Introduction
This course is focused upon better business performance, through better planning and control of the business by top management. Sales & Operations Planning (S&OP) is the traditional name for the process, although some have tried to introduce alternative titles, such as Integrated Business Management and SOFplan – Sales, Operations, and Financial Planning. The process is about ensuring that the top-level plans in the business – covering product management, sales, marketing, operations, resources, finance, engineering, human resources, IT – are all balanced to achieve the strategic plans of the organization, in the medium to long term.
On successful completion of this workshop delegates will be able to:
- Improved customer service
- More consistent achievement of budget and business plan
- Reduced inventory and/or better control of lead times
- Becoming a ‘one number’ company, where everyone works to the same set of numbers
- Improved communication throughout the organization; it has been suggested that S&OP is all about communication, communication, communication
Course Objectives of Sales and Operations Planning
- To ensure that participants understand what Sales & Operations Planning is
- To explain the objectives of the process, and the benefits that can be achieved
- To describe the 5 phases of the monthly S&OP process, and to ensure that participants can recognize the appropriate people to be involved in each phase
- To ensure that top management realize S&OP is their process; they are responsible for making it work for them
- To realize that it is the preparation performed by people below the top-level that allows the process to work effectively and efficiently
- To prepare people to go back to their companies, ready to implement S&OP
- To plan for those implementations to be a success in achieving improved business performance
Course Process of Sales and Operations Planning
The course will explain the inputs to, the logic of, and the outputs from the S&OP process. Traditional slide presentations will be utilized. Exercises will be used to show how the logic of the spreadsheets works. There will be role plays to make people think about how they would react to specific circumstances. We encourage discussion at all times to ensure practical issues from individual organizations are exposed, discussed, and perhaps resolved. We will gradually develop the main critical issues that create an environment in which S&OP will succeed.
Course Benefits of Sales and Operations Planning
- S&OP will help you develop better, more realistic medium to long term plans
- Allowing you to better plan your acquisition of resources, across your planning horizon
- Thus you will have better plans that will be executed closer to plan, which will improve customer service and increase profitability. Plans will be genuinely achievable, and customer demand will not just be a wish list
- Top management will have a clear, recognized monthly process with which to plan and control the business
- Top management will be better integrated to create and maintain one plan for the business, driving towards becoming a ‘one number company’
- You will have more control over your inventory, lead times and order book levels
- You will achieve your financial numbers more consistently
Course Results of Sales and Operations Planning
- Individuals will recognize their roles within the S&OP process.
- People will be able to better carry out their roles within the S&OP process.
- They will be able to support each other in the development of realistic plans.
- They will realize that people must be integrated across the business to achieve success.
- Awareness of the need to reconcile each of the plans will become obvious.
- People will be able to see the need to develop the big picture, and allow top management to review it each and every month in a structured process.
Course Outlines of Sales and Operations Planning
Day One
Introduction to Sales & Operations Planning
- Why do organizations need S&OP?
- Where does it fit in the hierarchy of ERP and Supply Chain systems?
- What are the benefits that can be achieved?
- Who does what?
- An introduction to the 5 step Sales & Operations Planning process
- Step 1 of the process
- Managing the product or service portfolio
- New product introduction, phasing out old products
Day Two
The Demand Planning Phase
- What is the overall objective of demand planning?
- The essential difference between forecasting and demand planning
- The inputs to the demand planning process
- The logic of demand planning
- The outputs from demand planning – the data required to be passed on
- A demand planning exercise
- Demand planning & demand management
- The demand planning meeting
Day Three
The Supply & Resource Planning Phase
- What is the overall objective of supply and resource planning?
- The inputs to the supply planning process
- The logic of supply planning
- The outputs from supply planning – the data required to be passed on
- The inputs to resource planning
- The logic of resource planning
- The outputs from resource planning – the data to be passed on
- A supply and resource planning exercise
- The supply & resource planning meeting
Day Four
The Integration and Reconciliation Phase
- What must be integrated?
- What must be reconciled?
- Who must be involved?
- What is the agenda for the pre-S&OP meeting?
- The importance of the financial numbers
- Identifying gaps between the budget and the S&OP numbers, and discuss potential action plans to close the gaps
- Planning the agenda for the executive S&OP meeting
- Publishing the information for senior management
Day Five
The Executive Sales & Operations Planning Meeting
- Who must be involved? Who runs the meeting?
- The agenda for the S&OP meeting
- The review of each family to consider the balance of demand and supply
- The review of the overall financial numbers
- Decisions to be taken, the minutes of the meeting
- Identifying what can be improved in the next cycle
- Beyond plant level S&OP
- Software advances to support the process
About Kuala Lumpur
If you are not the type to laze around during your vacation and prefer a full schedule, visiting a capital city is a good idea! You won’t be short of activities to fill your days and may choose from museums, shops, amusement parks, theaters, restaurants, or even festivals. Don’t know where to go? Look no further! Kuala Lumpur, in Malaysia, has a wide range of things to do there. Whether traveling alone, with someone else, your family, or even friends, you will surely find what to do.