Operations at Whirlpool
 
			
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	  	
 
		
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Case Details:
  
Case Code : OPER034 
Case Length : 15 Pages 
Period : 1990 - 2004 
Organization : Whirpool Corporation 
Pub Date : 2004 
Teaching Note : Available 
Countries : USA 
Industry : Consumer Appliances 
 
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This case study was compiled from published sources, and is intended to be used as a basis for class discussion. It is not intended to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a management situation. Nor is it a primary information source.
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"Logistics is the most challenging of all business 
processes due to its extreme cross-functional nature and this challenge 
increases exponentially in a global environment." 
-J. Paul Dittmannn, Vice-President, Whirlpool in 19971. 
"We want to get the right product to the customer when 
they expect it. While that is a simple set of outcomes, it is an incredibly 
complex set of activities that have to be orchestrated all the way to our 
suppliers." 
-Reuben Slone, Vice-President of Supply Chain, Whirlpool in 
20032 . 
Introduction
Whirlpool Corporation (Whirlpool) was the world's leading 
manufacturer and marketer of home appliances in the 1990s and 2000s. 
	
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(Refer to Exhibit-I on the 
major appliance manufacturers in the world). It led the appliance market in the 
United States and South America and was among the top three manufacturers in 
Europe. (Refer to Exhibit-II on the appliance industry in the US).  
 
It was also 
the largest western appliance manufacturer in Asia. The company was the leading 
manufacturer of refrigerators, microwave ovens, washers, dryers and air 
conditioners, and marketed its products under the names Kenmore, Sears, KitchenAid, Roper, Inglis and Speed Queen, in addition to the brand name 
'Whirlpool'. (Refer to Exhibit-III for Whirlpool's brands and products). 
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 As a manufacturing company, Whirlpool placed considerable emphasis on 
	operational efficiency.  
	
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		The company 
		began restructuring its operations in the early-1990s to orient itself 
		to changing market conditions.  As a part of its operational 
		restructuring, the company set up several cross-functional teams for key 
		product areas, entered into several agreements with its suppliers based 
		on their reliability and their ability to assist in product design and 
		began using Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)3 
		to communicate with its suppliers. 
		 
		Almost all the Whirlpool stores around the world were linked with 
		e-business software. The software linked each of its factories and sales 
		operations with suppliers and key-retail partners.  | 		
	 
 
Operations at Whirlpool
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