SAFEWAY SUPPLY CHAIN INNOVATION FOR KRAFT FOODS

Supply-chain process redesign

In an industry where margins can be razor thin, optimizing the supply chain is an effective way to compete for and win customers. Using collaborative design techniques allowed Kraft, the largest US food manufacturer, to identify supply chain innovations that have increased revenues, created lasting partnerships, and uncovered new value opportunities throughout the organization.

For a series of workshops facilitated by IDEO, Kraft assembled a team of Supply Chain, Merchandising, Procurement, Sales, and Human Resources representatives from both Kraft and its retail supermarket customers. Using structured brainstorms, field observations at stores and distribution centers, inspirational observations at analogous companies, employee interviews, and quick prototyping of new tools, the teams convened several times over an 18-month period to share learnings, brainstorm further solutions, and implement changes.

One of the dozens of experiments involved Capri Sun Lemonade and a team from Safeway. The team saw why Lemonade posed a challenge: it shipped on the bottom of a mixed-flavor pallet, and stock keepers had to unload the other flavors to reach it. After several prototypes, the team landed on a design in which each flavor gets “chimney-stacked” vertically. Now stockers can easily reach any flavor that goes out of stock. This experiment led to a 162% increase over to the previous year. Shipments of full pallets improved across all Safeway divisions, and Kraft became Safeway’s premier cross-dock vendor.

Kraft has trained the entire leadership team within its supply chain to use these methods with internal teams and directly with customers. In addition, Kraft’s customers have adopted this collaboration strategy within their organizations, with other trading partners, and within functions outside of supply chain, in merchandising, for example.

Project date: 2004


Facts & Figures

Improved access to product palettes led to an immediate 162% increase in sales.

Ever more concerned with saving time, grocery shoppers rely on the predictability of their local supermarkets.
(IDEO research)

A classic chimney inspired the vertical, easy-to-access product stacks used to speed up stocking and shopping.

Read how IDEO helped Kraft and Safeway to co-manage and optimize the end-to-end supply chain in Logitistics magazine.

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