Moving from Warehouse to Distribution Center Cross
Download
Report
Transcript Moving from Warehouse to Distribution Center Cross
Moving from Warehouse to
Distribution Center Cross Docking
Todd Brandt
Unit Head - Logistics Warehousing
Tom Stewart
Finance Manager
Materials Management
Financial Analysis
Mayo Clinic
Rochester, MN
Agenda
Mayo Clinic Background
Warehouse vs. Distribution Center
Need for Change
Road to Success
Value
Mayo’s Mission
Mayo will provide the best care to every patient every
day through integrated clinical practice, education, and
research.
Primary Value
The needs of a patient come first.
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Scottsdale, AZ
Mayo Clinic
Hospital
Mayo Clinic
Rochester, MN
Rochester
Methodist
Hospital
Charter
House
Saint
Marys
Hospital
Mayo
Health
System*
Mayo Clinic
Jacksonville, FL
St. Luke’s
Hospital
* A network of clinics and hospitals in 64 communities in southern Minnesota,
northern Iowa, and western Wisconsin
Mayo Clinic Rochester
28,080 Employees*
322,772 Unique Patients*
1,951 Licensed Beds*
77 Buildings
$633M of Supply Spend
*as of 9/06
MAYO CLINIC ROCHESTER
DIVISION OF MATERIALS MANAGEMENT
Department Chair
Division Chair
Rochester Finance
Supply Chain Management
B. Schmidt
J. Francis
Admin Asst
Director
B. Schroeder
C. Thornton
Linda Akiens
Unit Head
Finance Manager
Purchasing
D. Schmitz
Supply Chain LogisticsDistribution & Whse/
Records
S. Borgen
Unit Head
Finance Manager
MM Financial Analysis
Supply Chain LogisticsInventory
T. Brandt
T. Stewart
Unit Head
Director
Supply Chain LogisticsPar Stocking
Value Analysis
C. Schneider
T. Nelson, R.N.
Mayo Distribution Center
60,000 sq ft with 24 ft Ceilings
5,000 sq ft Mezzanine
4,000 sq ft Controlled Environment Area
8,000 Lines / day Ordered
> 50% low unit measure lines
700 Customer Requisitions Daily
400 – 500 Receiving Lines Daily
Average Tenure = 16 Years
What is a Warehouse?
Warehouse
Storage
Minimize expense
Fill it up!
Few metrics
Past- The 90’s
Product Migration
Inventory
Low visibility
Few policies and procedures
No stocking criteria
Traditional Approach
Fill it up!
Measurements
Inventory Value/Turns
Mayo Inventory Center (MIC)
12.0
10.0
9.5
8.0
5.1
6.0
4.0
2.0
-
Inv (in millions)
Turns
1995
Past- New Millennium
Product Stabilization
Inventory
Increased visibility
Develop policies and procedures
Unofficial stocking criteria
Guarded Approach
Limited space available
Measurements
Mayo Inventory Center (MIC)
Inventory Value/Turns
12.0
10.0
9.5
10.0
9.1
8.0
5.1
6.0
4.0
2.0
Inv (in millions)
Turns
1995
2004
Need for Change
Customer Needs
Just in time
Low unit of measure
Growth
Space utilization
Financial Viability
Change patient demographics
Improving cost structure
What is a Distribution Center?
Distribution Center
Organized process
Customer focused
Unique demands
Visible metrics
Cross docking
Consolidation area
Road to success
Assemble Team
Create Strategy Map
Determine Baseline
Implement Plan
Measure Progress
Have Some FUN!
Assembled Team
Leadership Sponsor
Analytical Staff
Line Staff
Supervisors
Systems Support
Consultant
Strategy Map
Current State
Future State
Road Map
Slow Moving Parts
Defined Slow Moving
Identify Items
Criteria
Communicate
Disposition
Monitor
Velocity and ABC Codes
What is Needed
Create Legend
Slotting
Correct Size
Label SKUs
Reporting
Velocity and ABC Codes
Classification
A
Based on Point System*
Order Schedule
Location Capacity
2 points
Ordered daily by the largest
customer base.
Min. 3 days
3 points
More than one Customer was
ordering either daily or
weekly.
Min. 1 week
B
4 points
C
5 points
D
Single Customer SKUs
More than one customer ordered
at least once per week.
19 customers are ordering less
than once per week or less
than 52 times per year.
All
One customer orders daily.
E
Min. 3 days
Single Customer SKUs
F
G
Min. 2 weeks
Single Customer or Critical (NMMC)
SKUs
One customer was ordering either
daily or weekly
One customer was ordering less
than once per week or less
than 52 times per year.
Min. 1 week
Min. 2 weeks
“A” Velocity SKUs Current Locations
631 “A” SKUs
29 Pick Aisles
2 Floors
427 Over-Stock Locations
Order Management and
Staff Optimization
Current Patterns
Institution Needs
Customer Needs
Who Controls?
Change
Technology
Enterprise Resource Planning
Point of Use
Warehouse Management
Lot tracking
Expiration tracking
Electronic transactions
Staff productivity
Standard Operating Procedures (SOP’s)
Requires Process Changes
Inventory control
Slotting
Receiving
Picking
Cycle counting
Communication Tool
Change Behaviors
Distribution Processing*
Customers Needs
Lean Process
Save Space
Reduced Inventor
* Internal or External
Cross Docking
Consolidation
Non-stocks
Delivery Times
Reduce trips
Space
Current State
Stock to Non-stock
Inventory
High visibility
Turns
Implement SOP’s
Official stocking criteria
Lean Approach
Low unit of measure
“A” Velocity SKUs New Locations
631 “A” SKUs
10 Pick Aisles
Ground Floor
211 Over-Stock Locations
Product Slotting
Measurements
Inventory Value/Turns
Mayo Inventory Center (MIC)
11.6
12.0
10.0
9.5
10.0
9.1
7.9
8.0
5.1
6.0
4.0
2.0
Inv (in millions)
1995
Turns
2004
Proj 2007
Value
Customer Satisfaction
Right product
Right place
Right time
Growth
Optimize space needed for growth
Financial Viability
Optimize Staffing
Improved inventory turnover
Inventory reductions
Cost to Serve Benchmarks
C
O
S
T
T
O
S
E
R
V
E
9.5%
8.0%
6.5%
5.0%
3.5%
2.0%
SCHEDULED
BULK DEL. 3 +
DAYS/ WK
NEXT DAY
LOW UNIT DEL
BULK DEL.. 5 + TO PAR LOC 5 +
DAYS/ WK
DAYS/WK
LOW UNIT TO
PAR LOC. 7 +
DAYS/WK
SERVICE OFFERING
*Data provided by National Medical Logistics
UNLIMITED
98%+ FILL
+
STAT ORDER +
RATE
DEL
COMMITMENT
CROSS
DOCKING
SERVICES
Future State
Laboratory Expansion
Lot track
Temperature sensitive
Clinical Growth
Space constraints
Flexibility
Best Practices
Key Performance Indicators
Documented SOPs
Point-of-use Replenishment Process
Scheduled Pick Waves
Scheduled Deliveries
Velocity Slotting
Summary
Evolution
Traditional warehouse
Distribution model
Customer
Flexibility
Value
Lower cost
Quality
Q&A
[email protected]
[email protected]