The student must thenpost 2 replies of at least 250 words by 11:59 p.m. (ET)
students must support their assertions with at least 2 peer-reviewed journal articles in current APA format. The thread must include a reference list, andeach question/answer must be delineated under an APA heading. Each reply must demonstrate asubstantive discussion.
# 1 Reply
BUSI740
Week 3 Discussion Questions
Question 1: How do the location and size of warehouse affect the performance of a firm such as Amazon? What factors should Amazon take into account when deciding where and how big its warehouse should be?
According to Chopra (2019), the decisions about warehouse location and size significantly influence a company’s response time and efficiency. Companies like Amazon rely heavily on their responsiveness to their customers, and it is an integral part of their competitive advantage. However, facility decisions also impact both the total cost and service level. Therefore, companies face trade-offs when making these decisions. For example, if Amazon wants to reduce its response time for customers, it must locate warehouses closer to them. However, this approach would be relatively more expensive in terms of having a large central warehouse with economies of scale, which would then increase the response time. Santoso et al. (2021) noted that logistics play a critical role in creating customer satisfaction, and thus, these decisions are of strategic importance that can affect a firm’s competitive advantage. There are a host of factors that a company like Amazon needs to consider. For example, it should consider total logistic cost, comprised of inventory, transportation, and facility costs. It should also consider local tax incentives and regulations. Amazon should consider factors such as demand patterns, expected response time, transportation infrastructure, labor costs, real estate costs, scalability, etc. The optimal warehouse placement and choice of size will help Amazon reduce delivery time and minimize other inventory costs, such as holding and shipping costs.
Question 2: How do import duties and exchange rates affect the location decision in a supply chain?
Import duties and exchange rates are key macroeconomic factors that impact the supply chain network design (Chopra, 2019). These factors are crucial as they affect the total landed cost of goods and thus can make the production or distribution in one region more or less attractive depending on their favorable or unfavorable values. For example, import duties raise the costs of imported goods in a country, which makes local sourcing or production more cost-effective. Similarly, the exchange rate fluctuations can be favorable or unfavorable for the distribution of goods between the two countries. For example, an increase in the local currency value would make exports expensive, whereas a decrease in the value can make imports expensive. Msomi and Muzindutsi (2025), while evaluating the relationships among exchange rates, supply chain, and exports, noted that a real exchange rate depreciation results in decreased imports and increased exports. Firms must consider the fluctuation of the exchange rate when designing their respective supply chain networks globally. Failure to take these macroeconomic factors into account can cause firms to bear costs and experience a drop in their profit margins.
Question 3: How is a rise in transportation costs likely to affect global supply chain networks?
Transportation costs are comprised of inbound costs to bring the supply to the facilities and the outbound costs delivering the output from the facilities (Chopra, 2019). A rise in the transportation costs would reduce the total cost of logistics and would force firms to take remedial steps, such as creating a supplier hub to consolidate shipments from several suppliers. There would also be a push toward regionalization to minimize the long transportation routes. And the firms would re-evaluate their network design and bring their facilities closer to their demand centers. Firms can also redesign their components so they can be packed more economically for shipping in a compact form. Similarly, firms can re-evaluate their production process to revise their outsourcing choices. Müllerklein and Fontaine (2025) underscore the importance of increasing supply chain resilience (SCR) in the face of such disruptions as increased transportation costs. They suggest that firms could adopt SCR measures such as supplier segregation, multiple sourcing, inventory positioning, multiple transportation channels, re-routing, and backup suppliers.
Question 4: Amazon has built new warehouses as it has grown. How does this change affect various costs and response times in the Amazon supply chain?
An additional warehouse can help Amazon’s supply chain in various ways. For example, the new warehouse would help reduce the transportation costs due to proximity to its customers. It will also improve Amazon’s response time and enable Amazon to deliver faster to some of its customers, which will also increase customer satisfaction. In contrast, Amazon’s facility costs will increase, such as labor, utilities, and real estate costs. The new warehouse will also increase operational complexity. In the end, Amazon needs to find a cost-service balance where customer service level is optimized at the minimal level of total supply chain cost.
