Sourcing procurement

Published on January 2017 | Categories: Documents | Downloads: 42 | Comments: 0 | Views: 215
of 3
Download PDF   Embed   Report

Comments

Content

Sourcing Strategies
A sourcing strategy allows a supply chain planner to gather all possible replenishment scenarios and apply them globally, or to any item, category of items, or organization. This allows the enterprise, or an individual organization, to adopt the most efficient method of fulfilling net requirements. Oracle Supply Chain Planning minimizes the effort required to set up, implement, and maintain this strategy with sourcing rules and bills of distribution.

Sourcing Rules and Bills of Distribution
Sourcing rules and bills of distribution determine the movement of materials between organizations in your global enterprise; these organizations include your suppliers and the materials include those items made at the manufacturing organizations. They both describe sourcing supply; for any organization, they answer the question "where do I get part A from?". (They never say "where do I send part A to".) Sourcing rules answer this question for one organization or for all organizations in the enterprise. Bills of distribution can define a strategy for multiple organizations. Sourcing rules and bills of distribution both specify date-effective sourcing strategies, combining replenishment sources with split allocation percentages and rankings. A replenishment source is:
o o o

an inter-organization transfer (Transfer From) the replenished organization that manufactures the item (Make At) an external supplier (Buy From)

In a sourcing rule, time-phasing applies only to the shipping organizations; the receiving organization remains static for the life of the sourcing rule. In a bill of distribution, time-phasing applies both to shipping and receiving organizations. Rank and Allocation You can rank the sources of supply named in the rules and bills, giving one priority over another when the planning process generates recommendations. You can also assign sourcing percentages to these sources, allowing you to allocate a portion of the total orders to each source. Control over Make/Buy Attributes In Oracle Master Scheduling/MRP, three item attributes determine if planned orders can be implemented as discrete jobs, repetitive schedules, or purchase requisitions. Supply Chain Planning users can supplement and refine this behavior with sourcing rules and bills of distribution. For each item in a rule or bill, you can define effectivity dates to switch sourcing between make and buy, and set intransit lead times. If an item does not appear in a rule or bill, the item attribute

determines the status; when these attributes conflict with a sourcing rule or bill of distribution, the rule or bill takes precedence.

Sourcing Rules
Sourcing rules define inventory replenishment methods for either a single organization or all organizations in your enterprise. Time-phasing in a sourcing rule determines when each group of shipping method - ship org combinations is in effect, as in this example:

In the first phase of SR-C01, SAC is replenished equally by AUS and NYC. From 01-JUL-1997, AUS no longer supplies SAC, which receives all transfers from NYC:

Sourcing rule assignment

You cannot apply sourcing rules and bills of distribution (make them Planning Active) until the sum of the allocation percentages equals 100. Secondly, sourcing rules and bills of distribution do not take effect until they are assigned to a part or a range of parts.

Bills of Distribution
Bills of distribution define the sourcing strategies of several organizations. In other words, a bill of distribution is library of sourcing strategies. For instance, the sourcing strategy described in SR-C01 could apply to different organizations at different periods. You cannot do this with sourcing rules because you have to apply the strategy to one org or all orgs. In another example, an item is made in a manufacturing center and supplied to a distribution center, which in turn supplies three sales offices. Instead of using five different local sourcing rules, you could set up a three-level replenishment hierarchy with a bill of distribution for the item. This bill would specify how the item is sourced at each level. Both sourcing rules and bills of distribution have effective dates, periods during which the scheme is valid. For each period, you can specify a list of sources, type, allocation percentage, rank, shipping method, and intransit time.

Sponsor Documents

Or use your account on DocShare.tips

Hide

Forgot your password?

Or register your new account on DocShare.tips

Hide

Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link to create a new password.

Back to log-in

Close