQ) requirements 9 Finding: Ordering Discrete Purchase Order: Orders are based on need. Lead time not in contract. Vendor Management Inventory (VMI) (70% of SKUs): Annual order. Forecast and current inventory levels are shared. • DePuy don’t know when they receive the products. • Suppliers don’t have commitment from DePuy on future orders, can’t plan allocate capacity . 10 Instrument Supply Chain Planning Stage 11 Finding: Order Management PO and VMI are not Well Managed: VMI conditions not enforced. Order strategy is not aligned with SKU demand. Monthly Orders 450 400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 0-5 5-10 10-20 VMI Order 20-50 Discrete PO 50-100 100-200 Finding: Inaccurate Forecast 250,000 Actual vs. Forecast 200,000 Over forecasting 150,000 100,000 Sum of Actual Sum of Forecast 50,000 - 4/1/2014 5/1/2014 6/1/2014 MIT SCM ResearchFest 7/1/2014 May 22, 2014 8/1/2014 13 Finding: Data Barrier No history data: New Products accounts for 50% budget 2015 INSTRUMENTS BUDGET Legacy 15% Others(cust om) 1% New Product 47% Converssio n 19% Full Set Orders 18% Hard to Predict: 77% of 12,000 SKUs are legacy products. 77% SKUs Findings – Ordering Practices Back Order 8,000 17% 7,000 6,000 • Reuse of existing POs – cannot capture lead time. • Delay of orders to reach MOQ/discount thresholds. 5,000 4,000 34% 3,000 2,000 1,000 - Slow Moving SKUs MIT SCM ResearchFest May 22, 2014 Fast Moving SKUs 15 Instrument Supply Chain Demand Stage 16 Finding: High demand variation High share of slow movers: 59% of SKUs are <5 units per month Orders pattern uncertainty: orders flow in a volatile manner Information Barrier: No Communications between Distributors; No visibility to inventory at distributors’ warehouses. Instrument Supply Chain Inventory and Delivery Stage 18 Finding: Drivers of High Levels of Inventory 65% of the SKUs are with more than a year worth of supply • • • • • Inaccurate forecast Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ)required by suppliers Lack of transshipment between distributors Lack of visibility across the supply chain Long lead time 19 Results – What Hinders Agility? Information Barriers • No visibility across partners • No standard inventory management • Communications Virtual • No sales feedback • Inaccurate forecast Agile Supply Chain Demand Sensitive Process Integration • Volatile order flow • VMI not managed Network Based • No knowledge sharing • No inventory sharing Material Flow Barriers Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices Suppliers Management Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices Suppliers Management Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices Suppliers Management A. Build a Database of inventory at Distributors D1 D2 D3 D4 ? ? ? ? DePuy Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices Suppliers Management A. Build a Database of inventory at Distributors Benefits A. Close monitor of real time usage. B. Advice Distributors on inventory management – orchestrate the supply chain. C. Validate orders D1 D2 D3 D4 Suppliers Extend the visibility to all players DePuy Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices Suppliers Management A. Build a Database of inventory at Distributors B. Transshipment – Replenishments between distributors I. One network vs. independent warehouses. Benefits: 1. Second source of supply D1 D2 D3 D4 2. Reduced safety stock 3. Fast response, high LOS 4. Less inventory DePuy Yale T. Herer, Michal Tzur, Enver Yucesan (2002) Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices Suppliers Management A. Build a Database of inventory at Distributors B. Transshipment – Replenishments between distributors C. Slow movers managed by DePuy Benefit: D1 1. D2 D3 No need for 37 safety stocks of 7,000 instruments. DePuy D4 Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices Suppliers Management A. Build Build aaDatabase Databaseofofinventory inventory at Distributors B. Transshipment Replenishments between B. – Replenishments between distributors distributors C. Slow movers managed by DePuy C. Slow movers managed by Benefit: DePuy 1. D1 D2 D3 No need for 37 safety stocks of 7,000 instruments. DePuy D4 Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices A. Build a Database of inventory B. Replenishments between distributors C. Slow movers managed by DePuy D1 D2 D3 DePuy D4 Suppliers Management A. Order instruments in product families • Suppliers to identify families to minimize setup times Benefit: I. Reducing MOQ, will be applied at the group level II. Better forecast III. Lower inventory levels Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices A. Build a Database of inventory B. Replenishments between distributors C. Slow movers managed by DePuy D1 D2 D3 DePuy D4 Suppliers Management A. Order instruments in product families Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices A. Build a Database of inventory B. Replenishments between distributors C. Slow movers managed by A. Order instruments in product families B. Dedicated capacity Benefits: I. Gain back in-house flexibilities II. Reduced lead time • DePuy D1 Suppliers Management III. D2 D3 DePuy D4 No capacity competition Lower unit cost How? I. Commitment on minimum order II. Smooth ordering flow Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices A. Build a Database of inventory B. Replenishments between distributors C. Slow movers managed by DePuy D1 D2 D3 DePuy D4 Suppliers Management A. Order instruments in product families B. Dedicated capacity C. Work with suppliers to eliminate/reduce MOQ D. Avoid working with one instrument suppliers Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices A. Build a Database of inventory B. Replenishments between distributors C. Slow movers managed by DePuy D1 D2 D3 DePuy D4 Suppliers Management A. instruments A. Order Order instruments in in product families product families B. Dedicated capacity B. Dedicated capacity Benefits: I. Gain back in-house flexibilities C. Eliminate/Reduce MOQ II. Reduced lead time capacity competition D. •AvoidNoworking with one III. Lower unit cost (15%) instrument supplier How? I. Commitment on minimum order II. Smooth ordering flow Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices A. Build a Database of inventory B. Replenishments between C. Slow movers managed by DePuy D2 D3 DePuy • D4 A. Order instruments in 12,000 SKUs only in joint reconstruction. 14,000 in spine. distributors D1 A. SKU Rationalization Suppliers Management Benefits: I. Reduced complexity II. Improved forecast III. Lower inventory How? I. Incentivize designers for fewer new instruments. II. End of life process – charge for ‘exotic’ instruments product families B. Dedicated capacity C. Eliminate/Reduce MOQ D. Avoid working with one instrument supplier Recommendations Distribution Channel DePuy Practices A. Build a Database of inventory A. SKU Rationalization B. Replenishments between B. Better management of distributors C. Slow movers managed by C. DePuy D2 D3 D4 Consider relaxing LOS when C. servicing distributors D. Avoid working with one Manage legacy and base instruments differently DePuy product families B. Dedicated capacity opening PO E. A. Order instruments in instruments under VMI D. Simplify the process of D1 Suppliers Management Eliminate/Reduce MOQ instrument supplier Questions? MIT SCM ResearchFest May 21, 2015 35