3.2 Supply chain industry A company’s supply chain is its central nervous system for how it creates and distributes a product. The industry is made up of the key players who participate in this process‚ including manufacturers‚ wholesalers or distributors‚ retailers and transportation companies. There are three main areas of a company’s supply chain. They include: (Refer to the Picture below) * Procurement or the “buying” process. This includes the purchasing of the raw materials needed to
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race. That may have been true in Aesop’s time‚ but in today’s demanding business environment‚ "slow and steady" won’t get you out of the starting gate‚ let alone win any races. Managers these days recognise that getting products to customers faster than the competition will improve a company’s competitive position. To remain competitive‚ companies must seek new solutions to important Supply Chain Management issues such as modal analysis‚ supply chain management‚ load planning‚ route planning
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1. Amazon.com‚ Peapod‚ Dell‚ and many furniture manufacturers use push-pull supply chain strategies. Describe how each of these companies takes advantage of the risk-pooling concept. To better understand the strategies used by the three (3) companies and furniture manufacturers‚ the definition of Push or Pull is established below: Push Strategies – when the manufacturer uses its sales force and trade promotion money to induce intermediaries to carry‚ promote‚ and sell the product to end users.
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edge of his company was offering cheap labor and cheap land‚ he offered a very low price to the customers. By doing that‚ Galanz beat the competitors away as they could not make big profit and Galanz gained a big market share within a short period of time. At the same time‚ Galanz escalated its production capacity through free production line transfer and provided necessary training to the operators by its clients. The most important thing was Galanz had the right to use the excessive capacity for
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lean practices on inventory turnover. International Journal of Production Economics 2010. DiBarra‚ Camilla. 2002. 5S - A tool for culture change in shipyards. Journal of Ship Production 18 (3):143151. Fazelle‚ E.‚ ed. 2001. Supply chain strategy. The logistics of Supply chain managment. Edited by McGrawHill. Frazelle‚ Edward. 2002. World-Class Warehousing and Material Handling‚ ed McGraw-Hill. New York. Gu‚ Jinxiang‚ Goetschalckx‚ and Leon F. McGinnis. 2007. Reasearch on Warehouse Operations: A Comprehensive
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process. (need to advertisement‚but competitive is very differcult) l. Ensure supply continuity. (if competitive bidding‚ price high‚ supplier will leave) 4. When compared with single sourcing‚ multiple sourcing -> (lower risk)has the advantage of: dual and cross also double supplier‚ -dual is 2 different supplier to support same product. Cross is the supplier supply A‚ also need to supply B at the same time. m. spreading risk. n. volume leveraging. o. lower transportation
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Initial idea: Offer affordable sports equipment for children Products: − Used (second-hand) products − Surplus equipment from manufacturers and retailers Current situation (December 2007): − Demand has been growing steadily over the last years − The products are distributed to the U.S. customers through a single (and small) warehouse in St. Louis − The warehouse is leased on a year-to-year basis − The current network design‚ in particular the distribution network and warehouse
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issn=19369735&issue=v2i1-4&article=28_getmom Week 2 1. Chopra & Meindl Chapters4‚ 10 2. Fisher‚ M. L. (1997). What is the right supply chain for your product? Harvard Business Review‚ 75(2)‚ 105-116. http://ezproxy.libraries.wright.edu:2048/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=bth&AN=9705150574&site=ehost-live 3. Lee‚ H. L. (2004). The triple-a supply chain. Harvard Business Review‚ 82(10)‚ 102-112. http://ezproxy.libraries.wright.edu:2048/login?url=http://search.ebscohost
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White Paper on transport Roadmap to a single euRopean tRanspoRt aRea — towaRds a competitive and ResouRce-eFFicient tRanspoRt system this illustrated brochure comPrises the text of the euroPean commission’s White PaPer ‘roadmaP to a single euroPean transPort area — toWards a comPetitive and resource -efficient transPort system’ (com(2011) 144 final of 28 march 2011) and a foreWord by vice -President siim K allas‚ commissioner for transPort. Europe Direct is a service to
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2009‚ page 63). The offeree can be a specific person‚ a group of people or to the whole world. An invitation to treat refers an invitation to commence negotiations. It is an invitation to make an offer. Acceptance of an invitation to treat does not lead to a contract (Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain v Boots Cash Chemist) (1952) (Benny‚ 2009‚ page 66). In the advertisement that was placed by the offeror‚ the offer on the table is the sale of a electric guitar that was previously owned and
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