Proactive inventory policy intervention to mitigate supply chain disruptions

Risk management is one of the critical issues in supply chain management. Supply chain disruptions negatively impact on the performance and the business continuity of a firm, and the disruptions should be managed proactively if possible. One of the approaches for supply disruption management is to r...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kurano, Takako
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/6049
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spelling ndltd-WATERLOO-oai-uwspace.uwaterloo.ca-10012-60492013-01-08T18:54:42ZKurano, Takako2011-08-02T18:10:25Z2011-08-02T18:10:25Z2011-08-02T18:10:25Z2011http://hdl.handle.net/10012/6049Risk management is one of the critical issues in supply chain management. Supply chain disruptions negatively impact on the performance and the business continuity of a firm, and the disruptions should be managed proactively if possible. One of the approaches for supply disruption management is to raise the level of inventory: supply disruptions can be reduced by simply increasing the safety stock level. However, inventory costs will be increased at the same time. Therefore it is assumed that having extra safety stock when and where needed is better than keeping a high safety stock all of the time. In this thesis, the concept of dynamic inventory management by supplier behavior monitoring is suggested and explored. Key to the concept is the assumption that out-of-control situations at a supplier can be causal triggers for stockouts, and that these triggers can be potentially predicted by using statistical monitoring tools. In the suggested approach, the statistical process control approach of using run tests is employed to monitor and evaluate the supplier behavior. The supplier’s yield rate is monitored as the performance measure, and the receiver’s safety stock level is increased when the supplier’s performance is detected to be potentially out-of-control (or about to reach an out-of-control situation). The simulation results under different yield rates indicate that stockouts can be reduced by monitoring the supplier behavior and dynamically adjusting inventory policy when production capacity is relatively loose and enough variability can be seen in the performance measure.enproactive inventory interventionsupply chainProactive inventory policy intervention to mitigate supply chain disruptionsThesis or DissertationManagement SciencesMaster of Applied ScienceManagement Sciences
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic proactive inventory intervention
supply chain
Management Sciences
spellingShingle proactive inventory intervention
supply chain
Management Sciences
Kurano, Takako
Proactive inventory policy intervention to mitigate supply chain disruptions
description Risk management is one of the critical issues in supply chain management. Supply chain disruptions negatively impact on the performance and the business continuity of a firm, and the disruptions should be managed proactively if possible. One of the approaches for supply disruption management is to raise the level of inventory: supply disruptions can be reduced by simply increasing the safety stock level. However, inventory costs will be increased at the same time. Therefore it is assumed that having extra safety stock when and where needed is better than keeping a high safety stock all of the time. In this thesis, the concept of dynamic inventory management by supplier behavior monitoring is suggested and explored. Key to the concept is the assumption that out-of-control situations at a supplier can be causal triggers for stockouts, and that these triggers can be potentially predicted by using statistical monitoring tools. In the suggested approach, the statistical process control approach of using run tests is employed to monitor and evaluate the supplier behavior. The supplier’s yield rate is monitored as the performance measure, and the receiver’s safety stock level is increased when the supplier’s performance is detected to be potentially out-of-control (or about to reach an out-of-control situation). The simulation results under different yield rates indicate that stockouts can be reduced by monitoring the supplier behavior and dynamically adjusting inventory policy when production capacity is relatively loose and enough variability can be seen in the performance measure.
author Kurano, Takako
author_facet Kurano, Takako
author_sort Kurano, Takako
title Proactive inventory policy intervention to mitigate supply chain disruptions
title_short Proactive inventory policy intervention to mitigate supply chain disruptions
title_full Proactive inventory policy intervention to mitigate supply chain disruptions
title_fullStr Proactive inventory policy intervention to mitigate supply chain disruptions
title_full_unstemmed Proactive inventory policy intervention to mitigate supply chain disruptions
title_sort proactive inventory policy intervention to mitigate supply chain disruptions
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/6049
work_keys_str_mv AT kuranotakako proactiveinventorypolicyinterventiontomitigatesupplychaindisruptions
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