SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT Introduction According to Thomas Friedman in The World is Flat‚ supply chain management has become a source of competitive advantage and profit in a flat world. He has quoted Wal-Mart’s ability of moving 2.3 billion general merchandise cartons a year down its supply chain into its stores as an example of creating value. Global supply chains that draw parts and producers from every corner of the world‚ from the best producers at the lowest price‚ are the way how to beat
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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 is printed after the question. The ‘grade book value’ of the test is 150 points. For all multiple choice questions‚ answer the questions by circling the letter corresponding to the one‚ most appropriate response for the question‚ and then blacken the space for that letter on the computer graded answer sheet --- be sure to use a pencil
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A. Supply Chain Strategy To fully appreciate the recommendation for a supply chain strategy‚ it is necessary to know something about them. There are numerous strategies one can use for supply chain: Keiretsu‚ vertical integration‚ and virtual companies. These Three are by no means the only strategies‚ but ones which may be considered. First‚ the Keiretsu will be discussed. Keiretsu is a Japanese term to describe many companies that link together or around a central bank to do business. This link
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INTRODUCTION OF SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT Fierce competition in today’s global markets‚ the introduction of products with shorter life cycles‚ and the heightened expectations of customers have forced business enterprises to invest in‚ and focus attention on‚ their supply chains. This‚ together with continuing advances in communications and transportation technologies (e.g.‚ mobile communication‚ Internet‚ and overnight delivery)‚ has motivated the continuous evolution of the supply chain and of the
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Table of Contents Business Analysis 3 About InnoBus 3 Mission and strategy 3 Structure 3 The competitive situation of InnoBus in the trade environment 4 SWOT Analysis 4 5-Forces Model by Porter 6 The Unique Selling Proposition of InnoBus 7 Competitors of InnoBus 7 The Stakeholders of InnoBus 8 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
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------------------------------------------------- Supply chain management Supply chain management (SCM) is the management of a network of interconnected businesses involved in the ultimate provision of product and service packages required by end customers (Harland‚ 1996).[1] Supply Chain Management spans all movement and storage of raw materials‚ work-in-process inventory‚ and finished goods from point of origin to point of consumption (supply chain). Another definition is provided by the APICS Dictionary
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failure: strategic or tactical Nike the world leader in sports apparel manufacturer with a market share of 32 percent and market cap at $20billion decided to implement i2 demand planning engine to manage its supply chain at a cost of $400million. It was supposed to help Nike with its supply chain and to reduce the lead time for the manufacturing of sneakers from nine months down to six. The i2 system worked on the principle of using the data from the previous sales figures and predicting the productions
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Executive summary The e-Technology guide aims to analyse the practice of Green Supply Chain Management (GrSCM) adopted by different companies in the face of increasing impacts of business operations on environment. The guide will start with introducing the reasoning behind the decision of implementing GrSCM and discussing about GrSCM’s current and future development directions. More details regarding to the definition of GrSCM and in-depth analyses about its structure will be also elaborated. Besides
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Summary: The case discusses about the operation of the world’s largest convenience store chain Seven-Eleven in Japan‚ and the way it became Japan’s top leading super market chain. Seven–Eleven started its operation in Japan in November 1973 under an area licensing agreement between Ito-Yokado Co.‚ Ltd.‚ and The Southland Corporation. With more than 15‚500 stores worldwide‚ Seven-Eleven Japan Co.‚ Ltd (SEJ) franchises 6‚900 stores in Japan and most of the remaining stores located in North America
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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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