Order fulfillment

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Delivery lead time is the blue bar, manufacturing time is the whole bar, the green bar is the difference between the two.

Order fulfillment (in British English order fulfilment) is in the most general sense the complete process from point of sales inquiry to delivery of a product to the customer. Sometimes Order fulfillment is used to describe the more narrow act of distribution or the logistics function, however, in the broader sense it refers to the way firms respond to customer orders.

Classification

The first research towards defining order fulfillment strategies was published by Hans Wortmann,[1] and was continued by Hal Mather[2] in his discussion of the P:D ratio, whereby P is defined as the production lead-time, i.e. how long it takes to manufacture a product, and D is the demand lead-time. D can be viewed as:

1.The lead time quoted by the firm to the customer

2.The lead time the customer wishes it was

3.The competitive lead time

Based on comparing P and D, a firm has several basic strategic order fulfillment options:[3]

  • Engineer-to-Order (ETO) - (D>>P) Here, the product is designed and built to customer specifications; this approach is most common for large construction projects and one-off products, such as Formula 1 cars.
  • Build-to-Order (BTO); syn: Make-to-Order (MTO) - (D>P) Here, the product is based on a standard design, but component production and manufacture of the final product is linked to the order placed by the final customer's specifications; this strategy is typical for high-end motor vehicles and aircraft.
  • Assemble-to-Order (ATO); syn: Assemble-to-request - (D<P) Here, the product is built to customer specifications from a stock of existing components. This assumes a modular product architecture that allows for the final product to be configured in this way; a typical example for this approach is Dell's approach to customizing its computers.
  • Make-to-Stock (MTS); syn: Build-to-Forecast (BTF) - (D=0) Here, the product is built against a sales forecast, and sold to the customer from finished goods stock; this approach is common in the grocery and retail sectors.
  • Digital Copy (DC) - (D=0, P=0) Where products are digital assets and inventory is maintained with a single digital master. Copies are created on-demand, downloaded and saved on customers' storage devices, such as research papers.

Processes

In the broader sense, the possible processes in a logistic-production system are:[4]

  • Product Inquiry - Initial inquiry about offerings, visit to the web-site, catalog request
  • Sales Quote - Budgetary or availability quote
  • Order Configuration - Where ordered items need selection of options or order lines need to be compatible with each other
  • Order Booking - The formal order placement or closing of the deal (issuing by the customer of a Purchase Order)
  • Order Acknowledgment / Confirmation - Confirmation that the order is booked and/or received
  • Invoicing / Billing - The presentment of the commercial invoice / bill to the customer
  • Order Sourcing / Planning - Determining the source / location of item(s) to be shipped
  • Order Changes - Changes to orders, if needed
  • Order Processing - Process step where the distribution center or warehouse is responsible to fill order (receive and stock inventory, pick, pack and ship orders).
  • Shipment - The shipment and transportation of the goods
  • Delivery - The delivery of the goods to the consignee / customer
  • Settlement - The payment of the charges for goods / services / delivery
  • Returns - In case the goods are unacceptable / not required

Strategic Importance

The order fulfillment strategy also determines the de-coupling point in the supply chain,[5] which describes the point in the system where the "push" (or forecast-driven) and "pull" (or demand-driven see Demand chain management) elements of the supply chain meet. The decoupling point always is an inventory buffer that is needed to cater for the discrepancy between the sales forecast and the actual demand (i.e. the forecast error). Typically, the higher the P:D ratio, the more the firm relies on forecasts and inventories. Hal Mather suggests three ways to tackle this "planning dilemma":[2]

1.Improve forecasting accuracy

2.Provide for flexibility

3.Build a process to recognize forecasting errors and quickly correct production planning

It has become increasing necessary to move the de-coupling point in the supply chain to minimize the dependence on forecast and to maximize the reactionary or demand-driven supply chain elements. This initiative in the distribution elements of the supply chain corresponds to the Just-in-time initiatives pioneered by Toyota.[2]

The order fulfillment strategy has also strong implications on how firms customize their products and deal with product variety.[6] Strategies that can be used to mitigate the impact of product variety include modularity, option bundling, late configuration, and build to order (BTO) strategies—all of which are generally referred as mass customization strategies.

References

  1. J.C. Wortmann, Chapter: "A classification scheme for master production schedule", in Efficiency of Manufacturing Systems, C. Berg, D. French and B. Wilson (eds) New York, Plenum Press 1983
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Hal Mather, Competitive manufacturing, Prentice Hall 1988
  3. Fogarty, Blackstone, Hoffman. Production & Inventory Management 2nd ed. South-Western Publishing Co. 1991 p.2-3 ISBN 0-538-07461-2
  4. Keely L. Croxton. (2003) "The Order Fulfillment Process", International Journal of Logistics Management, The, Vol. 14 Iss: 1, pp.19 - 32
  5. Oden, H. W., Langenwalter, G. A., Lucier, R. A. (1993) Handbook of material and capacity requirements planning McGraw-Hill, Inc.
  6. Holweg, M. and Pil, F.K. (2001) "Successful build-to-order strategies start with the customer." MIT Sloan Management Review, 43. pg 74-83