7 Steps to Self Assessment
How better benchmarking can maximize performance in your fulfillment center
April 2008 By Kate VitasekLook to trade groups, such as the Warehousing Research and Education Council (WERC) and the American Productivity & Quality Center, both of which offer industry metrics to their members.
successful performance measures into your own environment. Now you benchmark qualitatively at the processes, subprocesses and process attributes to understand the successful environment.
Qualitative benchmarking data can be obtained from some industry trade groups. The Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals and WERC have guides that list processes and process attributes.
Just as the warehouse prioritized processes to benchmark, it must also prioritize the process groups that should be improved. As tempting as it might be to improve all areas, focusing on too many things at once will end up prolonging the improvement initiatives to an unacceptable length, jeopardizing any productive returns.
Evaluate improvement priorities with a bubble chart. Compare the strategic importance (irrelevant, important, vital) to the cost/performance impact (low, moderate, high). Plot each process on a bubble graph (see below), where the size of the bubble designates the gap size.
Maintain processes with no competitive advantage to gain. Re-evaluate processes that don't support your goals but could help you gain an advantage.
Just as the company must prioritize the processes in which it will invest in improvement, it must also take special care to focus the level of improvement targeted.
It must establish targets that are reasonable to achieve. Therefore, it may need to establish achievable, near-term targets for selected focus areas.
These initiatives may represent a significant cross-functional, cross-regional effort. Any large project typically requires centralized project management and significant funding. But mind you, it’s well worth the effort.
Summary
By following these benchmarking steps, you’ll mark for improvement the processes that’ll have the most impact on the company. Those improvement targets will be both reasonable and realistic.
I recommend the following resources:
• Warehouse Managers Guide for Benchmarking - Unleashing Best Practices in Your Warehouse, WERC 2007
• Warehousing & Fulfillment Process Benchmark & Best Practice Guide, WERC 2007
Kate Vitasek is the founder and managing partner of Supply Chain Visions, a consulting firm that specializes in benchmarking and education. You can reach her at kate@SCVisions.com, Web site: SCVisions.com.
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