Question

In: Operations Management

Question:Read Forbes Article about Pepsi Supply Chain (Pepsico's Practical Application of Supply Chain Resilience Strategies) and...

Question:Read Forbes Article about Pepsi Supply Chain (Pepsico's Practical Application of Supply Chain Resilience Strategies) and answer the following Questions: For full credit, total responses should be the equivalent to 3/4-1 page, college writing 1. Which Pepsico products are growing faster than soft drinks (why) and by what percentage? 2 Why do the fastest growing products experience a more complex supply chain? Explain. 3. What are some of the challenges in sourcing and purchasing coconut products? Explain. 4. How does Pepsico source their copackers and why do they source them both internationally and domestically? 5. How docs Pepsico manage their inventory levels, balancing long lcad times with JIT? Explain

Article:

PepsiCo's Practical Application Of Supply Chain Resilience Strategies

PepsiCo, the food and beverage behemoth with $63 billion in annual revenues, is best known for their carbonated soft drinks. But consumers’ preferences have shifted toward more nutritious foods. Organic products, for example, were up 11 percent in 2015 while the overall food market is growing at 3 percent according to a report released by the Organic Trade Association. PepsiCo responded by leveraging its premier health & wellness brands such as Naked Juice and O.N.E. Coconut Water.

These products, however, have much more complex supply chains than PepsiCo’s carbonated beverage value chains. First, these products require ingredients from around the world; these are global rather than regional supply chains. Secondly, many of these require cold chains where products are refrigerated all the way to the store shelves. Finally, consumers interested in nutritious products also tend to want to buy from companies with sustainable supply chain practices.

Tim Rowell, a Senior Manager of Supply Chain Planning working in the chilled supply chain portion for PepsiCo's global nutrition segment, spoke about how his company has adapted to these changes. Mr. Rowell spoke at the APICS2016 conference that took place early this week in Washington D.C.APICS is a professional association for supply chain management known for its research, education, and certification programs.

First of all, to address consumer’s sustainability preferences, PepsiCo has taken several actions: for the Naked Juice product line their packaging is made from other recycled bottles; the bottles are square, allowing the company to squeeze more freight into their shipments, thereby reducing their carbon footprint; their bottling facility and corporate offices are LEEDcertified; and this year they are in the midst of replacing current fleet vehicles with vehicles four times more fuel efficient and are also working to ship more freight by rail.

To address nutritional concerns, Mr. Rowell pointed out that in addition to using natural ingredients like juices and coconut water, “we use non-GMO ingredients everywhere that is possible” and these products are non-GMO Project certified. And for their organic products, which indicates products produced without the use of pesticides, they are USDA Organic certified.

The PepsiCo coconut water supply chain starts with growers in Indonesia and the Philippines, uses copackers in Asia and in the U.S., imports goods through ports in California and New York, provides first line storage in warehouses near the ports, and then redistributes the goods to other distribution centers across North America based on demand. Packaging material is sourced from Europe, Asia, and the Middle East.

A resilient supply chain starts with a network design and practices that help a company avoid events that will disrupt the supply chain. But the coconut supply chain is in a region of the world where typhoons are common. Disruptions are not totally avoidable; Mr. Rowell has seen two typhoons that caused disruptions in the three years he has been managing this supply chain, one of which knocked out one of their copackers for three months.

So in addition to avoidance, it is necessary to develop practices that allow PepsiCo to return to optimal performance as quickly as possible after an adverse event. In one of Mr. Rowell’s slides, he detailed the specific strategies from APICs Risk Management body of knowledge that were being used to help avoid and recover from supply chain disruptions. These included early warning signals, the use of buffers, an appropriate supply chain configuration, and protection of brand equity. “Much of this is common sense,” Mr. Rowell said, “but APICs does offer a good framework.”

From a network design perspective, they built in some capacity buffering by using three copackers in Southeast Asia, with additional copackers in the U.S. to be used if necessary. The copackers in Southeast Asia are far enough apart so that if a typhoon knocks one offline, the others are not likely to be in the zone of destruction.

The communication with copackers, the critical capacity bottleneck, requires active collaboration. This is PepsiCo’s core early warning mechanism. According to Mr. Rowell, early in the relationship with some of these copackers, “weeks could go by when they didn’t produce anything for us and we wouldn't know it.”

PepsiCo had to improve the frequency and quality of the data exchanged. Now the copackers report weekly on how many cases of each SKU they have produced, whether they have enough raw material to continue scheduled production, and reason codes associated with any failures to produce what they committed to produce. “We have a contact person at each copacker tasked with alerting us in hours, rather than at the end of the month,” if a significant disruption occurs.

To support collaborative production scheduling, Pepsico needs to understand both the aggregate capacity of a packer, and line capacity. The company also needs to understand the copackers’ labor strategies, for example what the local holidays are and whether workers have weekends off.

To get this kind of collaboration, PepsiCo has to be a good partner. They lock the production schedule for two months, committing to purchase all the inventory produced over that period. “On occasion copackers can and will deviate from the plan to produce what is needed,” particularly if PepsiCo is willing to allow less production of some SKUs to secure capacity for the SKUs with unexpectedly strong demand.

The U.S. copackers are there to provide backup capacity, for which they have to pay a premium. They can be used to shave that lead time down if necessary. By eliminating the ocean transit, the U.S. copacker can “shave eight weeks of lead time.”

