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Perspective: Supply Chain Segmentation - Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed ...

Author Simon Ellis, Catherine White
Publisher IDC
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1500.00 USD
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Book Details
PublisherIDC
ISBN / ASINB004WYYHLI
ISBN-13978B004WYYHL8
AvailabilityAvailable for download now
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

This IDC Manufacturing Insights Perspective looks at the evolving nature of supply chain segmentation, and its implications across the manufacturing industry.

Supply chain segmentation is not new, despite recent articles to the contrary, as manufacturing companies have explored ways to manage parts of the supply chain differently for the varied requirements of product lines or categories for decades. Yet — what was true for Sales & Operations Planning (S&OP) in 2010 seems true for supply chain segmentation in 2011 — new life is being breathed into an old concept.

Why is that?

There appear to be a few reasons, and most relate either directly or indirectly to the 2008–2009 global recession. To quote from Worldwide Supply Chain 2011 Top 10 Predictions (IDC Manufacturing Insights #MI226394, December 2010):

As we move into 2011, the business landscape has changed. The demand side of the supply chain is far more volatile and unpredictable, with forecast accuracy becoming even more of a challenge than it has historically been, and the conversation is starting to move to topics like fast planning and responsiveness. The supply side of the supply chain is also experiencing some seismic shocks (one literal, others figurative) that are causing manufacturing companies to relook at their supply networks through the lens of risk management and lead-time assessment. Whether these changes, on both the demand and supply side of the supply chain, prove to be short or long lived, there is little question that fundamentally the complexity level that supply chain organizations are asked to manage has increased significantly over the past few years.