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Information Systems in Organizations 4.1 Supply Chain Management Systems.

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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 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 week 11

3 Supply chain management Supply chain management (SCM) is the management of the flow of and. The purpose of supply chain management is to improve trust and collaboration among supply chain partners, thus improving inventory and the velocity of inventory movement. As organizations strive to focus on core competencies and become more flexible, they reduce their ownership of raw materials sources and distribution channels. Successful SCM requires a change from managing to integrating activities into key supply chain processes. Supply chain business process integration involves collaborative work between buyers and suppliers, joint product development, common systems, and shared.

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5 Supply Chain Management Definition and Solutions Five basic components of SCM are: Plan,, Make, Deliver, and Return SCM applications benefit from having a single major source to go to for information. Companies can connect their supply chain with the supply chains of their suppliers and customers together in a single vast network. The goal of these projects is greater supply chain. It is important for a company to keep track of what is happening in its supply chain because a supplier or a supplier's supplier could end up having an impact on you. Many SCM applications are reliant upon the kind of information that is stored inside software and, in some cases, some CRM packages

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7 Where is your iPhone “made”? What happens in Shenzhen, China if there are any delays?

8 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?

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

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

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

12 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.

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14 Just-in-Time Manufacturing Just-in-Time Manufacturing lets manufacturers purchase and receive components just before they're needed on the. In the high-tech area, companies are turning to a process in which a product is customized and manufactured according to specific customer requests Dell is able to achieve a four-hour production cycle time using an -based supply- chain management system. Just-in-Time manufacturing doesn't mean a company is on its supply chain. Often, companies just have a distributor or supplier maintain a warehouse.

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

17 What else could I do with this cash?

18 Vendor-Managed Inventory (VMI): What is it and When Does It Make Sense to Use It VMI relates to the tasks associated with managing the inventory supplied by a vendor, while ____________relates to ownership of the inventory. A specific may cover a single task, all tasks, or any combination of tasks. Vendors choose to offer VMI because they feel it gives them a advantage or because VMI is expected in their industry. describes a distribution method used in grocery/retail where the supplier delivers product directly to the stores. This bypasses the retailers’ distribution network.

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21 What is RFID? RFID is a type of technology that lets you identify objects that have been fitted with special RF identification tags. The RFID system comprises an RFID reader (or RFID scanner) and an RFID tag (or RFID label) for each item that you’ll want to be able to identify. RFID can help you manage materials or assets easily, improve productivity, eliminate errors and stock-outs, and significantly reduce costs. For management, RFID is currently the best practical way to track items in transit. RFID readers might push their identified item data to a special computer for processing into useful information that can be sent to, and used by the company’s _____________________ system.

22 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.

23 The Big Picture


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