The Supply chain differentiation guide: a roadmap to operational excelence/ Erik Hofmann
Material type: TextPublication details: Heidelberg: Springer: 2012Description: xvi, 341 pages; tables; 25 cmISBN:- 9783642319358
- 23rd. 330.015195 H713
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | ISI Library, Kolkata | 330.015 195 H713 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | Gifted by Prof. Ashis Kumar Chakraborty | C27578 |
Includes index and appendix
Conception of the Supply Chain Differentiation Guideline --
1. Introduction --
Part II Phrase 1: Description of a TO- BE Supply Chain --
2. SCD Guide Preparation --
3. CM 1: Custoemer Segmentation and Supply Chain Strategy --
4. CM2: Manufacturing Strategy and Supply Chain Management --
5. CM3: Supplier Segmentation and Supply Strategy --
6. CM4: Activity Allocation and Supply Chain Process Definition --
7. CM5: Supply Chain Governance --
8. CM6: Supporting Activities—Project Management and Human Resources --
Part III Phrase 2 to 5: From the AS- IS Analysis to the Selection and Implementation Preparation of Specific Corrective Action --
9. Phase 2: Identification of AS-IS Supply Chain and Analysis --
10. Phase 3: Supply Chain Gap Analysis in the SCD-Guide --
11. Phase 4: Supply Chain Prioritization and Selection of Corrective Actions --
12. Phase 5: Preparation of Implementation of Supply Chain Differentiation
The importance of supply chain management has increased over the last few decades. Today, entire supply chains are competing with each other instead of individual companies. As such, supply chain management has become a way for companies to set themselves apart from competing companies and their supply chains. Interestingly, supply chain management mainly focuses on efficiency-oriented topics rather than effectiveness-driven issues, in particular the design of supply chains from manufacturing sites downstream, instead of upstream from the customer.
The Supply Chain Differentiation Guide offers a modern approach to supply chain management. While for many years “one-size-fits-all” approaches to supply chain management were very common, the current efforts of managers and academics alike focus on the simultaneous management of multiple supply chains. Despite the interest of the business sector in the management of multiple supply chains, academia has largely neglected this topicto date. The Supply Chain Differentiation Guide addresses this shortcoming, introducing both established and cutting-edge management methods to the context of supply chain differentiation and providing inspirations for how to improve corporate operations.
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