Provia Tackles RFID in a Twofold Manner
Part Seven: WMS Market Impact
P.J. Jakovljevic -
8/19/2004
WMS Market Impact
These
days when radio frequency identification (RFID) is constantly on everyone's
lips, and when every relevant enterprise application vendor is hedging its bets
towards becoming RFID-ready or is even convincing the market that its RFID-compliant
solution is exactly what the doctor (such as, Wal-Mart, Target,
Albertsons, the US Department of Defense [DoD])
ordered, the typically quiet Provia Software (www.provia.com),
a privately-held provider of supply chain execution (SCE) software
solutions, naturally feels the time has come for it to be more vocal about its
RFID endeavors, albeit after it has already put so much effort in terms of the
proof of concept in the field.
At
the end of May, Provia announced at the Distribution/Computer Expo 2004
in Chicago, Illinois (US) that its ViaView event/alert management
and decision support product plays a key role in offering visibility to supply
chain data for companies supplying RFID-tagged products to Wal-Mart and other
retailers.
Further,
at the end of March, Provia announced that it has aligned itself with its parent
company for over fifteen years, Viastore Systems, a leading
provider of automated storage and retrieval systems (AS/RS), and material handling
control systems, with over 3,000 cranes installed worldwide.
As
for the products' functional enhancements, at the end of 2003, Provia announced
the release of FourSite 4.4, an upgrade of its fulfillment
solution oriented towards third party logistics (3PL) providers. Industry-wide
globalization is a major factor affecting logistics and supply chain management
businesses.
Generally
speaking, WMS applications traditionally automate activities falling within
the four walls of a warehouse, such as receiving, put-away, serialization, picking,
packing, and shipping. The software market for WMS has consequently become more
and more competitive as the technology has evolved to address the lion's share
of customer requirements. This includes more intricate advanced shipping
notice (ASN) and RF receiving; lot/expiration control; location and carton
selection; wave building; labor planning; advanced kitting; wave templates;
material selection; compliance labeling; picking and packing; cluster/batch
picking; serial number capture; catch-weight capture; cycle counting; task management;
replenishment; container tracking; cross docking; report generation; shipping
paperwork; automated rule checking; carton selection; etc. Like any software
technology that has been reaching a plateau in the maturation curve, WMS products
have evolved to a point where there is little differentiation among them.
This
is Part Seven of an eight-part note.
Parts
One through Five detail recent announcements.
Parts
Six and Seven discuss the market impact.
Part
Eight will note challenges and make user recommendations.
Parts
One through Four were published between August 11 and 14.
Part
Five to Eight will be published August 18 to 21.
WMS Package is Key
Still, since the warehouse is no longer merely a static storage facility, it now has to use real time data to closely match supply to demand, eliminate the need to hold excess inventory, and increase the flow of goods throughout the supply chain. Therefore, due to the SCE software's capability to handle these complex requirements, there has been a trend of postponing many light manufacturing operations (such as, final assembly, customized packing, labeling, engraving, etc.) from shop floors to warehouses and DCs. A WMS package plays a key role in the company's postponement strategy to delay the customization of products until after the products, or a set of common components, have left the manufacturing plant.
To
that end, introducing an advanced kitting capability within the ViaWare
WMS was Provia's apt answer to helping its customers reduce the costs
associated with their supply chains, where one of the most significant facilitators
is postponement, and that is where kitting helps because it allows enterprises
to keep their products in a more generic state for as long as possible. Accordingly,
Provia's advanced kitting capability allows users to have generic products assembled
ahead of time with the option to assemble and configure them "to order", based
on last-moment customer requests, which should keep inventory levels lower and
increase material velocity. In turn, this overall reduction in inventory reduces
costs within the supply chain, and also, the better service provides a higher
level of customer satisfaction, as has been the case with Provia's high-profile
customers TaylorMade Golf and Lanier.
During these days of careful cash flow and asset management, more and more manufacturers are attempting to get rid of unnecessary inventory, and the place to start is with finished goods inventory. Postponement indeed allows manufacturers to limit their finished goods inventory by postponing production of the final product as long as possible, in the ideal case until the order is in hand, and then it is shipped out immediately.
If
one can build the sub-components to the most generic level and harness a WMS
that can take an order and explode it into a bill of material (BOM),
with the components being the generic SKUs, pick the components of the exploded
BOM, deliver it to a kitting station, and then have it assembled for final distribution,
this would be a very effective method of mass customization and inventory reduction
for the manufacturer. Consequently, the need for these light manufacturing activities
in warehouses rather than on the shop floor has forced WMS vendors to include
more functions in their packages that would previously have been considered
manufacturing functionality, such as BOMs creation for kits, assembly work plan
and instructions, kit assembly user dialogs, kit-to-stock, kit-to-order, de-kitting,
special packaging and labeling, accessories (non-stock items) processing, and
reporting of completions against manufacturing steps, so that the enterprises
can postpone the production of their finished goods and decrease their own costs.
