The Bullwhip Effect in Action

OPS Rules Management Consultants explains the bullwhip effect with a real life example.


What is the bullwhip effect?
The ripple effect of small changes in customer demand are magnified upstream through a supply chain all the way from the customer to the retailer to distributor to manufacturer.

It is so named because of the resemblance to a bullwhip as the variability of demand increases sharply when you progress up the supply chain.

Has something like this happened to you?
The Bullwhip effect is very common as long lead times, high variability, promotions and many other factors in any complex supply chain conspire to drive inventory. However, there are practices that can help mitigate the Bullwhip effect - these are some ideas:

  • Focus on the customer. Maintain an optimal network design centered on your customer and how they want to receive and consume your product. Segment your supply chain based upon this understanding and a clear picture of your unique value proposition.
  • Define the right push-pull boundaries and strategy. Optimize your inventory allocation process based upon an understanding of your demand certainty. If you have stable demand for some products, a push strategy can be employed. But where demand is uncertain, a pull strategy will need to dominate your policy. Often you will be somewhere in the middle with a push-pull strategy.
  • Share information. No matter where you sit in the supply chain, costs rise when there is a lack of visibility to demand shared along the supply chain. Encourage information sharing amongst your trading partners and be a catalyst and good example of information sharing. An often overlooked opportunity is working with suppliers on reducing lead times and improving on time delivery.
  • Manage your product portfolio. This entails honestly and accurately evaluating the costs associated with the products in your portfolio. Most companies do not take a comprehensive approach to reducing the complexity of their portfolio. Complexity management is much more than a one-time, revenue and activity-based costing exercise. It is not only a thorough evaluation of the products in your portfolio, but also a joint agreement with product development, product management, marketing, ops and finance on the criteria and guidelines for new product introduction (NPI) and the refinement of the product management process and metrics to ensure the company adheres to these decisions. It’s certainly not an easy task, but well worth the effort.

But first, you many want to know what really drives inventory in your supply chain. In a recent videocast with Pepsico, we show how an end-to-end optimization analysis helped uncover an unexpected inventory driver that was creating the bullwhip effect - Click here to view the videocast (registration required).

Related: An Executive Guide to Supply Chain Research


Article Topics


OPS Rules Management Consultants News & Resources

Coca-Cola’s New Supply Chain Strategy – Sell 9 Production Plants to Independent Bottlers
Operations Rules Chapter 1: The Value of Operations
Musk Raises Expectations for Tesla with More Bold Statements
Supply Chain Segmentation Strategies To Manage Complexity
3 Standout Trends of Gartner’s Supply Chain Top 25
Analytics for Supply Chain and Operations
Schneider Electric Inventory Optimization Journey Case Study
More OPS Rules Management Consultants

Latest in Supply Chain

How Supply Chains Are Solving Severe Workplace Shortages
SAP Unveils New AI-Driven Supply Chain Innovations
How Much Extra Will Consumers Pay for Sustainable Packaging?
FedEx Announces Plans to Shut Down Four Facilities
U.S. Manufacturing is Growing but Employment Not Keeping Pace
The Two Most Important Factors in Last-Mile Delivery
Most Companies Unprepared For Supply Chain Emergency
More Supply Chain

OPS Rules is a consulting practice begun by a team of specialists who have created lasting improvement and increased value at top global enterprises and government operations. From this vantage point OPS Rules sees operational processes that have been leaned out to a point where they are fragile and cannot perform well in situations that require subject matter expertise. Continued emphasis on lean, six-sigma and other traditional continuous improvement methodologies won’t create or even maintain a competitive advantage.



View OPS Rules Management Consultants company profile

 

Featured Downloads

The Ultimate WMS Checklist: Find the Perfect Fit
The Ultimate WMS Checklist: Find the Perfect Fit
Warehouse Management System selection requires time, research and diligent planning. In order to help you, Made4net has published this whitepaper to...
GEP Procurement & Supply Chain Tech Trends Report 2024
GEP Procurement & Supply Chain Tech Trends Report 2024
We’ve researched the five biggest trends in the supply chain space this year, and, drawing on our expertise in procurement and...

Unified Control System - Intelligent Warehouse Orchestration
Unified Control System - Intelligent Warehouse Orchestration
Download this whitepaper to learn Unified Control System (UCS), designed to orchestrate automated and human workflows across the warehouse, enabling automation technologies...
An Inside Look at Dropshipping
An Inside Look at Dropshipping
Korber Supply Chain’s introduction to the world of dropshipping. While dropshipping is not for every retailer or distributor, it does provide...
C3 Solutions Major Trends for Yard and Dock Management in 2024
C3 Solutions Major Trends for Yard and Dock Management in 2024
What trends you should be focusing on in 2024 depends on how far you are on your yard and dock management journey. This...