Actions

CODP

Difference between revisions of "CODP"

Line 119: Line 119:
 
| class="top" style = "width: 10%; text-align: center; border-bottom: 1px dashed silver; border-right: 1px dashed silver;" | Source  
 
| class="top" style = "width: 10%; text-align: center; border-bottom: 1px dashed silver; border-right: 1px dashed silver;" | Source  
 
| class="top" style = "width: 30%; text-align: center; border-bottom: 1px dashed silver; border-right: 1px dashed silver;" colspan = 3 | Make  
 
| class="top" style = "width: 30%; text-align: center; border-bottom: 1px dashed silver; border-right: 1px dashed silver;" colspan = 3 | Make  
| class="top" style = "width: 10%; text-align: center; border-bottom: 1px dashed silver; border-right: 1px dashed silver;" colspan = 2 | Deliver  
+
| class="top" style = "width: 20%; text-align: center; border-bottom: 1px dashed silver; border-right: 1px dashed silver;" colspan = 2 | Deliver  
 
| class="top" style = "width: 10%; text-align: center; border-bottom: 1px dashed silver; border-right: 1px dashed silver;" | Customer  
 
| class="top" style = "width: 10%; text-align: center; border-bottom: 1px dashed silver; border-right: 1px dashed silver;" | Customer  
 
|}
 
|}

Revision as of 01:19, 10 July 2017

Customer Order Decoupling Point is a Term describing the process or node in the supply chain network where the activities are no longer driven by individual orders. Managing Customer Order Decoupling Points is a Best Practice.

Understanding the Customer Order Decoupling Point of a supply chain is important for Supply Chain Management processes. The behavior of processes upstream and downstram of the Customer Order Decoupling Point is quite different:

  • Upstream processes are driven by forecast based planning information, Materials are pushed downstream. Optimization is realized by balancing inventory and capacity.
  • Downstream processes are driven by actual customer orders. Materials are pulled by the order. Optimization is realized by balancing capacity and lead-times.

The OpenReference Supply Chain Operations Domain recognizes these differences in behavior at level-2: Make-to-Stock (MTS), Make-to-Order (MTO, CTO, ATO, PTO), and Engineer-to-Order (ETO). Customer Order Decoupling Points typically resides in the first MTS process (when looking upstream):

Supply Chain Configuration Strategy

Supplier Receive, Store Pre-build/ Produce Assemble/ Finish Package, Store Pick, Load, Ship Enter Order, Invoice Customer

MTS/VMI

Vendor Managed Inventory

S1

M1

M1

M1

D1

D1

MTS

Make-to-Stock

S1

M1

M1

M1

D1

D1

MTO/PTO

Package-to-Order

S1

M1

M1

M2

D2

D2

MTO/ATO

Assemble-to-Order

S1

M1

M2

M2

D2

D2

MTO/CTO

Configure-To-Order

S1

M2

M2

M2

D2

D2

S2

  Supplier Source Make Deliver Customer

Use Cases

Community Importance Rating:
0.00
(0 votes)

Process(es)

IDNameLevelx
A108Define Supply Chain Network3A108
A202Define Supply Chain Network3A202
A203Define Network Process Flow3A203
A210Define To-Be Supply Chain Network3A210
Customer Order Decoupling Point Best Practice, Customer Order, Decoupling Point, Order Cycle, Order-to-Cash, Supply Chain, Network The process or node in the supply chain network where the activities are no longer driven by individual orders