Multivariable Supplier Segmentation in Sustainable Supply Chain Management
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. A Systematic Review of the Literature on Supplier Segmentation and Sustainable Development
- (1)
- The process method identifies distinguishable segments of potential suppliers for each item to be purchased by an industrial company. These segments are based on characteristics that are closely related to the key characteristics of the company’s own customer segments [36].
- (2)
- The portfolio method classifies the materials or components that a firm can purchase. Two variables are considered: profit impact and supply risk. Based on these two variables, materials or components can be divided into four supply categories: (1) non-critical items (supply risk: low; profit impact: low), (2) leverage items (supply risk: low; profit impact: high), (3) bottleneck items (supply risk: high; profit impact: low), and (4) strategic items (supply risk: high; profit impact: high). Each category requires a specific supplier strategy [37]. However, positioning in the matrix in terms of supply risk and benefit impact is subjective; it does not take into account suppliers’ reactions or joint development, nor does it encourage a joint working mentality [41]. Years later, Kraljic noted “the importance of trust in long-term relationships with suppliers. You need trust to create win-win” [42]. Other authors have also used the portfolio model by introducing other classification dimensions: Van Stekelenborg et al. [43] used control need of the internal market demand and control need of the external supply market as classification dimensions. Olsen et al. [44] used difficulty of managing the purchase situation and the strategic importance of the purchase as classification dimensions. Bensaou [45] used buyer’s and supplier’s specific investments as classification dimensions. Finally, Gelderman et al. [46] used supplier’s and buyer’s dependence as classification dimensions.
- (3)
- According to the involvement method, firms should determine their core competencies as relevant core activities and non-core activities. Resources that relate to core activities are strategic resources, while those that relate to non-core activities are non-strategic resources. With this method, the level of involvement determines the type of relationship. Based on this classification, the authors suggest two types of buyer-supplier relationships [28]:
- (a)
- Durable arm’s-length (quasi-market) relationships are suitable for the first class of inputs or resources, which are necessary but non-strategic.
- (b)
- Strategic partnerships (quasi-hierarchies) are suitable for the second class of inputs or strategic inputs, which are important in differentiating the buyer’s final product.
3. Business Evidence of Supplier Development
4. A Supplier Segmentation Proposal
5. Application of the Supplier Segmentation Proposal to Real Cases
5.1. Application of the Supplier Segmentation Proposal
5.2. MAThread® in Ford Europe
6. Results and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Type | % | Sector |
---|---|---|
Manufactured goods | 50–70% | Automotive, appliances, engineering, machinery and consumer goods, advanced software |
Process industry | 60–85% | Food, drugstore and cosmetics, pharmacy, iron and steel, cement, glass, chemistry, gas, petroleum, mining |
Services | 60–90% | Distribution, wholesalers, retailers, transportation, financial, professional services, telephone |
Measure | Department |
---|---|
Financial capacity | Finance |
Supplier alternatives | Purchasing |
Delivery time | Logistics |
Technological capacity | Engineering |
Negotiation time requirement | Purchasing |
Quality indicator | Quality |
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Rius-Sorolla, G.; Estelles-Miguel, S.; Rueda-Armengot, C. Multivariable Supplier Segmentation in Sustainable Supply Chain Management. Sustainability 2020, 12, 4556. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12114556
Rius-Sorolla G, Estelles-Miguel S, Rueda-Armengot C. Multivariable Supplier Segmentation in Sustainable Supply Chain Management. Sustainability. 2020; 12(11):4556. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12114556
Chicago/Turabian StyleRius-Sorolla, Gregorio, Sofía Estelles-Miguel, and Carlos Rueda-Armengot. 2020. "Multivariable Supplier Segmentation in Sustainable Supply Chain Management" Sustainability 12, no. 11: 4556. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12114556
APA StyleRius-Sorolla, G., Estelles-Miguel, S., & Rueda-Armengot, C. (2020). Multivariable Supplier Segmentation in Sustainable Supply Chain Management. Sustainability, 12(11), 4556. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12114556