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Enterprise Resource Planning




                    notes          MRP II systems have been implemented in most manufacturing industries. Some industries need
                                   specialised functions e.g. lot traceability in regulated manufacturing such as pharmaceuticals
                                   or food. Other industries can afford to disregard facilities required by others e.g. the tableware
                                   industry has few starting materials – mainly clay – and does not need complex materials planning.
                                   Capacity planning is the key to success in this as in many industries, and it is in those that MRP
                                   II is less appropriate.




                                      Task     Would you suggest the basic difference of MRP and MRP-II techniques?


                                   4.7 Distribution requirement planning


                                   A supply channel is composed of three structures. At one end of the channel is the manufacturer.
                                   The manufacturer focuses on the development and production of products and originates the
                                   distribution process. The terminal point in the channel is the retailer who sells goods and services
                                   directly to the customer for their personal, non-business use. In between the two lies a process
                                   called distribution, which is more difficult to define. One involved in the distribution process is
                                   labeled a “distributor.” The APICS Dictionary describes a distributor as “a business that does not
                                   manufacture its own products but purchases and resells these products. Such a business usually
                                   maintains a finished goods inventory.” The proliferation of alternative distribution forms, such
                                   as warehouse clubs, catalog sales, marketing channel specialists, and mail order, have blurred
                                   functional distinctions and increased the difficulty of defining both the distribution process and
                                   the term distributor.

                                   One  ultimately  could  maintain  that  distributors  include  all  enterprises  that  sell  products  to
                                   retailers and other merchants—and/or to industrial, institutional, and commercial users—but
                                   do not sell in significant amounts to the ultimate customer. According to this definition, most
                                   companies that are involved with the disbursement of raw materials and finished products belong,
                                   in one sense or another, to the distribution industry. By adopting this definition, distribution is
                                   expanded to cover nearly every form of materials management and physical distribution activity
                                   performed by channel constituents, except for the processes of manufacturing and retailing.

                                   Distribution  involves  a  number  of  activities  centered  around  a  physical  flow  of  goods  and
                                   information. At one time the term distribution applied only to the outbound side of supply chain
                                   management, but it now includes both inbound and outbound. Management of the inbound flow
                                   involves these elements:
                                   1.   Material planning and control
                                   2.   Purchasing

                                   3.   Receiving
                                   4.   Physical management of materials via warehousing and storage
                                   5.   Materials handling
                                   Management of the outbound flow involves these elements:

                                   1.   Order processing
                                   2.   Warehousing and storage
                                   3.   Finished goods management
                                   4.   Material handling and packaging






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