Postponement is widely recognised as an approach that can lead to superior supply
chains, and its application is widely observed as a growing trend in manufacturing.
Form postponement (FPp) involves the delay of final manufacturing until a customer
order is received and is commonly regarded as an approach to mass customisation.
However, while much is written in the literature on the benefits and strategic impact of
FPp, little is still known about its application. Thus this research project aims to address
how FPp is applied in terms of the operational implications within the manufacturing
facility. Here the ‘postponed’ manufacturing processes are performed in the factory
where the preceding processes are carried out.
An in-depth case study research design was developed and involved case studies at
three manufacturing facilities, which provided diverse contexts in which to study FPp
applications. Each case study incorporated multiple units of analysis which were based
around product groups subject to different inventory management policies – FPp, make
to order (MTO) and make to stock (MTS). The same research design was used in each
study and involved both qualitative and quantitative evidence. Qualitative evidence was
gathered via structured interviews and included the operational changes required to
apply FPp in a previously MTO and MTS environment. Eleven quantitative variables,
providing a broad based measurement instrument, were compared across the three units
of analysis to test the hypotheses. This combination of qualitative and quantitative
evidence in the case studies helped to triangulate the research findings. Comparison
between the three case studies provided further conclusions regarding operational
implications that were context specific and those which were not.
The research concludes that the manufacturing planning system presents a major
obstacle to the application of FPp in a MTO and MTS environment. In spite of this, and
even when the FPp application is flawed, the benefits of FPp still justify its application.
The research also contributes two frameworks: one which determines when FPp is a
viable alternative to MTO or MTS; and another that illustrates the major operational
implications of applying FPp to a product exhibiting component swapping modularity.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:CRANFIELD1/oai:dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk:1826/116 |
Date | 09 1900 |
Creators | Skipworth, Heather |
Contributors | Harrison, Alan |
Publisher | Cranfield University, School of Management |
Source Sets | CRANFIELD1 |
Language | en_UK |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis or dissertation, Doctoral, PhD |
Format | 1883 bytes, 3089834 bytes, text/plain, application/pdf |
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