Channel coordination

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Channel coordination (or supply chain coordination) aims at improving supply chain performance by aligning the plans and the objectives of individual enterprises. It usually focuses on inventory management and ordering decisions in distributed inter-company settings. Channel coordination models may involve multi-echelon inventory theory, multiple decision makers, asymmetric information, as well as recent paradigms of manufacturing, such as mass customization, short product life-cycles, outsourcing and delayed differentiation. The theoretical foundations of the coordination are based chiefly on the contract theory.

Contents

Overview

The decentralized decision making in supply chains leads to a dilemma situation which results in a suboptimal overall performance called double marginalization [1]. Recently, partners in permanent supply chains tend to extend the coordination of their decisions in order to improve the performance for all of the participants. Some practical realizations of this approach are Collaborative Planning, Forecasting, and Replenishment (CPFR), Vendor Managed Inventory (VMI) and Quick Response (QR).

The theory of channel coordination aims at supporting the performance optimization by developing arrangements for aligning the different objectives of the partners. These are called coordination mechanisms or schemes, which control the flows of information, materials (or service) and financial assets along the chains. In general, a contracting scheme should consist of the following components [2]:

The appropriate planning methods are necessary for optimizing the behavior of the production. The second component should support the information visibility and transparency both within and among the partners and facilitates the realization of real-time enterprises. Finally, the third component should guarantee that the partners act upon to the common goals of the supply chain.

The general method for studying coordination consists of two steps. At first, one assumes a central decision maker with complete information who solves the problem. The result is a first-best solution which provides bound on the obtainable system-wide performance objective. In the second step one regards the decentralized problem and designs such a contract protocol that approaches or even achieves the performance of the first-best.

A contract is said to coordinate the channel, if thereby the partners' optimal local decisions lead to optimal system-wide performance[3]. Channel coordination is achievable in several simple models, but it is more difficult (or even impossible) in more realistic cases and in the practice. Therefore the aim is often only the achievement of mutual benefit compared to the uncoordinated situation.

Another widely studied alternative direction for channel coordination is the application of some negotiation protocols [4][5]. Such approaches apply iterative solution methods, where the partners exchange proposals and counter-proposals until an agreement is reached. For this reason, this approach is commonly referred to as collaborative planning. The negotiation protocols can be characterized according to the following criteria:

An also commonly used instrument for aligning plans of different decision makers is the application of some auction mechanisms. However, “auctions are most applicable in pure market interactions at the boundaries of a supply chain but not within a supply chain″[4], therefore they are usually not considered as channel coordination approaches.

Characteristics of coordination schemes

There are several classifications of channel coordination contracts, but they are not complete, and the considered classes are not disjoint [6]. Instead of a complete classification, a set of aspects are enumerated below which generalizes the existing taxonomies by allowing classification along multiple viewpoints[4][7].

Problem characteristics

Decentralization characteristics

Contract types

There are many variants of the contracts, some widespread forms are briefly described below. Besides, there exist several combinations and customized approaches, too.

Two-part tariff

In this case the customer pays not only for the purchased goods, but in addition a fixed amount called franchise fee per order. This is intended to compensate the supplier for his fixed setup cost.

Sales rebate

This contract specifies two prices and a quantity threshold. If the order size is below the threshold, the customer pays the higher price, and if it is above, she pays a lower price for the units above the threshold.

Quantity discount

This resembles to the sales rebate contract, but there is no threshold defined, but the customer pays a wholesale price inversely proportional to the order quantity.

Buyback/return

With these types of contracts the supplier offers that it will buy back the remaining obsolete inventory at a discounted price. This supports the sharing of inventory risk between the partners. A variation of this contract is the backup agreement, where the customer gives a preliminary forecast and then makes an order less or equal to the forecasted quantity. If the order is less, it must also pay a proportional penalty for the remaining obsolete inventory. Buyback agreements are widespread in the newspaper, book, CD and fashion industries.

Quantity flexibility

In this case the customer gives a preliminary forecast and then it can give fixed order in an interval around the forecast. Such contracts are widespread in several markets, e.g., among the suppliers of the European automotive industry.

Revenue sharing

With revenue sharing the customer pays not only for the purchased goods, but also shares a given percentage of her revenue with the supplier. This contract is successfully used in video cassette rental and movie exhibition fields. It can be proved, that the optimal revenue sharing and buyback contracts are equivalent, i.e., they generate the same profits for the partners.

Options

The option contracts are originated from the product and stock exchange. With an option contract, the customer can give fixed orders in advance, as well as buy rights to purchase more (call option) or return (put option) products later. The options can be bought at a predefined option price and executed at the execution price. This approach is a generalization of some previous contract types.

VMI contract

This contract can be used when the buyer does not order, only communicates the forecasts and consumes from the inventory filled by the supplier. The VMI contract specifies that not only the consumed goods should be paid, but also the forecast imprecision, i.e., the differece between the estimated and realized demand. In this way, the buyer is inspired to increase the forecast quality, and the risk of market uncertainty is shared between the partners.

See also

References

  1. Tirole, J.: The Theory of Industrial Organization. MIT Press, 1988. (ISBN 0-262-20071-6)
  2. Li, X., Wang, Q.: Coordination Mechanisms of Supply Chain Systems. Invited Review. European Journal of Operational Research, 179(1), pp. 1-16, 2007.
  3. Cachon, G.P.: Supply Chain Coordination with Contracts. In de Kok, A.G., Graves, S.C. (eds): Supply Chain Management: Design, Coordination and Cooperation. Handbooks in Operations Research and Management Science, 11, Elsevier, pp. 229-339, 2003. (ISBN 0-444-51328-0)
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Stadtler, H.: A Framework for Collaborative Planning and State-of-the-Art. OR Spectrum, 31, pp. 5-30, 2009.
  5. Albrecht, M.: Supply Chain Coordination Mechanisms Springer, 2010. (ISBN 978-3-642-02832-8).
  6. Tsay, A. A., Nahmias, S., Agrawal, N.: Modeling Supply Chain Contracts: A Review. In: Tayur, S., Ganeshan, R., Magazine, M. (eds.): Quantitative Models for Supply Chain Management. International Series in Operations Research and Management Science, 17, Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp. 299-336, 1999. (ISBN 0-792-38344-3)
  7. Egri, P.: Coordination in production networks. PhD Thesis, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, 2008.
  8. Sethi, S.P., Yan, H., Zhang, H.: Inventory and Supply Chain Management With Forecast Updates. Springer, 2005. (ISBN 1-402-08123-5 )

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