1.Explain role of demand management 2.Differentiate between demand management and forecasting 3.Describe various forecasting procedures 4.Develop forecast.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Forecasting OPS 370.
Advertisements

Operations Management Forecasting Chapter 4
PowerPoint presentation to accompany Chopra and Meindl Supply Chain Management, 5e 1-1 Copyright ©2013 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall.
© 2007 Pearson Education Forecasting Chapter 13. © 2007 Pearson Education How Forecasting fits the Operations Management Philosophy Operations As a Competitive.
Forecasting Ross L. Fink.
Chapter 12 - Forecasting Forecasting is important in the business decision-making process in which a current choice or decision has future implications:
Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Forecasting Operations Management - 5 th Edition Chapter 11.
Forecasting.
OPIM 310 –Lecture # 1.2 Instructor: Jose M. Cruz
Chapter 3 Forecasting McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 13 Forecasting.
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach
Roberta Russell & Bernard W. Taylor, III
Operations Management Forecasting Chapter 4
© 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Operations Management Forecasting Chapter 4.
Forecasting & Demand Planning
Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Forecasting Operations Chapter 12 Roberta Russell & Bernard.
2. Forecasting. Forecasting  Using past data to help us determine what we think will happen in the future  Things typically forecasted Demand for products.
Chapter 5 DEMAND FORECASTING Prepared by Mark A. Jacobs, PhD
Demand Planning: Forecasting and Demand Management
Fall, 2012 EMBA 512 Demand Forecasting Boise State University 1 Demand Forecasting.
Forecasting.
1 DSCI 3123 Forecasting & Aggregate Production Planning Strategic Role Of Forecasting Forecasting Methods Capacity Planning Aggregate Production Planning.
LSS Black Belt Training Forecasting. Forecasting Models Forecasting Techniques Qualitative Models Delphi Method Jury of Executive Opinion Sales Force.
Group No :- 9 Chapter 7 :- Demand forecasting in a supply chain. Members : Roll No Name 1118 Lema Juliet D 1136 Mwakatundu T 1140 Peter Naomi D 1143 Rwelamila.
Chapter 15 Demand Management & Forecasting
IES 371 Engineering Management Chapter 13: Forecasting
Demand Management and Forecasting
Business Forecasting Used to try to predict the future Uses two main methods: Qualitative – seeking opinions on which to base decision making – Consumer.
COPYRIGHT © 2008 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.
To accompany Quantitative Analysis for Management, 8e by Render/Stair/Hanna Forecasting.
Chapter 4 Forecasting Production Planning Overview  What is forecasting?  Types of forecasts  7 steps of forecasting  Qualitative forecasting.
Demand Planning: Forecasting and Demand Management CHAPTER TWELVE McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
© 2004 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Chapter 7 Demand Forecasting in a Supply Chain Supply Chain Management (2nd Edition) 7-1.
DAVIS AQUILANO CHASE PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook F O U R T H E D I T I O N Forecasting © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2003 chapter 9.
Operations Management For Competitive Advantage 1Forecasting Operations Management For Competitive Advantage Chapter 11.
MBA.782.ForecastingCAJ Demand Management Qualitative Methods of Forecasting Quantitative Methods of Forecasting Causal Relationship Forecasting Focus.
1-1 1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved.
CHAPTER 5 DEMAND FORECASTING
Forecasting February 26, Laws of Forecasting Three Laws of Forecasting –Forecasts are always wrong! –Detailed forecasts are worse than aggregate.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Chapter 15 Demand Management and Forecasting.
Forecasting Operations Management For Competitive Advantage.
Demand Management and Forecasting Module IV. Two Approaches in Demand Management Active approach to influence demand Passive approach to respond to changing.
Operations Fall 2015 Bruce Duggan Providence University College.
Forecasting. 預測 (Forecasting) A Basis of Forecasting In business, forecasts are the basis for budgeting and planning for capacity, sales, production and.
Forecasting Chapter 9. Copyright © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall Define Forecast.
Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Forecasting Operations Management - 6 th Edition Chapter 12.
1 Chapter 13 Forecasting  Demand Management  Qualitative Forecasting Methods  Simple & Weighted Moving Average Forecasts  Exponential Smoothing  Simple.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. 1.
Business Processes Sales Order Management Aggregate Planning Master Scheduling Production Activity Control Quality Control Distribution Mngt. © 2001 Victor.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Demand Management and Forecasting CHAPTER 10.
MGS3100_03.ppt/Feb 11, 2016/Page 1 Georgia State University - Confidential MGS 3100 Business Analysis Time Series Forecasting Feb 11, 2016.
CHAPTER 12 FORECASTING. THE CONCEPTS A prediction of future events used for planning purpose Supply chain success, resources planning, scheduling, capacity.
Chapter 12 Forecasting. Lecture Outline Strategic Role of Forecasting in SCM Components of Forecasting Demand Time Series Methods Forecast Accuracy Regression.
13 – 1 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall. Forecasting 13 For Operations Management, 9e by Krajewski/Ritzman/Malhotra.
To Accompany Russell and Taylor, Operations Management, 4th Edition,  2003 Prentice-Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 8 Forecasting To Accompany.
Demand Management and Forecasting Chapter 11 Portions Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Chapter 11 – With Woodruff Modications Demand Management and Forecasting Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Chapter 18: Forecasting LO18–1: Understand how forecasting is essential to supply chain planning. LO18–2: Evaluate demand using quantitative forecasting.
Operations Management Contemporary Concepts and Cases
Mechanical Engineering Haldia Institute of Technology
Forecasting Chapter 11.
Fall, 2017 EMBA 512 Demand Forecasting
FORCASTING AND DEMAND PLANNING
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Module 2: Demand Forecasting 2.
Principles of Supply Chain Management: A Balanced Approach
Forecasting is an Integral Part of Business Planning
Chapter 8 Supplement Forecasting.
Demand Management and Forecasting
Presentation transcript:

