Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Information Systems in Organizations 4.1 Supply Chain Management Systems.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Information Systems in Organizations 4.1 Supply Chain Management Systems."— Presentation transcript:

1 Information Systems in Organizations 4.1 Supply Chain Management Systems

2 Administrivia Grades – Exam #2 - At the graders – Learn IT #3: With Lombardo – Both should be graded next week Learn it #4

3 Learn IT Assignment #4 : An Hour of Code All done on www.codecademy.com This is where you learn what coding is all about Complete three activities: – Animate your name (JavaScript) – About me (HTML) – Sun and earth (HTML and CSS) Due March 30

4 Where are We?

5 Agenda Supply chain management Why do we do it? – Why its boring – Why its awesome – Why it makes eleventy billion dollars.

6 Build Your Own Study Guide Supply chain management Supply chain management What are 3 key points from this reading? What are 3 important details from this reading? Students will be called upon at random

7

8 Build Your Own Study Guide Supply Chain Management Definition and Solutions Supply Chain Management Definition and Solutions What are 3 key points from this reading? What are 3 important details from this reading? Students will be called upon at random

9 Build Your Own Study Guide Integrated Planning - Optimization for the entire internal supply chain Integrated Planning - Optimization for the entire internal supply chain What are 3 key points from this reading? What are 3 important details from this reading? Students will be called upon at random

10

11 Where is your iPhone “made”? What happens in Shenzhen, China if there are any delays? Q: When do you think Dell gets a payment? A: Immediately upon order (payment is received directly) Fun Fact: Most Manufacturers receive payment 30 days after shipment Q: When do you think Dell pays suppliers? A: 36 Days after delivery Fun Fact: Turnover – 107 times per annum HP & IBM – 8.5 and 7.5 Fun Fact: Turnover – 107 times per annum HP & IBM – 8.5 and 7.5

12 Question Who works for a company which manufactures a product? What kind of product is it? What stuff do you need to make your product? Where do you get this stuff? What happens if they run out of this stuff?

13 ? How difficult is it to get the right product on the right shelf at the right time and the lowest possible cost?

14 Safety Stock – That’s the Answer! Here’s what the people in order fulfilment see Here’s what the people in accounting see

15 What else could I do with this cash? If this goes up then this goes down… What else could I do with this cash?

16 SCM Architecture SCM modules support two functions. – Supply chain planning—development of resource plans to support production. – Supply chain execution—efficient flow of products, information, and financing. Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.

17

18

19 SCM AND THE INCOME STATEMENT In-Class Activity…

20 Build Your Own Study Guide Just-in-Time Manufacturing Just-in-Time Manufacturing What are 3 key points from this reading? What are 3 important details from this reading? Students will be called upon at random

21

22 Dell Internal Supplier Customer Order Manufacturing Storing Merging Customer Supply on demand every two hours Taken by Internet or phone Dell’s Supply Chain

23 What else could I do with this cash?

24 Build Your Own Study Guide Vendor-Managed Inventory (VMI): What is it and When Does It Make Sense to Use It Vendor-Managed Inventory (VMI): What is it and When Does It Make Sense to Use It What are 3 key points from this reading? What are 3 important details from this reading? Students will be called upon at random

25

26 Who owns the inventory in Dell’s assembly shops? Why would suppliers be willing to play this game with Dell?

27 Build Your Own Study Guide What is RFID? What is RFID? What are 3 key points from this reading? What are 3 important details from this reading? Students will be called upon at random

28 Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) RFID tags will soon replace standard bar codes. – RFID is the use of electromagnetic energy to transit energy between a reader (transceiver) and the tag (antenna). – Line-of-sight reading is not necessary. – RFID tags can contain more information than bar codes. Tags are programmable, so there is a vast array of potential uses. Scanning can be done from greater distance. – Passive tags—inexpensive, range of few feet. – Active tags—more expensive, range of hundreds of feet. Source: METRO AG.

29

30 The Big Picture

31 SCM SOURCING PLANNING In-Class Activity…

32 Agenda Supply chain management Why do we do it? – Why its boring – Why its awesome – Why it makes eleventy billion dollars.


Download ppt "Information Systems in Organizations 4.1 Supply Chain Management Systems."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google