Question
Course Title:- Supply Chain Case Study 3DMALL GROWTH PAINS Instructions This activity presents a case study of a fictitious 3D printer and printer cartridge company
Course Title:- Supply Chain Case Study
3DMALL GROWTH PAINS
Instructions
This activity presents a case study of a fictitious 3D printer and printer cartridge company called 3DMall. 3DMall has a patent on proprietary 3D printing technology and has decided to sell its novel, user-friendly 3D printers and cartridges to consumers. The unique benefit to using 3DMall printers is that consumers do not have to design their own products by using complex scanning and design programs that require a certain level of technological expertise. Instead, they can choose to immediately print ready-made designs they find in 3DMalls online store.
The designs in 3DMalls store are provided by third-party organizations who submit these to 3DMall for sale. 3DMall hosts the designs, and consumers can browse and purchase them via an app or 3DMalls store website. When a consumer purchases a design through the 3DMall store, they are purchasing a one-time-use design from a third party and using it to print the item immediately with their own printer. 3DMall receives a percentage of every purchase made in the store. Once a consumer has purchased a design and uses it, the design automatically deletes itself from their printer.
Read the case study below and answer the questions that follow. At the end of the activity, the instructor will review the steps of the activity and share the correct answers for each question. This case study will be revisited in later activities.
Case Study Information
3DMall is a private start-up with some large investors. They used the investors' money to fund initial research and development and design, to build and staff a headquarters and a number of regional DCs with light manufacturing capability, and to pay for outsourced manufacturing, transportation, and supply. They also leased a cloud-based enterprise resources planning (ERP) system early on and spent some time developing a less hierarchical organizational structurea network structurethat focuses on end-to-end process efficiency. Since all of the employees are new, human resources staffed key roles with persons who had experience using this software system and were comfortable working in a more empowered, collegiate environment.
3DMalls founders felt that part of their mission was to sell sustainable products to support their environmental and fair trade priorities, so the initial R&D team used design-for-the-environment methodology by involving many internal stakeholders in the design process. They also developed an ethics and sustainability policy for manufacturers and suppliers. The manufacturer and suppliers agreed to these policies in the initial contract, but, at this time, it is unclear whether the policies are being put in practice, especially as 3DMall has started to grow rapidly and the manufacturer has added its own subcontractors to increase capacity.
Growth in sales in the first three years has been significant. The product and the marketplace are gaining users, but, according to market research, growth would be greater if there were more designs in the online marketplace. However, too many firms are still skittish about losing traditional sales to this new method, and others are upset that start-up firms have sprung up using this medium to compete with them directly.
The independent retail franchises are growing steadily, but some did close, in part due to overambitious inventory ordering relative to sales. 3DMalls revenue in the first year was US$60 million, but they had total expenses of US$80 million, for a net loss of US$20 million. Revenue grew by 20% in the next year, to US$72 million, and, due to some one-time start-up expenses, total expenses fell to US$70 million, for a first-time net profit of US$2 million. The strategic forecast predicts that revenue will continue to grow by 20% per year for each of the next five years. However, further investments will be needed to increase capacity, and most of 3DMall's expenses are variable rather than fixed, so total expenses are expected to rise each year. In addition, they expect an increase in net profits of only 10% per year (i.e., US$2.2 million expected net profit in the third year of operations).
Question
1. What is 3DMall's stage of supply chain maturity? Why? Is there any issue in the SC? How to fix it? 20%
2. Which is the most important red flag that there are misalignments or gaps in 3DMall's strategy? Why? 20%
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