1.Explain role of demand management 2.Differentiate between demand management and forecasting 3.Describe various forecasting procedures 4.Develop forecast various models 5.Describe forecast measures 6.Explain how improvements make demand planning easier 12–1 Learning Objectives

Class 19: Chapter 12: Demand Agenda for Class 19 –Review Trimester 2 Exam—See Class 18 –Use Challenge Form 2 -Due Next Monday –Secondary Research Paper Due on November 29th News of Note –Election Blackout Period in Effect –Giants—It ain’t over t’ll its over--Yogi Berra –How does the government/Fed create jobs/demand? Review Chapter 12

Demand Planning Demand Planning: both forecasting and managing customer demand to reach operational and financial goals Who is the customer? Demand Forecasting: predicting future customer demand Which business process uses it? Demand Management: influencing either pattern or consistency of demand When can you use demand mgt? 12–3

Demand Planning and OM Figure –4

Planning Activities Time Horizon/ Type of Planning Demand Planning Units Use of Forecast and Demand Planning Types of Decisions Involved Long Term 1-5 years Strategic Dollar or unit sales by business unit across sales network SC network design Technology investment Capacity plans Sources of supply Open/close facilities Transportation Medium Term 6-18 months Tactical Dollar or unit sales by product family in a region Sales & operations plan Portfolio plans Aggregate plans Workforce plans New product launches Short Term 1-12 weeks Operational Dollar or unit sales by item or service at a given location Inventory plans Purchasing Labor scheduling Daily production Purchase orders Table –5

Demand Forecasting Components of Demand: patterns of demand over time Autocorrelation: relationship of past and current demand Forecast error: “unexplained” component of demand StableSeasonalTrendStep Change Figure –6

Forecasting Process Figure –7

Judgment Based Forecasting Grassroots: input from those close to products or customers Executive Judgment: input from those with experience Historical Analogy: assume past demand is a good predictor of future demand Marketing Research: examine patterns of current customers Delphi Method: input for panel of experts 12–8

Statistical Based Forecasting Time Series Analysis: uses historical data arranged in order of occurrence Naïve Model: tomorrow's demand will be same as today’s demand 12–9

Statistical Based Forecasting cont’d Moving Average: simple average of demand from some number of past periods 12–10

Statistical Based Forecasting cont’d If actual Friday sales turn out to be Example –11

Statistical Based Forecasting cont’d Weighted Moving Average: assigns different weights to each period’s demand based upon its importance 12–12

Weighted Moving Average Example –13

Statistical Based Forecasting cont’d Figure –14

Statistical Based Forecasting cont’d Exponential Smoothing: a moving average approach that put less weight on further back in time data Smoothing Coefficient: weight given to most recent demand 12–15

Statistical Based Forecasting cont’d The forecast of a product was 110 lbs and actual demand was 115 lbs. What is the next period forecast with a smoothing constant of 0.10? F t+1 = (0.1)( ) = lbs Example –16

Statistical Based Forecasting cont’d Regression Analysis: fits an equation to a set of data B = Base sales (computed y intercept) D = Disposable personal income A = Advertising expenditures F = Fuel prices S = Sales from prior year 12–17

Statistical Based Forecasting cont’d Simulation Models: sophisticated techniques that allow for the evaluation of multiple business scenarios Focused Forecasting: combination of computer simulation and input from knowledgeable individuals 12–18

Forecast Process Performance Forecast Accuracy: measure of how closely forecast aligns with demand Bias: tendency to over or under predict future demand (forecast error) 12–19

Forecast Process Performance Mean Absolute Deviation (MAD): average of forecast errors, irrespective of direct 12–20

Forecast Process Performance 1.Short term forecasts are more accurate than long term forecasts 2.Aggregate forecasts are more accurate than detailed forecasts 3.Information from more sources yields a more accurate forecast 12–21

Demand Planning Fluctuating customer demand cause operational inefficiencies, such as: 1.Need for extra capacity resources 2.Backlog 3.Customer dissatisfaction 4.System buffering (safety stock, safety lead time, capacity cushions, etc.) 12–22

Demand Planning Try to manage demand by: 1.Use pricing, promotions or incentives to influence timing or quantity of demand 2.Manage timing of order fulfillment 3.Encourage shifting to alternate products 12–23

Improving Planning Management Improving information accuracy and timeliness Reducing lead time Redesigning the product Collaborating and sharing information 12–24

Improving Demand Planning Collaborative, planning, forecasting and replenishment (CPFR): supply chain partners share forecast, and demand and resource plans to reduce risk -Market Planning: changes to products, locations, pricing and promotions -Demand and resource planning: forecasting -Execution: order fulfillment -Analysis: data on key performance metrics 12–25

Improving Demand Planning Figure –26

Demand Planning Summary 1.Forecasting process choice is influenced by a variety of factors 2.Forecasts are judgment or statistical model based 3.Both accuracy and bias should be considered 4.Demand management involves influencing customer demand 5.Supply chains can be made more responsive to changes in customer demand 12–27