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Presented by: S.M.Tabatabaee Nasab 1. 2 3 SCOR spans: All customer interactions, from order entry through paid invoice All product (physical material.

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Presentation on theme: "Presented by: S.M.Tabatabaee Nasab 1. 2 3 SCOR spans: All customer interactions, from order entry through paid invoice All product (physical material."— Presentation transcript:

1 Presented by: S.M.Tabatabaee Nasab 1

2 2

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4 SCOR spans: All customer interactions, from order entry through paid invoice All product (physical material and service) transactions, from your supplier’s supplier to your customer’s customer, including equipment, supplies, spare parts, software, etc. All market interactions, from the understanding of aggregate demand to the fulfillment of each order 4

5 Scope of SCOR Processes 5

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10 Process decomposition models 10

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12 Level 1 12

13 Level 2 13

14 Level 3 14

15 Level 4 15

16 Level 1 Process Definitions 16

17 Performance Attributes and Level 1 Metrics 17

18 At Level 2, Each Process Can Be Further Described by Type 18

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20 Plan at level 2 20

21 Source at level 2 21

22 make at level 2 22

23 deliver at level 2 23

24 return at level 2 24

25 Enable 25

26 Enable 1) Establish and Manage Rules 2) Assess Performance 3) Manage Data 4) Manage Inventory 5) Manage Capital Assets 6) Manage Transportation 7) Manage Supply Chain Configuration 8) Manage Regulatory Compliance 9) Process Specific Elements 26

27 SCOR Level 3 Presents Detailed Process Element Information for Each Level 2 Process Category: Process flow Inputs and outputs Source of inputs Output destination 27

28 S1 at level 3 S1.1 Schedule Product Deliveries S1.2 Receive Product S1.3 Verify Product S1.4 Transfer product S1.5 Authorize Supplier Payment 28

29 decomposition in level 4 29

30 decomposition in level 4 30

31 The Concept of “Configurability” A supply-chain configuration is driven by: Plan levels of aggregation and information sources Source locations and products Make production sites and methods Deliver channels, inventory deployment and products Return locations and methods SCOR must accurately reflect how a supply-chain’s configuration impacts management processes and practices. 31

32 Each Basic Supply-Chain is a “Chain” of Source, Make, and Deliver Execution Processes 32

33 “ pure” make-to-stock configuration. 33 How SCOR Describes One SCM Trade-off

34 replenish-to-order Deliver network. 34

35 Make to - order configuration 35

36 Extended make to - order configuration. 36

37 Configuring Supply-Chain Threads 1. Select the business entity to be modeled (geography, product set, organization) 2. Illustrate the physical locations of: -- Production facilities (Make) --Distribution activities (Deliver) -- Sourcing activities (Source) 3. Illustrate primary point-to-point material flows using “solid line” arrows 4. Place the most appropriate Level 2 execution process categories to describe activities at each location 5. Describe each distinct supply-chain “thread” 6. Place planning process categories, using dashed lines to show links with execution processes 7. Place P1, if appropriate 37

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