Products such as cans or bags of food; boxes of cigarettes or candies; bottles of pills or drinks; or luxury watches and giftware usually have multiple packaging configurations or labeling requirements. From an inventory management point of view, each of those different packaging configurations or labels is a separate SKU and a separate unit of finished goods inventory. But if the underlying basic product is the same for all those configurations, a manufacturer could postpone the customization by producing the generic product, and performing the final packaging and labeling as orders are taken and shipped. By doing this, they also avoid the need to forecast what individual demands will be for each SKU. Rather they will forecast the aggregate demand for all the unfinished generic products (i.e., product families or sub-assemblies), where the margin of forecast error is usually much lower. As a result, there are fewer deviations from forecasts and the manufacturer does not run the risk of accumulating excess or obsolete inventory of any of those packaging configurations.
Benefits of Manufacturing Postponement
The benefits of using manufacturing postponement to achieve mass customization vary by industry, manufacturer, and the product nature, but in general, any business that has an inverted (V-shape) BOM (i.e., a small number of raw materials, a slightly larger number of semi-finished products, and a very large number of finished product configurations based on customers' preferences) will probably achieve worthwhile benefits. Industries such as CPG, retail, and high-tech would be good postponement candidates. By providing all the above advanced kitting functionality, and more, Provia often stands out amongst its peers during software evaluations.
Also
powerful is the serial number capture and tracking throughout the entire
distribution chain so that, for example, a cell phone body and its battery serial
numbers and their whereabouts are traceable up- and downstream. Without these
capabilities, one could hardly expect the likelihood of a successful RFID compliance
achievement. Namely, serial number tracking comes in handy when a bulk scan
is made, by enabling the item-level data from the scan to be recorded. This
capability has been delivered by Provia years ago to accommodate scanning of
conventional barcodes advanced with ASNs, which hold detailed data on entire
shipments.
YMS Integrated with WMS
Possibly
the best in its class could be Provia's yard management system (Provia
YMS) with browser-based graphical drag-and-drop control of yard activities
(such as, yard control—including trailer tracking, trailer contents, trailer
movement, and graphical yard presentation; appointment scheduling—including
inbound and outbound time, service time, resource requirements, and equipment
requirements; and carrier performance tracking like on-time and correct equipment
aspects), and its seamless integration with WMS, thereby extending the WMS'
functionality beyond the four walls of the warehouse into the yard. For instance,
each trailer that comes into the DC is checked in through the YMS, which then
triggers activity throughout the WMS, including wave planning, trailer loading,
and cross-docking.
The
YMS and WMS communicate continuously as the YMS helps direct trucks to the proper
dock door for loading while the WMS prepares the orders to be shipped out. The
YMS then checks out trucks as they leave the facility and automatically informs
the ERP back-office system in place. A color-coded, graphical view of all trailers
in the yard is a nifty feature that yard managers find intuitive in pinpointing
bottlenecks, as operators can see color changes if trailers are beyond an appointed
time, or see where loads have not even been started. A landmark Provia customer's
testimony in this regard is from Owens Corning.
Small Parcel Shipment Management
Moreover,
due to the way warehouses are increasingly shipping orders with lower quantities,
but with increasingly growing line items, small parcel shipment management systems
may be even more important than full-fledged WMS/TMS systems for some businesses,
particularly for those doing high volumes and complex order profiles. To that
end, ViaWare SPS determines where products are going and which
shipper to use (for example, FedEx, UPS, DHL,
etc.), and it creates the appropriate label during picking. Conversely, the
traditional WMS approach would involve extra steps since it performs picks,
moves them to shipping, and then generates labels.
Other
notable features the SPS module would be integrated WMS check/pack dialog, carrier
compliant labeling, parcel rating, on-line carrier manifesting, combined carrier/compliance
label, pre-print labels for cluster picking, cash on delivery (COD)
support, and multiple rate servers. Another buzzword applicable both for SPS
and WMS is "cartonization" to automatically determine the best way to box and
package orders including, how many products or boxes will fit in a bigger box,
factoring in component weight and size.
This
concludes Part Seven of an eight-part note.
Parts
One through Five detail recent announcements.
Parts
Six and Seven discuss the Market Impact.
Part
Eight will note Challenges and make User Recommendations.
Parts
One through Four were published between August 11 and 14.
Part
Five to Eight will be published August 18 to 21.