supply-chain concept

Comprehensive Conceptual Overview of Supply Chain Management with Drivers, Cycles, and OTP Framework

Comprehensive Conceptual Overview of Supply Chain Management with Drivers, Cycles, and OTP Framework

This article combines everything we discussed earlier into one complete conceptual article so that this can be used for your Talent Consultancy blog, training material, and consulting framework.

At Talent Consultancy, we explain Supply Chain Management not as separate functions like procurement, logistics, inventory, and warehouse, but as an integrated performance system driven by drivers, cycles, and the OTP Framework.

1. Concept of Supply Chain Management

Supply Chain Management is the management of:

  • Material flow
  • Information flow
  • Financial flow
  • Suppliers
  • Procurement
  • Production
  • Inventory
  • Warehousing
  • Transportation
  • Distribution
  • Customer service
  • Returns

Three Main Flows in Supply Chain

FlowDirection
Product FlowSupplier → Customer
Information FlowCustomer → Supplier
Financial FlowCustomer → Supplier

So supply chain is not a line — it is a network of flows and activities.

2. Supply Chain Drivers (Cost and Service Performance Factors)

Supply chain performance is determined by six supply chain drivers:

Supply Chain DriverDescription
FacilitiesFactories, warehouses, distribution centers
InventoryRaw materials, WIP, finished goods
TransportationMovement of goods
InformationData, forecasting, planning systems
SourcingSupplier selection and procurement
PricingDiscounts, promotions, demand management

These drivers determine:

  • Supply chain cost
  • Service level
  • Responsiveness
  • Efficiency
  • Profitability

Explanation of Each Driver

Facilities

Facilities include warehouses, factories, and distribution centers.

Facility decisions:

  • Number of warehouses
  • Warehouse location
  • Capacity
  • Factory location
  • Distribution network design

Impact:

  • More facilities → Faster delivery + Higher cost
  • Fewer facilities → Lower cost + Slower delivery

So facilities affect cost vs service level.

Inventory

Inventory includes:

  • Raw materials
  • Work in progress
  • Finished goods
  • Safety stock
  • Buffer stock
  • Seasonal stock
  • Transit inventory

Inventory exists because:

  • Demand uncertainty
  • Supply uncertainty
  • Lead time delays
  • Bulk purchasing
  • Seasonal demand

Inventory affects:

  • Holding cost
  • Service level
  • Working capital
  • Stock availability

Inventory is a buffer between supply and demand.

Transportation

Transportation includes:

  • Road
  • Rail
  • Sea
  • Air

Transportation decisions:

  • Mode selection
  • Route planning
  • Shipment size
  • Delivery frequency
  • Fleet utilization

Impact:

  • Fast transport → High cost
  • Slow transport → Low cost

Transportation affects:

  • Logistics cost
  • Delivery time
  • Inventory levels
  • Customer service

Information

Information is the most important driver.

Information includes:

  • Demand forecasting
  • Inventory levels
  • Order status
  • Supplier performance
  • Production schedule
  • Shipment tracking
  • Cost information

Good information:

  • Reduces uncertainty
  • Reduces inventory
  • Improves planning
  • Improves coordination
  • Reduces cost
  • Improves service level

Information connects all supply chain drivers.

Sourcing

Sourcing includes:

  • Supplier selection
  • Make or buy decisions
  • Local vs global sourcing
  • Contract management
  • Supplier relationship management

Sourcing affects:

  • Material cost
  • Lead time
  • Quality
  • Reliability
  • Supply risk

Pricing

Pricing includes:

  • Discounts
  • Promotions
  • Seasonal pricing
  • Bulk discounts
  • Credit terms

Pricing affects:

  • Demand level
  • Demand variability
  • Order quantity
  • Inventory levels
  • Transportation frequency

So pricing affects demand patterns, which affect supply chain operations.

3. Supply Chain Cycles (Process View of Supply Chain)

Supply chain processes operate in cycles between supply chain partners.

Four Main Supply Chain Cycles

CycleBetween
Customer Order CycleCustomer – Retailer
Replenishment CycleRetailer – Distributor
Manufacturing CycleDistributor – Manufacturer
Procurement CycleManufacturer – Supplier

Customer Order Cycle

Activities:

  • Customer order
  • Order processing
  • Picking
  • Packing
  • Shipping
  • Delivery
  • Payment

Focus:

  • Customer service
  • Delivery time
  • Order fulfillment

Replenishment Cycle

Activities:

  • Inventory monitoring
  • Replenishment order
  • Distributor shipment
  • Inventory replenishment

Focus:

  • Inventory availability
  • Service level
  • Replenishment planning

Manufacturing Cycle

Activities:

