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An Introduction to Supply Chain Management

An Introduction to Supply Chain Management

An Introduction to Supply Chain Management

 Supply chain management (SCM) is the management of a network of interconnected businesses involved in the ultimate provision of product and service packages required by end customers. Supply Chain Management spans all movement and storage of raw materials, work-in-process inventory, and finished goods from point of origin to point of consumption (supply chain).

 A simple supply chain is made up of several elements that are linked by the movement of products along it. The supply chain starts and ends with the customer.

Customer: The customer starts the chain of events when they decide to purchase a product that has been offered for sale by a company. The customer contacts the sales department of the company, which enters the sales order for a specific quantity to be delivered on a specific date. If the product has to be manufactured, the sales order will include a requirement that needs to be fulfilled by the production facility.

Planning: The requirement triggered by the customer’s sales order will be combined with other orders. The planning department will create a production plan to produce the products to fulfill the customer’s orders. To manufacture the products the company will then have to purchase the raw materials needed.

Purchasing: The purchasing department receives a list of raw materials and services required by the production department to complete the customer’s orders. The purchasing department sends purchase orders to selected suppliers to deliver the necessary raw materials to the manufacturing site on the required date.

Inventory: The raw materials are received from the suppliers, checked for quality and accuracy and moved into the warehouse. The supplier will then send an invoice to the company for the items they delivered. The raw materials are stored until they are required by the production department.

Production: Based on a production plan, the raw materials are moved inventory to the production area. The finished products ordered by the customer are manufactured using the raw materials purchased from suppliers. After the items have been completed and tested, they are stored back in the warehouse prior to delivery to the customer.

Transportation: When the finished product arrives in the warehouse, the shipping department determines the most efficient method to ship the products so that they are delivered on or before the date specified by the customer. When the goods are received by the customer, the company will send an invoice for the delivered products.

Supply Chain Management

To ensure that the supply chain is operating as efficient as possible and generating the highest level of customer satisfaction at the lowest cost, companies have adopted Supply Chain Management processes and associated technology. Supply Chain Management has three levels of activities that different parts of the company will focus on: strategic; tactical; and operational.

Strategic: At this level, company management will be looking to high level strategic decisions concerning the whole organization, such as the size and location of manufacturing sites, partnerships with suppliers, products to be manufactured and sales markets:

Strategic network optimization, including the number, location, and size of warehousing, distribution centers, and facilities. Strategic partnerships with suppliers, distributors, and customers, creating communication channels for critical information and operational improvements such as cross docking, direct shipping, and third-party logistics. Product life cycle management so that new and existing products can be optimally integrated into the supply chain and capacity management activities. information technology infrastructure to support supply chain operations. Where-to-make and what-to-make-or-buy decisions. Aligning overall organizational strategy with supply strategy.

Tactical: Tactical decisions focus on adopting measures that will produce cost benefits such as using industry best practices, developing a purchasing strategy with favored suppliers, working with logistics companies to develop cost effect transportation and developing warehouse strategies to reduce the cost of storing inventory:

Sourcing contracts and other purchasing decisions. Production decisions, including contracting, scheduling, and planning process definition. Inventory decisions, including quantity, location, and quality of inventory. Transportation strategy, including frequency, routes, and contracting. Benchmarking of all operations against competitors and implementation of best practices throughout the enterprise. Milestone payments. Focus on customer demand.

Operational: Decisions at this level are made each day in businesses that affect how the products move along the supply chain. Operational decisions involve making schedule changes to production, purchasing agreements with suppliers, taking orders from customers and moving products in the warehouse:

Daily production and distribution planning, including all nodes in the supply chain. Production scheduling for each manufacturing facility in the supply chain (minute by minute). Demand planning and forecasting, coordinating the demand forecast of all customers and sharing the forecast with all suppliers. Sourcing planning, including current inventory and forecast demand, in collaboration with all suppliers. Inbound operations, including transportation from suppliers and receiving inventory. Production operations, including the consumption of materials and flow of finished goods. Outbound operations, including all fulfillment activities, warehousing and transportation to customers. Order promising, accounting for all constraints in the supply chain, including all suppliers, manufacturing facilities, distribution centers, and other customers.

 Supply Chain Management Technology

Organizations increasingly find that they must rely on effective supply chains, or networks, to successfully compete in the global market and networked economy. In Peter Drucker’s (1998) new management paradigms, this concept of business relationships extends beyond traditional enterprise boundaries and seeks to organize entire business processes throughout a value chain of multiple companies.

If a company expects to achieve benefits from their supply chain management process, they will require some level of investment in technology. The backbone for many large companies has been the vastly expensive Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) suites, such as SAP and Oracle.

Since the wide adoption of Internet technologies, all businesses can take advantage of Web-based software and Internet communications. Instant communication between vendors and customers allows for timely updates of information, which is key in management of the supply chain.