The inventory buffer is set to account for 20 weeks of inventory based on the supply chain lead times – 8 weeks of locked production, 2 weeks to hold and test the products, 8 weeks to transport the goods across the Ocean, and two weeks to redistribute the product once it reaches North America. But this is a balancing game. Buffers can’t be too large or the products lose freshness and risk expiration.

The company also engages in an inventory prebuild to support the peak summer season. This prebuild begins before the standard 20 weeks of lead time to account for the Typhoon season in Southeast Asia. There is a ramp down in production at the end of the peak season, but at times there is negotiation and compromise because “we can’t pull the rug out from under the copackers at the end of the season.”

In terms of protecting brand equity, the sustainability initiatives mentioned earlier in this article serve to protect brand equity. But PepsiCo is also Fair Trade Certified indicating they are fairly treating their partners in their extended supply chain.

In conclusion, this was the most interesting presentation I saw at the APICS conference. But all the presentations were good. I have never been to APICS before, but I was impressed by the depth of the presentations, APICS’ educational content, and their benchmarking services. I certainly hope intend to attend future APICS conferences.

Solutions

Expert Solution

Answer 1. Nutritious foods demand is growing faster than soft drinks. Organic products market raised by 11% in comparison to overall food market which rasied by 3%. Hence the products Pepsoco launched are naked juice and coconut water.

Answer 2. Fastest growing products experience a more complex supply chain because

- the ingredients used in these products are from different parts of the world which require global supply chains instead of regional supply chains.

- Many of these products require cold chains as they need to be refrigerated all through the supply chain process

- Sustainability is preferred by consumers who buy nutritious food hence supply chains have to be kept sustainable.

Answer 3. The challenges in sourcing and purchasing cocomut products are that the supply chain region of coconuts are cyclone prone where typhoons are not avoidable. After such a disaster it becomes a challenge to optimise the performance again to the same level as before. To meet this challenge they have arranged the supply from other parts of the world but getting the supply promtly at the time of need and communication and response from them requires active collaboration.

Answer 4. They source their copackers by early warning mechanism where the copackers report them weekly on the number of SKUs they have produced that week, raw materials update for the production of that week and reasons for the failure to reach the target of production if any. They tend to maintain good partnership with these copackers for work efficiency. International copackers supply the company with exclusive material which helps maintain quality of the brand and domestic copackers are a backup when the international suppliers production halts due to some hinderance. They fill the lead time when required. They also save the transit time and make the delivery available at low cost and less time.


Related Solutions

Mitigation strategies are commonly adopted by supply chain managers in global supply chain management. Discuss how...
Mitigation strategies are commonly adopted by supply chain managers in global supply chain management. Discuss how managers should consider to make better supply chain network design decisions when supply is unstable.
understand and develop production strategies, supply chain and logistics and product distribution strategies
understand and develop production strategies, supply chain and logistics and product distribution strategies
practical application of framework used to assess amazon value chain activities in business activities
practical application of framework used to assess amazon value chain activities in business activities
Identify and explain six sourcing strategies in supply chain management?
Identify and explain six sourcing strategies in supply chain management?
Critique and Analysis of Supply and Demand Article Find a current event article about supply and...
Critique and Analysis of Supply and Demand Article Find a current event article about supply and demand (less than one year old). Preferably the article will be from the UCW database of newspapers and magazines or other reliable source. It need not be a complicated article nor does it necessarily have to mention the words supply and demand. However, it should be interesting to you. The purpose of this exercise is for you to demonstrate that you understand the law...
Discuss the financial implications of supply chain strategies on overall business profitability
Discuss the financial implications of supply chain strategies on overall business profitability
Give two practical examples on applications of predictive analytics in your area (e.g. supply chain or...
Give two practical examples on applications of predictive analytics in your area (e.g. supply chain or IT or Library or etc.). Provide detail explanations. You need to explain why you think predictive analytics can be used in those cases, you do not need to provide data or solve them
Read the below article and answer the following questions, in regards to Operations and Supply Chain...
Read the below article and answer the following questions, in regards to Operations and Supply Chain management: 1) A comparative analysis of two systems (One with a single line and tree servers and a second with 3 waiting lines and three servers) found that the first is approximately three times more effective. Provide and illustrate three reasons for this difference in performance (Keep in mind service rate variability, customers and employers behavior. 2) Amusement park priority in term of customer...
Write a report that analyses supply chain disruption and propose strategies that will enable multinational organisations...
Write a report that analyses supply chain disruption and propose strategies that will enable multinational organisations to address such disruptions. You should identify a recent natural disaster, identify and analyse the effects of the disaster on businesses in that geographical region and, furthermore, propose improvement strategies. As an example, you could choose to analyse the earthquake and tsunami that occurred in Japan in March 2011. In March 2011, an earthquake measuring magnitude 8.9 struck the northeast coast of Japan, triggering...
2. What decisions can be made by a supply chain network design application? • Inventory level...
2. What decisions can be made by a supply chain network design application? • Inventory level and procurement • The number of facilities to build • Production quantity at each facility • Distribution and service links in the network What data is needed for a typical supply chain network design? Transportation cost rate Demand of customers or service locations Fixed cost of building a facility Geographical information of locations There ca be several answers
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT