Illustration of an Integer Replenishment Policy
If the distributor orders more frequently than the retailer, all
shipments to the retailer are cross-docked as shown in Figure. For
retailers ordering every four weeks, replenishment at the distributor can
be synchronized with shipment to retailers. Thus, every four weeks, the
distributor’s replenishment order arrives just in time to be cross-docked
and shipped to the retailers placing orders once every four weeks as shown
in Figure. If the distributor orders less frequently than the retailer, some
of the retailer’s replenishment ordering every week, every second week
the replenishment order at the distributor arrives just in time to be cross-
docked and shipped to the retailer as shown in Figure. Every other week,
however, the replenishment order to retailers is shipped from inventory.
Thus, half the replenishment orders are cross-docked in this case.
Notes
198
Determinants
Considering the supply chain shown in Figure as a set of stages
with all parties at a one stage being customers of some party at the previous
stage and suppliers to other parties at the next stage. For such a multi-
echelon distribution supply chain, a good replenishment policy has the
following characteristics:
➢ All parties within a stage are divided into groups such that all parties
within a group order simultaneously from the same supplier.
➢ When a party receives a replenishment order, the receipt should
be synchronized with the shipment of a replenishment order
to at least one of its customers. In other words, a portion of any
replenishment order at a stage should be cross-docked on to the
next stage.
A Multi-Echelon Distribution Supply Chain
➢ If a customer replenishes less frequently than its supplier, the
supplier replenishment frequency should be an integer multiple of
the customer replenishment frequency and replenishment at both
stages should be synchronized to facilitate cross-docking. In other
words, a supplier should cross-dock all orders from customers who
reorder less frequently than the supplier himself.
Notes
199
➢ If a customer replenishes more frequently than its supplier, the
customer’s replenishment frequency should be an integer multiple
of the supplier’s replenishment frequency and replenishment at
both stages should be synchronized to facilitate cross-docking.
In other words, a supplier should cross-dock one out of every k
shipments to a customer who orders more frequently than himself,
where k is an integer.
➢ Thus, the relative frequency of reordering will depend upon the
setup cost, holding cost and demand at different parties.
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Notes
200
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