IT DRILLDOWN
 
NEWSLETTERS
 

CIO.com updates, insights and advice on technology, management and your career.

 Advice and Opinion

 CIO Consumer IT

 CIO Leader

 CIO Enterprise

 CIO Insider

 

RSS Feeds »

 
 
LEADERSHIP
 

CIO Executive Programs

The Leader in Face-to-Face Education for Senior Executives

Offering regional and national programs, CIO (and CSO) events bring together some of the most respected names and thought leaders in information technology and security. Presented by CIOs and other senior level executives, these invitation-only programs offer timely topics and strong networking. Learn More »

 

CIO Executive Council

Public Teleconferences

Join CIO Executive Council members and participate in the following live teleconferences:

* Planning for Succession:
Models for IT Leadership Development, June 23
* Youth in IT: How CIOs Can Engage the Next Generation
June 10
* Change Leadership at General Growth Properties: A
Pathways Leadership Development Seminar, June 25

More / Register »

Learn more about the CIO Executive Council »



 
 
RESOURCE CENTER
 
 
 
SUBSCRIBE TO CIO
 

Are you involved in setting the direction for your company's IT budget or strategy?


Apply today for a FREE subscription to CIO Magazine!

Subscription Services »

Reprints »

 
 

Tutorial

 

ABC: An Introduction to Supply Chain Management

The basics of Supply Chain Management (SCM).
 

CIO

What is supply chain management?

Supply chain management (SCM) is the combination of art and science that goes into improving the way your company finds the raw components it needs to make a product or service and deliver it to customers. The following are five basic components of SCM.

1. Plan – This is the strategic portion of SCM. You need a strategy for managing all the resources that go toward meeting customer demand for your product or service. A big piece of planning is developing a set of metrics to monitor the supply chain so that it is efficient, costs less and delivers high quality and value to customers.

2. Source – Choose the suppliers that will deliver the goods and services you need to create your product. Develop a set of pricing, delivery and payment processes with suppliers and create metrics for monitoring and improving the relationships. And put together processes for managing the inventory of goods and services you receive from suppliers, including receiving shipments, verifying them, transferring them to your manufacturing facilities and authorizing supplier payments.

3. Make – This is the manufacturing step. Schedule the activities necessary for production, testing, packaging and preparation for delivery. As the most metric-intensive portion of the supply chain, measure quality levels, production output and worker productivity.

4. Deliver – This is the part that many insiders refer to as logistics. Coordinate the receipt of orders from customers, develop a network of warehouses, pick carriers to get products to customers and set up an invoicing system to receive payments.

5. Return – The problem part of the supply chain. Create a network for receiving defective and excess products back from customers and supporting customers who have problems with delivered products.

For a more detailed outline of these steps, check out the nonprofit Supply-Chain Council's website at www.supply-chain.org.

What does supply chain management software do?

Supply chain management software is possibly the most fractured group of software applications on the planet. Each of the five major supply chain steps previously outlined composes dozens of specific tasks, many of which have their own specific software. Some vendors have assembled many of these different chunks of software together under a single roof, but no one has a complete package that is right for every company. For example, most companies need to track demand, supply, manufacturing status, logistics (i.e. where things are in the supply chain), and distribution. They also need to share data with supply chain partners at an ever increasing rate. While products from large ERP vendors like SAP’s Advanced Planner and Optimizer (APO) can perform many or all of these tasks, because each industry’s supply chain has a unique set of challenges, many companies decide to go with targeted best of breed products instead, even if some integration is an inevitable consequence.

It’s worth mentioning that the old adage about systems only being as good as the information that they contain applies doubly to SCM. If the information entered into a demand forecasting application is not accurate then you will get an inaccurate forecast. Similarly, if employees bypass the supply chain systems and try to manage things manually, then even the most expensive systems will provide an incomplete picture of what is happening in a company’s supply chain.

 
 
 
 
 
 
Loading...
 
 
ABCs
 

How To Do Nearly Anything

Just the basics, please. Sometimes we all need a refresher or we need to make sure our team and our colleagues are all on the same page.

Over 25 tutorials on everything from business intelligence to virtualization.

 
 
FEATURED SPONSORS
 
 
 
SPONSORED LINKS
 

White Paper: Learn what it takes to achieve best in class performance in your supply chain

Gaining Transparency in IT Outsourcing

Case Study: Customer Integration Wins at Invitrogen

Integration as a Service Webcast: Are you connected?

TCO Comparison Report: Reducing Costs in the Data Center

Fujitsu Case Study - Thomson Learning

Building Compliance and Security into an Application Delivery Framework

E-Discovery: Why Archiving Your Web Presence is a Business Necessity

Oracle & SUN Team to Rise Above the Upgrade Challenge

Oracle 9i Database Upgrade Management Services - Upgrade with Confidence

Gain Profitable Innovation Through Product Lifecycle Management

Webcast - Secrets to PMO Success: Maximize Value for Your Business

Network Immunity Manager Video

Webcast: Research insight into how organizations are using virtualization

ITIL V3 and the IT Service Catalog

The New Growth Paragidm: Multi-Enterprise SOA

3M saved $3M on printing. Learn how HP can help your business

Survival of the Fittest: Disaster Recovery Design for the Data Center

Windows Server 2008: To Upgrade or Not to Upgrade?

How Office 2007 Exposed Bill Gates

How to simplify mobility and reduce the cost of supporting mobile workers

Helping IT Become a Service Provider White Paper

Extending PCI Compliance to the Mobile Workforce

A proven approach to WAN optimization

Wireless Vulnerability Management: What It Means for Your Enterprise

A CIO's View of Server Virtualization

Taking Control of Software Licensing

Internet's Largest Book Retailer Scores Big with B2B Customers

TCO Comparison Report: Reducing Costs in the Data Center

LIVE Webcast - The Mainframe is Dead...Long Live the Mainframe?

Learn about the Power of Pen Computing

Enhancing Business Mobility with Convertible PCs - Webcast

How to Assess IT to Ensure Continuous Improvement

Witness Oracle's Commitment to On Demand Customers

Uniting IT with Business through ITSM

Unified IT Strategy Playbook - A Must Have!

Making Adaptive Networks a Reality

Global Crossing is the most viable alternative for voice, video and data.

The New Foundation of Storage: Xiotech's Intelligent Storage Element

BPM Done Right: 15 Ways to Succeed Where Others have Failed

3 Reasons to Invest in Integration Technology Now

Enterprise Service Bus: A Definition

Let's Get Virtual: A Look at Today's Server Virtualization Architectures

Increase conversions on your site with the help of EV SSL.

Get Control of Mobile Data (and More)

Data Loss Prevention Starts at the Endpoint

Building a Foundation for Pragmatic Service Management White Paper

Performance Brief: Mobile Application Acceleration

Strategies for centralizing data backup

Citrix XenServer FREE trial