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Commentary: Squaring-off optimization

   For the past few years, the supply chain leadership mantra has been “agility.” The economic downturn taught virtually every business, in every industry, the importance of building speed and responsiveness into its end-to-end supply chain, enabling a faster reaction to demand shifts.
  
As a result, we’ve seen impressive improvements in supply chain capabilities across the board, but particularly in warehouse and transportation management — two functions that have historically been viewed as time- and cost-intensive. It’s easy to be nimble if you’re willing to expedite shipments or work overtime in the warehouse, but those activities are expensive. The real challenge is how to be agile, while keeping costs low.
  
More and more leading companies are using advanced supply chain solutions across their warehouses and transportation networks to achieve this goal in their daily operations. Thus, the obvious question is: What’s next?
  
Once performance has been optimized within these two functions, the next supply chain revolution will involve bringing them together — and optimizing their shared results. By tightly integrating all activities from the time an order reaches the warehouse through customer delivery, companies in every industry can take agility and cost control to an entirely new level.
  

Two functions, one perspective.   The first step in achieving this ambitious vision is ensuring that both warehouse and transportation managers have concurrent visibility to demand. The moment a customer order is generated, planners in the warehouse and the transportation function should begin aligning cross-functional resources to fill and deliver that order in the most timely, cost-effective way. Since most companies currently base their warehouse and transportation operations on a set of serial processes, this requires a huge change in mindset.
  
Ultimately, transportation planning should still drive warehouse execution — for the simple reason that warehousing is a location-specific function, while transportation is a network-level function. An intelligent transportation plan comes up with dynamic strategies for maximizing efficiencies across the entire network — for example, by scheduling a soft transfer to a distribution center (DC), picking up an order at the DC and delivering it to the customer as a seamless process.
  
It only makes sense for the DC to base its processes on the capabilities of the transportation network, so valuable time won’t be invested picking and packing orders that will be sitting on the loading dock, while trucks wait for other orders that aren’t filled yet.
  
Intelligent transportation planning will always be the driver, but providing warehouse planners with concurrent order visibility allows much more effective coordination across these two functions. 
  

Perfect load.   Providing warehouse and transportation planners with simultaneous visibility into orders, as well as network constraints, allows them to focus collaboratively on a concept called “the perfect load.” 
  
What is the perfect load? It’s the load that maximizes routing by aggregating many different kinds of transportation demand — including inbound, outbound and inter-facility movements of inventory. By stitching together these moves in an optimal way, perfect loads maximize transportation and warehouse efficiency, as well as financial results.
  
The perfect load also maximizes the containerization, or load building, of products — all the activities from building cartons and pallets to loading onto the container. 
  
In addition, perfect loads take advantage of sophisticated order splitting and scheduling strategies to further reduce costs whenever possible. Traditionally, individual customer orders were considered inviolate and non-breakable, but today transportation planners are recognizing that orders can often be strategically split to maximize utilization of assets such as trucks or ocean containers. While customer delivery commitments are still paramount, perfect loads increasingly represent partial orders that are spread over multiple assets in order to create new transportation and warehouse efficiencies.
  
Because perfect load building depends on managing constraints across the dynamic warehouse and transportation functions, it’s essential that these two areas work together if companies are going to achieve the perfect load on a consistent, day-to-day basis.
  

Iterative planning.   Bringing the warehouse and transportation functions together under one umbrella allows the introduction of a new concept that maximizes moment-by-moment agility: iterative planning.
  
Everyday, planners build the best-possible routes, pallets and containers from a transportation perspective. But they may not consider that these plans could result in warehouse inefficiencies — for example, by sending employees across the facility three times to pick different products. While multiple trips across the warehouse aren’t necessarily a recognized “constraint,” they can represent an enormous loss of productivity over the course of a year.
  
Cross-functional plans need to recognize these operational inefficiencies and work around them. That means transportation planners need to have real-time visibility into the warehouse configuration, so that workforce productivity is maximized. When orders are packed, transportation planners also need to ensure they have drivers, trailers and dock personnel ready to meet the loading schedule.
  
But, because conditions constantly change, these plans cannot be fixed. To truly optimize warehouse and transportation management, plans need to be reiterated and updated throughout the day. A dynamic, real-time view into warehouse load states, order changes and disruptions enables real-time responsiveness across both functions.
  

Technology as “great enabler.”   Clearly, companies can achieve enormous benefits from tightly integrating their warehouse and transportation plans. But how can they achieve this ideal state?
  
The answer is improved supply chain planning solutions that enable real-time information sharing and strategic process coordination, across both functions. Technology tools can provide the critical linkages among warehouse and transportation capabilities, enabling cross-functional managers to view the same real-time information about demand, constraints, resource availability, service targets and performance metrics. Instead of acting as mutually exclusive functions, the warehouse and transportation network can be knit together via advanced software to create a new level of interactivity, interoperability, integration and collaboration.
  
Technology also supports the repetitive, iterative planning capabilities that are needed to integrate these functions in real time. Instead of managing transportation and warehouse operations separately, tomorrow’s supply chain software will transform both functions into a single engine and shared dashboard, focused on continuous planning and execution that spans both capabilities and provides a net-new view of logistics. 
  


Fabrizio Brasca
Vice President of Global Logistics, 
JDA Software
Toronto, Canada