Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 26

OVERVIEW OF LOGISTICS

MANAGEMENT
MODULE 1

Instructor: D. NUERTEY (PhD)


INTRODUCTION
According to Stock and Lambert (2000):
 The logistics process affects almost every sphere of

human activity directly or indirectly.

 Few areas of business have as significant an impact on


a society’s standard of living as logistics.

 Most customers tend to notice logistics only when there


is a problem.
INTRODUCTION CONT.

The following illustrations by the authors show the


importance of Logistics Management:
 a shipment of medical supplies and food intended for

distribution to victims of a natural disaster in a foreign


country cannot be delivered to those in need because
transport equipment and storage facilities are not available
or are inadequate;

 an automobile plant is shut down when a trucker’s strike


halts shipment of the supplies of parts and equipment
essential to operate a just-in-time manufacturing system.
DEFINITION OF
LOGISTICS MANAGEMENT
According to The Council of Logistics Management (CLM):

 ‘“Logistics management is that part of the supply


chain process that plans, implements, and controls
the efficient, effective flow and storage of goods,
services, and related information from the point-of-
origin to the point-of-consumption in order to meet
customers’ requirements’.
Components of Logistics Management

Source: Stock and Lambert (2000)


The Systems Approach to Logistics
The systems approach simply states that:

‘all functions or activities need to be understood in


terms of how they affect, and are affected by, other
elements and activities with which they interact’.
The Systems Approach to Logistics
cont.
 The idea is that, if one looks at actions in isolation, he
or she will not understand the big picture or how such
actions affect, or are affected by other activities.

 In essence, the sum, or outcome of a series of activities,


is greater than its individual parts.
The Systems Approach to Logistics
cont.

For instance, while it might be desirable to have high


inventory levels in order to improve customer order
fulfilment, high inventory levels increase storage costs
such as the risk of obsolescence.
The Systems Approach to Logistics
cont.
 Without considering the impact of decisions on the larger system,
such as the firm or the distribution channel, sub-optimization often
occurs.

 That means, while the individual activities in that system appear to


be operating well, the net result on the total system is relatively poor
performance.

 To understand the opportunities for improvement, and the


implication of those opportunities, the system must be viewed as a
whole.
Factors Underlying the Development of
Interest in Logistics Management

 Cost and Service Impacts


 Profit Squeeze
 Computer and Information Technology
 Competitive Pressures
 Shifts in Channel Power
Cost and Service Impacts
 Identifying the cost and service impacts of the logistics
process was an important first step in achieving recognition
for logistics.
 For example, logistics costs, as a percentage of product value,
for a producer of industrial nondurable goods (raw materials
and industrial products used in the manufacture or end
products), can be much higher than logistics costs for a
pharmaceutical company.
Profit Squeeze

 During the 1980s and 1990s many firms found it increasingly


difficult to maintain traditional profit levels and growth rates
because of increasing domestic and foreign competition,
saturated markets, government regulation, and other factors.

 In many organisations, logistics is one of the most promising


areas where significant cost savings can be achieved. And in
some instances, such cost savings can have a far greater impact
on the firm’s profitability than increasing sales volume would
have.
Computer & Information Technology

 Information technology gave organizations the ability to better


monitor transaction intensive activities such as ordering,
movement of goods.
 Computerized quantitative models for controlling and
optimization
 Increase visibility though IT
◦ MRP,MRP II,DRP,DRP II,JIT link material management from
order processing to inventory management, forecasting and
production.
Competitive Pressures
 Globalization and competition
◦ Local firms versus overseas competitors
◦ Increased offshore buying and selling activities, more
complex and more costly global supply chains

 With rising interest rates and increasing energy costs logistics


received more attention as a cost driver-emphasis on cost
control.
Shifts in Channel Power
 Shifting channel power from manufacturers to retailers,
wholesalers, and distributors has also had a profound
impact on logistics.
 Lower brand loyalty decreases a manufacturer’s power but
increases retailer’s power
LOGISTICS’ ROLE IN THE
ORGANISATION
 Logistics Supports Marketing
 Logistics and Utility Creation
LOGISTICS & MARKETING

 The "four P's" of the marketing mix require that for a firm to be
successful, any marketing effort must integrate the ideas of having
the right product, at the right price, publicized with the proper
promotion, and available in the right place.

 Logistics plays a critical role particularly in support of getting


the product to the right place.
LOGISTICS & UTILITY CREATION

 Form Utility: The value or utility of making materials available in a


completed state is called form utility (not directly of logistics)

 Possession Utility: Possession utility is the value added to a product by


allowing the customer to take ownership of the item. Possession utility is a
result not directly of logistics, but of the offering of credit, quantity
discounts, and delayed payments that enable the customer to assume
possession of the product. The logistics and marketing processes culminate
in possession utility.
LOGISTICS & UTILITY CREATION
 Place Utility: is the value created or added to a product by
making it available for purchase or consumption in the right
place. Logistics is directly responsible for adding place utility
to products as it efficiently moves raw materials, in-process
inventory, and finished goods from point-of-origin to point-of-
consumption.

 Time Utility: is the value created by making something


available at the right time. Products are not as valuable to
customers if they are not available precisely when they are
needed.
LOGISTICS & OTHER FUNCTIONS
 FINANCE: Logistics interfaces with finance in the
planning process and in the analysis of capital
expenditures on investments in building and
equipment to support distribution, transportation,
warehousing, information technology and related
issues.
LOGISTICS & OTHER FUNCTIONS
cont.
 ACCOUTING: Logistics interfaces with accounting
in establishing logistics costs (transportation,
distribution, storage for various products, customers
and distribution channels).
 Logistics also requires information from accounting

regarding budgets and actual expenditures.


LOGISTICS & OTHER FUNCTIONS
cont.
 RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT: Logistics should be involved
with research and development, product engineering, packaging
engineering and related functions in the new product team.

 It is vital for the logistics area to be represented very early in the


new product development process.

 This is critical in terms of designing the proper distribution


channel, anticipating needs for inventory build-up, ensuring the
availability of materials for production, and properly configuring the
packaging for maximum efficiency and production within the
distribution channel.
LOGISTICS & OTHER FUNCTIONS
cont.
 PRODUCTION/OPERATIONS: Logistics must work closely with
production and operations in a number of capacities.
 First logistics often receives order releases for materials from
production, and it needs to ensure that the items required are
ordered, transported and received on a timely basis.
 Storage may also need to be arranged.
 Logistics often manages the flow of materials or work in process
within the organization.
 Logistics must also work with production in terms of stocking and
shipping the finished products as it is available.
LOGISTICS AS A PROPRIETARY ASSET
 An efficient and economical logistics system is similar to a
tangible asset on a corporation’s books.

 Logistics competency cannot be readily duplicated by the


firm’s competitors.

 If a company can provide its customers with products quickly


and at low cost, it can gain market share advantages over its
competitors.
LOGISTICS AND ECONOMIC TRANSACTIONS

 Logistics also supports the movement and flow of many


economic transactions; it is an important activity in facilitating
the sale of virtually all goods and services.

 To understand this role from a systems perspective, consider


that if goods do not arrive on time, customers cannot buy
them. If goods do not arrive in the proper place, or in the
proper condition, no sale can be made and thus all economic
activities throughout the supply chain will suffer.
END OF PRESENTATION

You might also like