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The Bullwhip Effect

The Bullwhip Effect

The Bullwhip Effect

Poor demand planning and forecasting in a supply chain often leads to an imbalance between supply and demand that, in turn, results in either product shortages or over-stocked inventory. An amplified demand forecasting error further downstream in the supply chain, when each supply chain member is blindsided by the lack of accurate demand information.

For example, when the actual customer demand is 1,000 units, with 10% set aside for a safety stock, the supplier furthest upstream of the supply chain ends up absorbing 1,464 units—that is, 364 units more than what is actually needed.

This phenomenon is called the bullwhip effect. The bullwhip effect (or whiplash or whipsaw phenomenon) is generally referred to as an inverse ripple effect of forecasting errors throughout the supply chain that often leads to amplified supply and demand misalignment, where orders (perceived demand) to the upstream supply chain member (e.g., the supplier) tend to exaggerate the true patterns of end-customer demand because each chain member’s view of true demand can be blocked by its immediate downstream supply chain member.

The common symptoms of the bullwhip effect include delayed new product development, constant shortages and backorders, frequent order cancellations and returns, excessive pipeline inventory, erratic production scheduling, and chronic overcapacity problems.

Causes of the Bullwhip Effect

The bullwhip effect can be caused by a number of management failures and mistakes, as

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