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Enterprise Resource Planning




                    notes          The concept of DRP very closely mimics the logic of MRP. As with MRP, gross requirements consist
                                   of actual customer orders, forecasted demand, or some combination of both; scheduled receipts
                                   are the goods the distributor expects to receive from orders that already have been released, while
                                   goods that already are received and entered into inventory constitute the on-hand inventory
                                   balance. Subtracting scheduled receipts and on-hand inventory from gross requirements yields
                                   net requirements. Based upon the distributor’s lot-sizing policy and receiving behavior, planned
                                   order receipts are generated. Firms may order only what they need for the next planning period
                                   or for a designated time period. Known as economic order quantity (EOQ), this involves a lot size
                                   based on a costing model. Alternatively, firms may be limited to multiples of a lot size simply
                                   because the supplying firm packages or palletizes their goods in standard quantities. Also, some
                                   distributors may require some time interval between the arrival of goods on their docks and
                                   the entry of the goods into the inventory system. For example, a firm may have a staging area
                                   where goods remain for an average time period while awaiting quality or quantity verification.
                                   Hence, planned order receipt may be during the planning period when the goods are needed,
                                   or they may need to be received earlier depending on time requirements. Order release is then
                                   determined by offsetting the planned order receipt by the supplier’s lead time.



                                     Did u know?  The  Master  Production  Schedule  serves  as  the  basis  for  all  further  output
                                     information from MRP.

                                   4.8 physical Distribution management

                                   There are many decisions that must be taken, when a company organizes a channel or network
                                   of intermediaries, who take responsibility for the management of goods as they move from the
                                   producer to the consumer. Each channel member must be carefully selected and the company
                                   must decide what type of relationship it seeks with each of its intermediate partners. Having
                                   established such a network, the organization must next consider how these goods can be efficiently
                                   transferred, in the physical sense, from the place of manufacture to the place of consumption.
                                   Physical distribution management (PDM) is concerned with ensuring the product is in the right
                                   place at the right time.

                                   It is now recognized that PDM is a critical area of overall supply chain management.
                                   Business logistical techniques can be applied to PDM so that costs and customer satisfaction are
                                   optimized. There is little point in making large savings in the cost of distribution if in the long
                                   run, sales are lost because of customer dissatisfaction.
                                   Similarly, it does not make economic sense to provide a level of service that is not required by
                                   the customer but leads to an erosion of profits. This cost/service balance is a basic dilemma that
                                   physical distribution managers face.
                                   The reason for the growing importance of PDM is the increasingly demanding nature of the
                                   business environment. In the past it was not uncommon for companies to hold large inventories
                                   of raw materials and components. Although industries and individual firms differ widely in
                                   their stockholding policies, nowadays, stock levels are kept to a minimum wherever possible.
                                   Holding stock is wasting working capital for it is not earning money for the company. To think
                                   of the logistical process merely in terms of transportation is much too narrow a view. Physical
                                   distribution  management  (PDM)  is  concerned  with  the  flow  of  goods  from  the  receipt  of  an
                                   order until the goods are delivered to the customer. In addition to transportation, PDM involves
                                   close  liaison  with  production  planning,  purchasing,  order  processing,  material  control  and
                                   warehousing. All these areas must be managed so that they interact efficiently with each other
                                   to provide the level of service that the customer demands and at a cost that the company can
                                   afford.






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