Supply Chain Redesign to Reduce Safety Stock Levels: Sequencing and Merging Operations
IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management: Special Issue on Supply Chain Management, 49(3), Aug. 2002, 243-257
Posted: 5 May 2020
Date Written: August 1, 2002
Abstract
We investigate the impact of the process of manufacturing and distribution on the safety stock levels in a supply chain. A pipeline hedging method is used to derive a model for estimating the safety stock levels. We propose methods and guidelines to redesign the manufacturing and distribution process to minimize the total safety stock investment for a specified service level. The product family consisting of one product and two products is studied in detail. Conditions and insights for better supply-chain management are developed. These enable us not only to decide when a process redesigning activity is appropriate, but also to suggest the scale and the format of the process redesign. Based on the results obtained, two procedures — re-sequencing and merging — are developed. Finally, we demonstrate how these procedures can be extended to product families consisting of multiple products in a hierarchical manner.
Keywords: supply-chain management, logistics, process redesign, safety stock
JEL Classification: C61, M11, M20
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation