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FMCG/Consumer Durables
Under pressure to structure supply chain and storage
FMCG companies have placed EAS, desktops and storage as their
top three technology priorities. EAS gives them tighter control over their processes
while desktops are a must for them and also storing vital information and having
an effective DR mechanism is also high on their priority list. By Abhinav
Singh
There
is stiff competition amongst FMCG companies putting pressure on their wafer
thin margins but they are using IT as a business enabler to their manufacturing
processes. With tight supply chain schedules and intense competition the pressure
is always on to bring new products to the marketplace. These companies are now
using enterprise solutions to gain visibility into their schedules, customer
requirements and their inventories. All of them have invested on desktops and
notebooks too to enable their top management and mobile workforce to stay connected.
As per the survey, many FMCG companies consider storage as an important IT asset
and want to have DR policies along with regularly archiving their e-mail and
databases that contains vital sales and marketing information and customer leads.
The top three
As per the survey, the top technology areas on which the FMCG/consumer durables
companies had invested were EAS (enterprise application software), followed
by desktops and then storage.
As far as enterprise application software is concerned of the ten FMCG firms
surveyed that had invested in enterprise applications, all had invested in ERP.
This was followed by the investments on databases and messaging with 70 percent
having invested in each of these and then CRM with 50 percent. While investment
in ERP will continue with 42 percent of 12 respondents planning to invest in
ERP this year and around 50 percent in CRM and a third of them want to streamline
their supply chain.
By investing in EAS, FMCG companies have already experienced better utilisation
of resources, faster time to market and have been able to formulate effective
marketing strategies. Through effective use of EAS they have been able to improve
service levels with their dealers in getting up-to-date information of potential
stock-out scenarios, which has been made possible due to better visibility in
sales, inventories and production-in-progress data.
EAS has been the top IT investment area for FMCG companies because they want
to enhance productivity. Take the case of Hindustan Lever Ltd (HLL) where consolidation
of information has led to operational excellence at its manufacturing plants
across the country. Since finance, planning and inventory are all integrated,
the company can focus on its core businessproduction.
Parle Products Ltd is using a home-grown ERP system, which has modules such
as material management, finance and accounting and payroll. The company has
also developed a home-grown depot management system, which is required to keep
control over its depots located across the country. Gaurav Sharma, EDP In charge,
Parle Products Ltd says, Through the depot management system we get weekly
reports on how many trucks were booked and the number of boxes dispatched in
each truck. This helps us keep tight control over the goods being dispatched
from our depots.
The consolidation of enterprise-wide information has also helped these companies
conduct better market analysis. There has been a continuous increase in the
level of competition in the market, and EAS has helped these companies understand
customer preferences. EAS has helped them improve their intimacy with customers
and they have been able to analyse consumer behaviour and understand brand performance
in the market. This has helped FMCG companies innovate with products as per
customer preferences. Many of these companies are using business intelligence
(BI) tools for better market analysis. FMCG companies are also forecasting cash
flows through their ERP systems and have been able to significantly speed up
accounts closure by more than 50 percent. Many companies such as HLL have experienced
a reduction in potential stock-out scenarios and there has been visibility of
inventory across locations thereby reducing the load on the system.
According to K G Mohan, vice president-IT, Hindustan Lever Limited, HLL has
been able to enhance its supply chain system, check stock inventory online,
and gain a deeper understanding of customer requirements. It has also eased
the process of capturing market data and there is more visibility throughout
the organisation. It has also helped in formulating market strategies by providing
better understanding of market conditions and has improved the decision-making
process leading to better inventory management, and structured production planning.
It is now easy for the company to analyse the performance of its sales staff,
thereby leading to enhanced productivity.
EAS has also helped FMCG companies manage their unprecedented growth. Take the
case of LG Electronics Ltd, which has deployed additional modules of its ERP
system to manage its growth. The most important one being costing (CO) and evaluation,
which the company has added to the Oracle E-Business Suite (ERP) that it uses.
Both these modules have been developed in-house and customised as per the companys
requirement. Daya Prakash, program manager, LG CNS Global says, The costing
module helps us analyse the exact cost of the finished product looking at the
materials procured to manufacture it. It also helps in fixing the margin and
price of the product. The evaluation system helps us in performance evaluation
of our sales team as to how they are performingkeeping track of operations,
daily targets/monthly targets, leads generated and follow up on the same and
the like.
In a FMCG company, a smoothly functioning supply chain is crucial if businesses
are to survive in competitive markets. Mumbai-based FMCG major Marico Industries
Ltd. is no exception. Its biggest challenge was to create efficiencies in distribution,
this being the area in which the greatest competitive advantage can be achieved
in India. Marico has a big supply chain to cover the country. Its supply chain
consists of five factories, around 15 plus contract manufacturers, two consolidation
centres to manage logistics activities, 30 depots, with hundreds of super distributors,
distributors, stockists, wholesalers and retailers.
Vinod Kamath, chief, Finance and IT, at Marico who had been associated with
the supply chain initiatives says, We had standalone systems at the headquarters
and in each of our 30 depots, and they werent integrated with each other.
All the planning was done in Excel, which meant that we lacked data visibility
and the management reports were inconsistent. The result was obviousinaccurate
forecasts, long planning cycles, no transparency of warehouse stock, and a delayed
response to customer needs. It would have been impossible to improve the
efficiency of the distribution based on this method, says Kamath. What
the company needed was a state-of-the art IT system to streamline the supply
chain and minimise time-to-market. Kamath adds that Marico works with low levels
of stock and its responses must be lightning-fast.
With SAP APO, the company has managed to shorten its planning
cycles and introduce online reporting. Before implementing SAP, distributors
had a warehouse stock out of around 30 percent each. Within six months of the
implementation, Marico had managed to reduce stock outs to 20 percent. Kamath
says, This 10 percent reduction in stock outs means a corresponding increase
in revenue. The monitoring functionality of mySAP SCM APO allows the effectiveness
of each distributor to be measured, and helps pinpoint the reasons for any changes.
Desktops: the next priority
All the surveyed FMCG companies have invested in PCs and 92 percent on notebooks.
One in four had deployed Thin Clients. As per the survey, 67 percent of FMCG
companies are planning to invest on notebooks, 58 percent on PCs and one in
four on Thin Clients.
Take the case of Electrolux, now part of the Videocon Group.
The company had outsourced its desktop management to Wipro Infotech. Now it
wants to invest in desktops and do away with the AMC with Wipro Infotech. Anil
Bhatia, senior manager-Business Solution Group, Electrolux, says, We would
now like to manage the desktops ourselves as we have to incur heavy cost in
the outsourcing model. We want our offices desktop PCs to be linked to the ERP
system (presently J D Edwards but soon migrating to SAP because Videocon is
using SAP ERP) and for this we require desktops and they are strategic to us.
Electrolux has also provided notebooks to about 90 of its employees and these
notebooks are helpful in cases where the workforce is on the move.
Similarly LG Electronics has also invested in desktops and a majority of them
are desktops with LCD monitors. According to Prakash, there are around 2,000
PCs in the organisation. These PCs are used across the country for LG Electronics
India employees and the choice of LCD monitors was because it occupies less
space and is power efficient vis-a-vis CRT monitors. The company has provided
500 plus notebooks to its managerial staff, which provides them flexibility
in accessing corporate data using Wi-Fi at its corporate office in Noida.
Many FMCG companies are also opting for thin clients these
days and they are displacing PCs in part. D Banerjee, assistant general managerSystems,
DCM Shriram Industries Ltd says, We have both LCD PCs as well as thin
clients. Notebook usage is still confined to senior executives and mainly used
to provide connectivity to the corporate network while the executives are out
of the office.
Thin clients are proving to be formidable alternatives to branded PCs at some
FMCG companies. Many companies are replacing PCs with thin clients. Whats
interesting is the fact that the low cost of thin clients is not the primary
reason for their deployment. Thin-clients bring with them ease of manageability.
Many FMCG companies have offices spread across locations and hence it is easier
to manage thin-clients from a central server, thus requiring minimal support
staff. Thin clients also address security aspects well.
That said it is likely that when some FMCG companies are successful in getting
the same PC functionality with better manageability and security they will go
for thin clients in the future. Thin clients can be a competitive alternative
to branded PCs, particularly if the Total cost of Ownership (TCO) is taken into
account. If one compares the cost of managing thin-clients it is a direct saving
for a large enterprise in the FMCG sector. Thin clients also consume less power;
this can prove to be a big saving for an enterprise. A thin client consumes
10 watts, whereas a PC consumes at least 150 Watts. For large enterprises with
hundreds or thousands of machines, this can result in huge savings.
Broadly speaking large FMCG companies who have multiple offices around the country
with desktops running into thousands will find it easy to manage and use thin
clients. Banerjee says, As a thin client has no hard disk or floppy drives
and can be managed from a central server, maintenance is simpler and requires
fewer support staff. Many FMCG companies that I know are always concerned with
the issue of security. They can look to these machines as an easy and low-cost
alternative to PCs. Barring cases where performance is critical, as in
engineering workstations, thin clients can easily stand in for PCs. According
to industry pundits the total cost of ownership (TCO) can be 30 to 60 percent
lower in the case of thin-clients.
Storage gains ground
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Many FMCG companies have offices spread across locations
and hence it is easier to manage thin-clients from a central server, thus
requiring minimal support staff. Thin clients also address security aspects
well
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Of the ten respondents from this vertical who had invested
in storage, 70 percent had already invested on SAN technology, the highest in
all verticals surveyed. A significant number, 60 percent, continue to use DASwhich
we feel will change this year, as they will be investing in networked storage.
As far as the adoption of secondary storage by FMCG companies is concerned,
75 percent of 8 respondents had invested on tape drives. About 25 percent were
using Virtual Tape Libraries (VTL). Tape continues to be a major investment
area followed by VTL. Also as part of their storage strategy, 86 percent of
7 FMCG respondents had invested on database archiving software to back up the
data on tape drives followed by 57 percent who had gone for e-mail archiving
software. 42 percent of 12 respondents intend to invest in e-mail and database
archiving software in the coming year as well.
The penetration of network storage was very high amongst large FMCG companies
as per the survey. The logic behind going in for network storage is the requirement
to go in for multiple Disaster Recovery sites and also for a BCP (Business Continuity
Plan). Electrolux has adopted SAN for block storage purposesmainly CAD/CAM/CAE
data that are used for product design. Bhatia says, Block-level storage
is very important for our organisation as many of our users used to accidentally
delete design files. Thanks to the SAN, all the files are safely stored.
The company is also following a comprehensive e-mail archiving policy. Most
Electrolux employees use Lotus Notes for e-mail and all their messages are archived
using a storage solution from EMC-Legato. As per policy, these messages are
archived for a few months. DCM Shriram Industries Ltd uses DAS but it is also
considering and evaluating networked storage so that it can plan a DR strategy.
FMCG companies have realised the importance of VTL, as it is an archival storage
technology that makes it possible to save data as if it were being stored on
tape although it may actually be stored on hard disk or on another storage medium.
VTL is facilitating faster backup and recovery and lower operating costs. VTL
can be used with a hierarchical storage management (HSM) system in which data
is moved as it falls through various usage thresholds to slower but less costly
forms of storage media. VTL is also used as part of a (SAN) where less-frequently
used or archived data can be managed by a single virtual tape server for a number
of networked computers.
LG Electronics India has a proper DR set-up across its two manufacturing plants
located in Noida and Pune. On a normal day, Noidas (manufacturing plant
and corporate office) users are connected to the Noida server and the Pune (plant)
users are connected to the Pune server. If the Noida server fails all the critical
usersboth plant and corporatewould be connected to the Pune server
to execute critical activities such as sales and production. A similar connection
to Noida is made if the Pune server fails. LG Electronics India has classified
all the information into two categoriescritical and sensitive. (Critical
data refers to the ERP and business-related data while sensitive data includes
all e-mail, Excel sheets and PowerPoint presentations).
The company also has an e-mail and database archiving solution from Hitachi
Data Systems (HDS) which it is using for storing e-mail of all its employees
who are on Lotus Notes. Prakash says, E-mail archiving is part of our
ILM strategy which we are following as we have to adhere to statutory compliance
requirements. We have a policy whereby we store all our transactional data for
more than eight years and all our e-mail messages are stored for more than one
year.
In a similar fashion database and e-mail archiving holds the utmost importance
for Parle Products, which is using a storage solution from Intransa for this
purpose. The company has kept its storage solution at a Reliance data centre
in Bangalore with the aim of bringing about storage consolidation for the purpose
of putting in place a Disaster Recovery set-up. The company strongly believes
in having an effective DR policy for data protection and in turn having a robust
storage policy.
Technology is a high priority for FMCG companies in order to stay ahead of competition
and also in analysing the competition which is equally important for them. Enhancing
information delivery capabilities using front-end reporting tools for better
market and self analysis will continue to be a priority for Indian FMCG companies.
Additionally Web enabling all their applications and consolidation of information
through EAS will help FMCG companies in bringing efficiency to their processes
as they will have real time online information about their manufacturing plants,
distribution points, distributors and retailers. In order to provide access
to different applications to their employees they will need to invest on desktops
and in order to preserve all the information they will need to invest on having
effective storage strategies and policies.
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