 

Introduction To Document Management

Introduction To Document Management

Document management in the age of vast and relative cheap computer storage space has made organizing files more difficult than ever before.     Selecting a document management system is a daunting task and should be carefully considered.   The amount of time spent managing documents outside of a document management system should be investigated to determine if there is a compelling reason to use a system.

Types Of Document Management

There are many types of document management systems which Wikipedia describes in the following ways:

Integrated Document Management (IDM) is a term used to describe the technologies, tools, and methods used to capture, manage, store, preserve, deliver and dispose of ‘documents’ across an enterprise. In this context ‘Documents’ can be used to describe a myriad of information assets including images, office documents, graphics and drawings as well as the new electronic objects such as Web pages, email, instant messages and video.

Product Data Management PDM Software is a tool to track and control data related to a particular product. The data tracked usually involves the technical specifications of the product, specifications for manufacture and development, and the types of materials that will be required to produce the good. The use of product data management allows a company to track the various costs associated with the creation and launch of a product. Product data management is part of product life cycle management, and is primarily used by engineers.

Revision control (also known as version control, source control or (source) code management (SCM)) is the management of changes to documents, programs, and other information stored as computer files. It is most commonly used in software development, where a team of people may be changing the same files. Changes are usually identified by a number or letter code, termed the “revision number”, “revision level”, or simply “revision”. For example, an initial set of files is “revision 1″. When the first change is made, the resulting set is “revision 2″, and so on. Each revision is associated with a timestamp and the person making the change. Revisions can be compared, restored, and with some types of files, merged.

Why use document management software?

There are many compelling reasons to use document management software versus storing files on your local hard drive and/or network.

Central Storage

One of the primary reasons is the central storage of your data versus having data stored on all the users local system and the network.    Storing files on a local system creates silos of data which cannot be easily accessed by other users in the company.

Duplicate Documents

Duplication of documents is a real problem in organizations where files are copied, modified and then stored locally.   These local versions of the document can make it difficult to find the actual document users are looking for.

Going Green

Storing documents in a central repository which is backed up is a great way to go green.  Hard copies of documents can be scanned and stored in a document management system with meta tag information which can be searched on.   Invoices and purchase orders can be scanned and saved in a document management system which can later be searched and retrieved without going to a filing cabinet.

Searching For Files

Document management systems have the ability to search for files by file names, meta information, user information and last transaction dates of the files.   Comments on files can be searched including file content.

Version Control

Documents which are stored on your network can be changed and manipulated by users without any change history, logging, etc under standard network file systems.   Document management systems require documents to be checked out prior to modification and check in to save those changes into the repository.   Through version control processes organizations can view entire history of documents which includes being able to roll back to any previous version.

Notifications

Email notifications can be associated with files in the document management system which will be sent when files get changed, check out, renamed, etc.

Workflow

Document management workflow is very useful when documents need to be signed off on by a number of other users.   This functionality creates a document trail of users who approved or did not approve this document.

Security

Document management has security built in which allows full access, modify access and read only access options on files and folders.   Files can be individually identified with specific access control settings which will allow specific users to access files in folders, but specific files in the folders may not be accessible.

mie docs

MIE Docs is a revolutionary file management system designed for a single user up to an organization of 100’s of users. File management systems are designed to solve the problems associated with storing, managing, finding and tracking files used throughout an organization. Organizations with hundreds of thousands of files lose files every day when files are stored on multiple computers, hard drives and backups. MIE Docs File Management lowers the costs of handling and storing your documents and saves staff time by providing both instant access to your documents and business process automation. MIE Docs centralizes the storage of files into an easy to use virtual drive.

To download a free copy of MIE Docs click on the link below.

http://www.mie-solutions.com/mie/index.php/MIE-Docs/

MIE Solutions is the leading provider of production control software for the entire manufacturing sector. Incorporating MRP, ERP, Scheduling, Shop floor data capture, Barcoding, Job Costing, Quoting and Estimating. MIE Trak (formerly known as FabriTrak) is the market leading software for sheet metal fabricators,  machine shops, precision engineers and manufacturers. It can be adapted to incorporate any manufacturing processes if required and offers a complete solution. Our services also include training, full product support and on-site implementation.

http://www.mie-solutions.com

The mission of MIE Solutions is to apply advanced technology to improve manufacturing productivity and quality in the field of fabrication. At MIE Solutions, we do not compromise product quality or service. We strive to satisfy our customer’s every reasonable requirement with speed, courtesy and honesty. Our pricing reflects the cost of providing high quality products and excellent service but remains fair. Our goal is to be known throughout the world for the development and production of innovative products. We endeavor to be regarded as the leading supplier of high technology in the sheet metal fabrication. We want our customers to be proud to own MIE products.

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