Question 5: McMaster-Carr sells MRO equipment from five warehouses in the United States. W.W. Grainger sells products from more than 300 retail locations, supported by several warehouses. In both cases, customers place orders using the Internet or on the phone. Discuss the pros and cons of the two strategies.
Chopra (2019) emphasizes that supply chain network design should match customer expectations. In the case of W.W. Grainger, the company seems to offer immediate availability of products through the network of its 300 retail locations. On the other hand, McMaster-Carr seems to be targeting non-emergency customers who might be willing to wait and expect better prices. Both of these strategies have their pros and cons. For example, in the case of McMaster-Carr, the strategy has the advantage of lower facility costs with fewer warehouses and can achieve optimal inventory levels and enjoy lower costs due to economies of scale. However, McMaster-Carr would have longer delivery times and higher transportation costs due to the limited number of warehouses. In the case of W.W. Grainger, it has a faster response time due to its proximity to customers and the vast network of its retail stores that can also ship orders to the customers. Similarly, it offers faster order fulfillment and hence a better customer experience. However, W. W. Grainger incurs higher operating costs and capital expenditure in maintaining its 300 retail stores. It also must maintain inventory redundancy across its multiple retail stores.
Question 6: Consider a firm such as Apple or Dell, with few production facilities worldwide. List the pros and cons of this approach and why it may or may not be suitable for the computer industry.
Chopra (2019) indicates that having fewer production facilities works best for high-value, low-volume products such as laptops, as the transportation cost is less critical than standardization and centralized control through a few production facilities. Therefore, Dell’s build-to-order model fits well with the focused model. In terms of pros, such networks can provide economies of scale and lower unit costs. In addition, the networks enable superior quality control and standardization, and finally, such networks can offer better inventory management. On the other hand, in terms of cons, such networks incur higher transportation costs due to their fewer centralized facilities, and they suffer from longer lead times more susceptible to supply chain disruptions, and finally, these systems are less flexible to respond to regional market changes.
Question 7: Consider a firm such as Ford, with more than 150 facilities worldwide. List the pros and cons of having many facilities and why this model may or may not be suitable for the automobile industry.
Chopra (2019) identifies that such models are generally suitable for the automobile manufacturers that deal with products that are costly to ship and must deal with local compliance and standards. In terms of pros, such networks enjoy faster delivery and lower shipping costs due to their proximity to global markets. They can adapt to local customization for regulatory and customer needs, and they are well-equipped to deal with uncertainty. In terms of cons, such networks are highly capital-intensive with multiple facilities across the globe and face greater complexity and coordination issues, along with inventory management issues and the risk of under-utilization of their available capacity.
References
Chopra, S. (2019). Supply chain management: Strategy, planning, and operation (7th ed.). Pearson Education, Inc.
Msomi, S., & Muzindutsi, P. (2025). Exchange rates, supply chain Activity/Disruption effects, and exports. Forecasting, 7(1), 10. to an external site.
Müllerklein, D., & Fontaine, P. (2025). Resilient transportation network design with disruption uncertainty and lead times. European Journal of Operational Research, 322(3), 827-840. to an external site.
Santoso, S., Nurhidayat, R., Mahmud, G., & Arijuddin, A. M. (2021). Measuring the total logistics costs at the macro level: A study of indonesia. Logistics, 5(4), 1-19. to an external site.
# 2 Reply :
ocation and Transportation
Location and the size of a warehouse impacts organizations because it has long-term impacts due to cost if moved or shut down, however, storage facilities are cheaper than production facilities (Chopra, 2019). Amazon must take into account the regional fixed and variable costs of storing and shipping costs, particularly when deciding where and what size the warehouse(s) should be. Additional factors Amazon must consider would be labor costs, the costs of holding inventory, and the costs of coordinating merchandise to the customer once they purchase an item.
