Reference no: EM132152451
CASE: SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
Pierre’s Kitchen
Pierre’s Kitchen manufactures utensils and gadgets for the cooking enthusiast. Pierre’s products are sold throughout North America, predominantly through kitchen and home specialty stores. Like most producers and suppliers of consumer specialty products, Pierre’s must cope with large seasonal variation in demand. This is easily seen to relate to seasonal variation at the retail stores,
One of Pierre’s top-selling product families is its line of 78 different gourmet kitchen knives. The knives have received praise for their comfort in the hand and their ability to hold an edge. Pierre’s credits the popularity of its knives to the steel used in their construction. Pierre’s has always utilized the finest Swedish steel for its blades. The steel used in those knives is the source for nearly all of purchasing manager Robin Benton’s aggravation.
Robin orders steel for knives at the beginning of each month. By the time it is transported to port, shipped to the US, and trucked to the Pierre’s Kitchen plant, it takes just over five weeks to get it. Robin determines order quantities by projecting retail demand for each knife model over the next month, translating those forecasts into steel requirements, and then summing the requirements across the 78 knife models. That forecast for each knife model is based on the sales that occurred the previous month. Pierre’s supplier of steel recently threatened to increase its prices during the next contract period to cover increasing expenses it claims are the result of the wide fluctuations in order quantities from Pierre’s.
Robin has examined her forecasts and orders for knife steel and admits that the orders fluctuate dramatically from month to month. This results from fluctuations in individual store demand, which in turn results from promotions and sales at the store level. When confronted with this information, sales manager Jaylen Cooper responded, “It’s true that sales at individual stores fluctuate, but when I look at month-to-month sales across an entire chain of retail stores, the demand only fluctuates about 10 percent. The only exception to this is the inventory build-up at Christmas time.” Robin’s examination of the actual sales data confirmed Jaylen’s report.
I. Brief Summary of the Case
II. Statement of the Problem (open-ended question)
III. Situational Analysis (cause and effect/opposing forces/problem tree/SWOT/etc.)
IV. Alternative Courses of Actions (at least 3 with corresponding advantages and disadvantages and computations using QA tools, if applicable)
V. Recommendation
VI. Implementation Plan
VII. Contingency Plan