- Push–pull strategy
The business terms push and pull originated in the
marketing andadvertising world,Fact|date=April 2007 but are also applicable in the world of electronic content andsupply chain management. The push/pull relationship is that between a product or piece of information and who is moving it. A customer "pulls" things towards themselves, while a producer "pushes" things toward customers.Content
In a "push" system the consumer does not request the product to be developed; it is "pushed at" the end-user by promotion. An example of this is a perfume product. Women do not request to smell a fragrance they never smelled before; it is simply "pushed" at them, through the right advertisement.
*Applied to that portion of the supply chain where demand uncertainty is relatively small
*Production & distribution decisions are based on long term forecasts
*Based on past orders received from retailer’s warehouse (may lead toBullwhip effect )
*Inability to meet changing demand patterns
*Large and variable production batches
*Unacceptable service levels
*Excessive inventories due to the need for large safety stocksIn a "pull" system the consumer requests the product and "pulls" it through the delivery channel. An example of this is the car manufacturing company
Ford Australia . Ford Australia only produces cars when they have been ordered by the customers.
*Applied to that portion of the supply chain where demand uncertainty is high
*Production and distribution are demand driven
*No inventory, response to specific orders
*Point of sale (POS) data comes in handy when shared with supply chain partners
*Decrease in lead time
*Difficult to implementupply chains
With a push-based supply chain, products are pushed through the channel, from the production side up to the retailer. The manufacturer sets production at a level in accord with historical ordering patterns from retailers. It takes longer for a push-based supply chain to respond to changes in demand, which can result in overstocking or bottlenecks and delays (the
bullwhip effect ), unacceptableservice level s and product obsolescence.In a pull-based supply chain, procurement, production and distribution are demand driven so that they are coordinated with actual customer orders, rather than forecast demand.
A supply chain is almost always a combination of both push and pull, where the interface between the push-based stages and the pull-based stages is known as the push–pull boundary. [cite book | title = The Practice of Supply Chain Management | author = Terry P. Harrison, Hau L. Lee and John J. Neale | publisher = Springer | year = 2005 | isbn = 0387240993 | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=o3jyaKwSGtwC&pg=PA17&dq=push-pull+strategy+boundary&ei=fVHUSMn7D4KgswOpkIiPBA&sig=ACfU3U1v3KDCoY14kig1LUwuvje6-HaxTg ] An example of this would be Dell's build to order supply chain. Inventory levels of individual components are determined by forecasting general demand, but final assembly is in response to a specific customer request. The push-pull boundary would then be at the beginning of the assembly line.
ee also
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Supply and demand
*Push technology
*Pull technology
*Digital marketing
*Publish/subscribe References
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