As a variable cost, a rise in transportation costs affect global supply chain networks by potentially raising the cost of the item shipped based on any tariff or tax incentives the company must pay. This can lead to companies building locations closer to market demands of items.
Import Duties and Exchange Rates
Import duties, also known as tariffs and tax incentives, affect location decisions in a supply chain (Chopra, 2019). Tariffs are fees paid when a product crosses city, state, or international boundaries while tax incentives reduce taxes and tariffs in cities, states, or other countries as an incentive to bring in businesses to specific areas. However, higher tariffs result in higher production locations but have smaller capacity levels (Chopra, 2019) and an example of tax incentives was when Michigan gave incentives to the movie industry to film within the state, which brought in quite a bit of revenue. Free trade zones allow production companies to have relaxed tariffs or duties if they export their products, something that companies may capitalize on due to lower labor costs in developing countries that offer those zones (Chopra, 2019).
Exchange rates on the other hand affect locations within a supply chain due to fluctuations and impact profits of organizations that are on the global market (Chopra, 2019). Weinberger (2020) researched markups and allocation efficiencies within the Chilean market during global exchange rate shocks and found evidence that importing firms add on real exchange rate appreciations into their markups. A way to effectively counteract fluctuating exchange rates is to build network overcapacity and make it flexible to supply different markets (Chopra, 2019).
Warehouses
The fact that Amazon has built new warehouses as it has grown changes the various costs and response times in its supply chain in that Amazon costs are higher, but customer responses are quicker, often being able to get a purchased item the next day or sooner (Chopra, 2019). Per Houde et al. (2023) Amazon has two types of location facilities: fulfillment centers and sortation centers. The fulfillment centers store goods, pack orders, and then transfer packages to the sortation centers where packages are sorted by destination and then sent out for delivery (Houde et al., 2023). The authors found that by Amazon expanding into the two types of facilities that Amazon had significant shipping cost savings and that they facilitated the realization of aggregate economies of scale (Houde et al., 2023).
McMaster-Carr (Chopra, 2019) utilizes five warehouses across the United States that customers can place orders using the Internet or on the phone. Each mode will have a lower inventory and facility costs but will have higher transportation costs associated with the purchase due to having fewer warehouses (Chopra, 2019). Deliveries will be scheduled the day after the purchase, with the potential reduction to shipping charges if scheduled later than that. W.W. Grainger, having more than 300 retail locations with support to several warehouses, will have higher facility and inventory costs but will have lower transportation costs; transportation costs for both organizations will depend on the cost of fuel and the amount of freight (Chopra, 2019). An advantage that both organizations have been that as online and telephone retailers, they can hold fixed prices to minimize costs (Houde, 2023).
Production Facilities
Apple or Dell who have few production facilities worldwide need to evaluate the demand of the supply market, the desired response time, fixed costs of any facilities they may wish to open, the variable costs of labor and materials needed, the holding costs of inventory, the transportation costs between the market and locations, product sales prices, tariffs and taxes, and facility capacities (Chopra, 2019). Given all these tasks, the computer industry may not be the best model of have more production facilities. The economies of scale for computers would impact on the variable costs but that is only if there is more demand for computers to be built.
Ford, having more than 150 facilities worldwide, would face many of the same challenges that the computer industry has. However, the automobile industry would have larger economies of scale in that purchases of automobiles are almost constant. Free trade zones would be necessary to keep production costs down (Chopra, 2019).
References
Chopra, S. (2019). Supply chain management: Strategy, planning, and operation (7th ed.). Pearson Education, Inc.
Houde, J-F., Newberry, P., & Seim, K. (2023). Nexus tax laws and economies of density in e-commerce: A study of Amazon’s fulfillment center network. Econometrica: Journal of the Econometric Society, 91(1), 147-190. https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA15265
Weinberger, A. (2020). Markups and misallocation with evidence from exchange rate shocks. Journal of Development Economics, 146.