also had to shift fundamental decision points from local level to the European level. Areas which needed changes/ of strategic importance were; I. Finished goods and work in progress inventories. II. Distribution operations and location. III. Supply chain strategy. IV. Development of forecasting and requirement planning systems. V. Purchasing. To satisfy customer demand they needed modern planning and control systems which had effective scheduling‚ manufacturing and distribution planning for
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LINKS Supply Chain Management Fundamentals Simulation Revised July 2010 Randall G. Chapman‚ PhD 2 LINKS Supply Chain Management Fundamentals Simulation Table of Contents Chapters 1/2: Introduction and Perspective ................................................................. 3 Chapter 3: Product Development Decisions................................................................. 7 Chapter 4: Procurement Decisions ...............................................................
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Zara is the flagship chain store of Inditex Group owned by Spanish tycoon Amancio Ortega. Zara is the most internationalized of Inditex’s chains. The group is headquartered in A Coruna‚ Spain‚ where the first Zara store opened in 1975. As of August 2009‚ there are more than 1‚500 Zara stores around the world. It is claimed that Zara needs just two weeks to develop a new product and get it to stores‚ compared with a six-month industry average‚ and launches around 10‚000 new designs each year. Zara
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“The Evolution of Supply Chain Management in Retail Sector of Tesco and Analytical Study for the Period of 2005-2011” Chapter One: Introduction 1.1 Introduction Supply chain as a whole can be seen as the flow of water in a river: organizations located closer to the original source of supply are described as being ’upstream ’‚ while those located closer to the end customer are ’downstream ’. The flow of the whole river is being concerned. In other words‚ supply chain is a network‚ which
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Activist Capitalism and Supply-Chain Citizenship: Producing Ethical Regimes and Ready-toWear Clothes: with CA comment by Bená Burda Author(s): Damani James Partridge Reviewed work(s): Source: Current Anthropology‚ Vol. 52‚ No. S3‚ Corporate Lives: New Perspectives on the Social Life of the Corporate Form: Edited by Damani J. Partridge‚ Marina Welker‚ and Rebecca Hardin (Supplement to April 2011)‚ pp. S97-S111 Published by: The University of Chicago Press on behalf of Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological
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Supply Chain Structure The adidas Group has outsourced most of its production. We work with more than 1‚200 independent factories from around the world that manufacture our products in 63 countries. The most dominant sourcing locations are: China‚ India‚ Indonesia and Vietnam. Our supply chain is global and multi-layered‚ with many different types of business partners‚ some of who are directly contracted factories‚ and others who are not. In 2011‚ the top five countries per region by number of
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Name __________________________________ Directions: Please print your name on this page of the exam‚ and put your initials on each page in case I need to reassemble your test (ie – the staple fails). Second‚ record this exam version on the Scantron sheet in the block title‚ “Marking Instructions.” This exam consists of 19 questions; you should answer all 19 of them. The value of each of the 15 multiple choice question is 6 points for a total of 90 and the value of each short answer question
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The Legal Aspects 8 The International Trade Environment 8 The competitive advantage of InnoBus 9 The logistic process at InnoBus 9 The Process 9 Time-to-market 10 Planning and Master Production Schedule 11 The position of InnoBus in the supply chain 11 Current problems and risks of InnoBus 14 Global Description 14 Financial Position and Possible Bankruptcy 14 Drop in Market Demand 14 Conservatism with possible Customers 14 Fierce Competition 15 Logistics and Time-to-market 15 Sources
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Overview of case studies: Singapore Case study: NTUC FairPrice Mrs. Susan Chong Director Special Projects SPRING SG Summary • Example of application of the ISO methodology – NTUC FairPrice: Supermarket retailer • Credits – SPRING Singapore Project team: Ms. Susan Chong‚ Director‚ Special Projects‚ Mr. Phua Kim-Chua‚ Head‚ Standards Division – Information Technology Standards Committee‚ Singapore: Ms. Ho Buaey Qui‚ Executive Secretary – Nanyang Technological University‚ Ms. Pauline Ping Ting
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The current issue and full text archive of this journal is available at www.emeraldinsight.com/0960-0035.htm IJPDLM 37‚8 594 Postponement: an evolving supply chain concept Christopher A. Boone‚ Christopher W. Craighead and Joe B. Hanna Auburn University‚ Auburn‚ Alabama‚ USA Received January 2006 Revised July 2007 Accepted July 2007 Abstract Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to assess and document the progress of postponement research‚ identify current gaps‚ and provide
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