  • Production planning
  • Production scheduling
  • Manufacturing
  • Quality control
  • Packaging
  • Finished goods storage

Focus:

  • Production efficiency
  • Capacity utilization
  • Production cost
  • Lead time

Procurement Cycle

Activities:

  • Material planning
  • Supplier selection
  • Purchase order
  • Supplier production
  • Delivery
  • Receiving
  • Inspection
  • Payment

Focus:

  • Supplier performance
  • Material availability
  • Procurement cost
  • Lead time

4. Linking Supply Chain Drivers and Cycles

DriverAffects Cycle
FacilitiesManufacturing, Replenishment
InventoryAll cycles
TransportationCustomer and Replenishment
InformationAll cycles
SourcingProcurement
PricingCustomer Order Cycle

So supply chain performance depends on:

How well drivers are managed within each cycle

5. OTP Framework (Operations → Transparency → Profit)

This is the most important part of the concept.

At Talent Consultancy, we use the OTP Framework to explain how operations convert into business performance.

OTP Framework Structure

Operations → Visibility → Accountability → Control → Profit → Business Performance

Transparency includes:

  1. Visibility
  2. Accountability
  3. Control

6. Linking Supply Chain Activities to OTP Framework

Now we list each supply chain area and connect to OTP.

Demand Forecasting and OTP

Visibility

  • Demand visibility
  • Sales trends
  • Seasonal demand
  • Product demand patterns

Accountability

  • Sales responsible for demand data
  • Planning responsible for forecasting
  • Supply chain responsible for execution

Control

  • Forecast accuracy KPI
  • Forecast error measurement
  • Forecast review meetings

Profit Impact

  • Reduced excess inventory
  • Reduced stockouts
  • Better planning
  • Improved customer satisfaction

Procurement and OTP

Visibility

  • Supplier performance visibility
  • Material cost visibility
  • Lead time visibility

Accountability

  • Buyers responsible for cost
  • Procurement responsible for suppliers
  • Quality responsible for supplier quality

Control

  • Supplier KPIs
  • Cost reduction targets
  • Contract management
  • Procurement audits

Profit Impact

  • Lower material cost
  • Better supplier performance
  • Reduced delays
  • Improved production efficiency

Inventory Management and OTP

Visibility

  • Inventory levels
  • Safety stock
  • Slow moving items
  • Stockouts
  • Inventory value

Accountability

  • Warehouse responsible for stock accuracy
  • Planning responsible for stock levels
  • Procurement responsible for replenishment

Control

  • Reorder level system
  • EOQ
  • Safety stock
  • Inventory KPIs
  • Cycle counting

Profit Impact

  • Reduced holding cost
  • Reduced stockouts
  • Improved service level
  • Improved cash flow

Warehouse Management and OTP

Visibility

  • Stock location visibility
  • Warehouse inventory visibility
  • Order status visibility

Accountability

  • Warehouse staff responsible for accuracy
  • Supervisor responsible for productivity

Control

  • Warehouse Management System
  • Warehouse KPIs
  • SOPs
  • Safety procedures

Profit Impact

  • Reduced warehouse cost
  • Reduced damage and loss
  • Improved order fulfillment

Transportation and Logistics and OTP

Visibility

  • Shipment tracking
  • Delivery status
  • Transport cost visibility

Accountability

  • Logistics team responsible for delivery
  • Transport manager responsible for cost

Control

  • Transport KPIs
  • Route planning
  • Fleet management
  • Freight cost control

Profit Impact

  • Reduced transport cost
  • Improved delivery performance
  • Improved customer satisfaction

7. Complete Supply Chain Performance Logic

Full Concept Flow

Demand Forecast
→ Procurement
→ Inventory
→ Warehouse
→ Transportation
→ Customer Service
→ Operations

Operations
→ Visibility
→ Accountability
→ Control
→ Cost Reduction + Service Improvement
→ Customer Satisfaction
→ Revenue
→ Profit
→ Business Performance

Final Strategic Conclusion

Supply chain management should not be managed as separate departments like procurement, logistics, warehouse, and inventory. It should be managed as a system of drivers, cycles, flows, and performance controls.

At Talent Consultancy, we summarize the entire supply chain and OTP framework in one concept:

“If an organization improves visibility, accountability, and control over procurement, inventory, warehouse, and logistics operations, cost will reduce, service level will improve, customers will be satisfied, and profitability and business performance will automatically improve.”

Final Thought

Many organizations try to improve profit by increasing sales, but smart organizations improve profit by improving supply chain operations. Sales brings revenue, but supply chain controls cost, service level, and operational efficiency.

Companies do not become profitable because they sell more.

They become profitable because they manage operations better through visibility, accountability, and control.

Tags: No tags

Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *