Logistics: Business Logistics: An Area of Management That Has Been Observed To Absorb More Than
Logistics: Business Logistics: An Area of Management That Has Been Observed To Absorb More Than
Business Logistics: An area of management that has been observed to absorb more than
30% of the sales dollar for some firms, that is an essential element in meeting customer
goals, and that can be essential to a firms competitive strategy.
Transportation
Inventory maintenance
Order processing
Purchasing
Warehousing
Materials handling
Packaging
Customer service standards, and
Product scheduling
Logistics is the process of planning, implementing, and controlling the efficient, cost-effective
flow and storage of raw materials, in-process inventory, finished goods and related information
from point of origin to point of consumption for the purpose of conforming to customer
requirements.
The mission of logistics is to get the right goods or services to the right place, at the
right time, and in the desired condition, while making the greatest contribution to the
firm.
Customer Service standards set the level of output and degree of readiness to which the
logistics system must respond. Logistics costs increase in proportion to the level of
customer service provided. Setting very high service requirements can force logistics
costs to exceedingly high levels.
Transportation and inventories are the primary cost-absorbing logistics activities.
Experience has shown that each will represent one-half to two-thirds of total logistics
costs.
It is Transportation that adds place value to the products and services, whereas
Inventory adds time value.
Transportation is essential because no modern firm can operate without providing for
the movement of its raw materials and/or finished products
Logistics is about creating value – value for customers and suppliers of the firm, and
value for the firm’s stakeholders. Value in logistics is expressed in terms of time and
place.
Products and services have no value unless they are in the possession of the customers
when (time) and where (place) they wish to consume them.
Customer service broadly includes inventory availability, speed of delivery, and order
filling speed and accuracy. The cost associated with these factors increase at a higher rate
as customer service levels is raised.
Reformulating the logistics strategy is usually needed when service levels are changed
due to competitive forces, policy revisions, or arbitrary service goals different from those
on which the logistics strategy was based originally.
Inventory Decisions
Refer to the manner in which inventories are managed. Allocating (pushing) inventories
to the stocking points versus pulling them into stocking points through inventory
replenishment rules represents two strategies.
Selective location of various items in the product line in plant, regional or field
warehouses or managing inventory levels by various methods or inventory control are
others.
Transportation Decisions
Transport decisions can involve mode selection, shipment size, and routing or scheduling.
These decisions are influenced by the proximity of warehouses to customers and plants,
which in turn, influence warehouse location. Inventory levels also respond to transport
decisions through shipment size.
Customer service levels, facility location, inventory, and transportation are major
planning areas because of the impact that decisions in these areas have on the
profitability, cash flow, and return on investment of the firm.
A firm producing high valued goods (such as machine tools and computers) with logistics
costs being a fraction of total costs will likely give little attention to the optimality of
logistics strategy.
However, when logistics costs are high, as they can be in the case of packaged industrial
chemicals and food products, logistics strategy is a key concern.
Classifying Products
Consumer Products are those that are directed to ultimate consumers.
A three-fold consumer classification has been suggested
Convenience Products are those goods and services that consumers purchase frequently,
immediately, and with limited comparative shopping. Typical products are banking
services, tobacco items, and many foodstuffs.
These products generally require wide distribution through many outlets. Distribution
costs are typically high but more than justified by the increased sales potential that is
brought about by this wide and extensive distribution.
Customer service levels are expressed in terms of product availability and accessibility.
(Examples are vending machines for Pepsi-cola etc., and telephone kiosks all over the
place).
Shopping Products are those for which customers are willing to seek and compare:
shopping many locations, comparing price and quality, performance, and making a
purchase only after careful deliberation. Typical products in this category are fashion
clothes, automobiles, and home furnishings.
Because of the customer’s willingness to shop around, the number of stocking points is
substantially reduced as compared with convenience goods and services. Distribution
costs for such suppliers are somewhat lower than convenience goods.
Specialty Products are those for which buyers are willing to expend a substantial effort
and often to wait a significant amount of time in order to require them. Buyers seek out
particular types and brands of goods and services. Examples can be almost any type of
good ranging from fine foods to custom made automobiles or a service such as
management consultancy advice. Because buyers insist on particular brands, distribution
is centralized and customer service levels are not as high as for convenience and
shopping products. Physical distribution costs can be the lowest of any product category.
Because of this, many firms will attempt to create a brand preference for their product
line.
Industrial Products are those that are directed to individuals or organizations that use
them to produce other goods or services. Their classification is quite different from
consumer products.
Traditionally, industrial goods and services have been classified according to the extent
to which they enter the production process. For example, there are goods that are part of
the finished product, such as raw materials and component parts; there are goods that are
used in the manufacturing process, such as buildings and equipment; and there are goods
that do not enter the process directly, such as supplies and business services. Although
this classification is valuable in preparing a selling strategy, it is not clear if it is useful in
planning a physical distribution strategy.
Industrial buyers do not seem to show preferences for different service levels for different
product classes. This simply means that traditional product classification for industrial
products may not be useful for identifying typical logistics channels, as is the
classification of consumer products.
Product Characteristics
The most important characteristics of the product that can influence logistics strategy are
the attributes of the product itself – weight, volume, value, perishability, flammability,
and substitutability. When observed in various combinations, they are an indication of the
need for warehousing, inventories, materials handling, and order processing.
Value-Weight Ratio Storage costs are particularly sensitive to value. When value is
expressed as a ratio to weight, some of the obvious cost trade-offs emerge that are useful
in planning the logistics system.
Products that have low value-weight ratios (coal ore, and sand) have low storage costs
but high movement costs as a percentage of their sales price.
Inventory carrying costs are computed as a percentage of the product’s value. Low
product value means low storage cost because inventory-carrying cost is the dominant
factor in storage cost.
Transportation costs on the other hand, are pegged to weight. When the value of the
product is low, transportation costs represent a high proportion of the sales value.
High value- weight ratio products (electronic equipment, jewelry, and musical
instruments) show the opposite pattern with higher storage and lower transport costs.
If the product has a high value-weight ratio, minimize the amount of inventory
maintained is a typical reaction.
Transportation Fundamentals
Transportation usually represents the most important single element in logistics costs in
most firms. Freight movement has been observed to absorb between one-third and two-
thirds of total logistics costs.
Transportation service may be viewed in terms of characteristics that are basic to all
services: price, average transit time, transit time variability, and loss and damage
Price (cost) of transport service to a shipper is simply the line-haul rate for transporting
goods plus any accessorial or terminal charges for additional services.
Transit time and Variability Average delivery time and delivery time variability rank at
the top as important transportation performance characteristics.
Delivery (transit) time is usually referred to as the average time it takes for a shipment to
move from its point of origin to its destination.
For purposes of comparing carrier performance, it is best to measure transit time door to
door, even if more than one mode is involved.
Variability refers to the usual differences that occur between shipments by various
modes.
Transit time variability is a measure of uncertainty in carrier performance.
Single-Service Choices
Rail the railroad is basically a long hauler and slow mover of raw materials (coal,
lumber, chemicals) and of low valued manufactured products (food, paper, and wood
products) and prefers to move shipment sizes of at least a full carload.
Air Air-service dependability can be rated as good under normal operating conditions,
and air transport has a distinct advantage in terms of loss and damage.
Water transportation is limited in scope for several reasons. Domestic water service is
confined to the inland waterway system, which requires shippers to be located on the
waterways or to use another transportation mode in combination with water.
Availability and dependability of water service are greatly influenced by weather.
Pipeline to date, pipeline transportation offers a very limited range of services and
capabilities.
The most economically feasible products to move by pipeline are crude oil and refined
petroleum products. However, there is some experimentation with moving solid products
suspended in liquids, called ”slurry”, or containing the solid products in cylinders that in
turn move in a liquid.
Product movement by pipeline is very slow, only about 3 or 4 miles per hour. This
slowness is tempered by the fact that products move 24 hours a day and 7 days a week.
Cost of service, average transit time (speed), and transit-time variability (dependability)
can serve as the basis for modal choice.
Vehicle Routing
Because transportation costs typically range between 1/3 and 2/3 of total logistics costs,
improving efficiency through the maximum utilization of transportation equipment and
personnel is a major concern. The length of time that goods are in transit reflects on the
number of shipments that can be made with a vehicle within a given period of time and
on the total transportation costs for all shipments. To reduce transportation costs and also
to improve customer service, finding the best paths that a vehicle should follow through a
network of roads, rail lines, shipping lanes, or air navigational routes that will minimize
time or distance is a frequent decision problem.
Although there are many variations of routing problems, they can be reduced to a few
basic types.
There is the problem of finding a path through a network where the origin point is
different from the destination point.
There is a similar problem where there are multiple origin and destination points.
And there is the problem of routing when origin and destination points are the same.
These restrictions add a great deal of complexity to the problem and make it very difficult
to find an optimal solution. However good solution can be found using heuristic
procedures.
Inventory Strategy
The Storage and Handling System
In contrast with transportation, storage and handling of product takes place primarily at
the nodal points in the supply chain network. Storage has been referred to as
transportation at zero miles per hour. The costs of warehousing and materials-handling
activities absorb 26 percent of a firm’s logistics dollar.