Achieving and sustaining an optimal product portfolio in the healthcare industry through SKU rationalization, complexity costing, and dashboards
2012
After years of new product launches, and entry into
emerging markets, Company X, a healthcare company, has seen its
product portfolio proliferate and bring costly complexity into its
operations. Today, Company X seeks to achieve and sustain an
optimal product offering that meets their customers' needs. Through
a six-month research effort, we develop a process for
stock-keeping-unit (SKU) rationalization to reduce SKU complexity
while maintaining sales volumes. We, also, implement operational
models to compute complexity costs associated with SKU complexity
and employ SKU portfolio dashboards to monitor SKU development and
govern SKU creation. This thesis discusses a process for applying
these tools to any healthcare company. Through two case studies, we
apply the rationalization process on one pilot brand and develop a
dashboard to improve product portfolio management. We expect that
the SKU rationalization process will release 38% of avoidable costs
associated with the pilot brand. These case studies also provide
insight into how to correctly diagnose the cost reduction
opportunity associated with SKU complexity, as well as methods for
a step-change improvement in lead-times and cost-reduction. Lastly,
removal of complexity provides flexibility to capture other
business opportunities.
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