logistics & supply chain management (lscm) · • in this context, standardization, quality...
Post on 12-May-2020
3 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
LOGISTICS & SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
(LSCM)
Dr N.Srilakshmi Head C-LAIMS,
An UK Regd /Approved Lead Auditor & Tutor: ISO
9001:2000,14001:2004,OHSAS,HACCP,TS16949, TQM/CMM/
Six sigma/NAAC(UGC) Assessor, ni-msme
cell: 09391010682; email: chikani@sify.com
2
• Supply Chain Management (SCM) has emerged as the most exciting and most rewarding career in management. In the present business environment, an understanding of supply chain is a must to succeed in other functional areas like operations management, sales and marketing management, customer relationship management (CRM), physical distribution and logistics management, procurement, service-operations management, information technology management, Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), financial management, global business management, strategic management, etc.
3
• SCM deals with management of flow of material,
information and money from supplier-to-customer
and customer-to- supplier. The course is designed to
equip the participants with concepts, tools and
techniques of Supply Chain Management (SCM),
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), and related
concepts so that they can understand the strategy,
operations, modeling, IT-enablement and other recent
trends in SCM.
Contd..
4
– Supply Chain Management and ERP
– Take decision related to operations of Supply
Chain Management
– modeling and design tools in Supply Chain
Management
– the value of information & IT-enablement of
Supply Chain Management
– of concepts through case studies and
illustrations from sectors such as Fast-moving-
consumer-goods (FMCG), automotive,
perishables, electronics, etc.
5
Supply chain management (SCM) is about
optimizing business processes and business value
in every corner of the extended enterprise -- from
your supplier’s supplier to your customer’s
customer. SCM uses e-business concepts and Web
technologies to manage beyond the organization --
upstream and downstream. Manufacturers and
vendors can share sales forecasts, manage
inventories, schedule labor, optimize deliveries,
and improve productivity
Contd..
6
• SCM includes mainly :
• Vendor management /Evaluation/Rating
• Procurement
• Inventory Management
• Forecasting
• Warehousing
• Logistics
• E-commerce
• Quality costs
• Distribution management
• JIT/KANBAN
• Networking
• Retail management
7
• How does SCM become e-business enabled?
• Companies with a network of suppliers, vendors, and
distributors need a fast, efficient way to disseminate
information and enable two-way communications. This is
done over the Web using:
• customized extranet sites
• Web servers
• groupware (e-mail-integrated collaborative software)
8
Contd..
By using e-business based SCM solutions, companies can:
•Lower operating costs through reduced inventory
requirements
•Improve customer satisfaction by maintaining adequate
stock. This will keep your offerings fresh and attuned to
marketplace trends and changes.
•Improve productivity through better data integrity, fewer
order entry errors, less rework, and faster communications.
!
9
• Suitable Measures of Performance (MOPs) are
defined and classified as either market qualifiers or
order winners. Aggregate MOPs include Quality,
service time, service level and total logistics costs.
10
• Agriculture, including crop and animal husbandry, forestry
and agro-forestry, fisheries, and agro-industries, provides
livelihoods to over 70 per cent of the Indian population.
Multifunctional - an economic activity (producing goods) and
a service to the community (food security, rural employment,
and environmental obligations such as soil conservation,
sustainable natural resource management and biodiversity
protection) - is thus crucial to sustainable agricultural and
rural development in our country
Contd..
11
This development strategy, inter alias, facilitates skill
improvement, providing employment in rural areas, transfer
of technology, rural industrialization and promoting self-
reliance among the people and to build up a strong rural
community base. An agricultural knowledge and information
system for rural empowerment and improved livelihoods i.e.
e-farmer, is the need of the hour
12
• e-commerce E-commerce refers to the sale of goods or products through a store online as opposed to a real world bricks and mortar site. A huge and growing area – online shopping sales in the UK hit a new high last year, hitting the £4bn per month mark in July for the first time and over a 12 month period online sales were up a massive 36% (Brand Republic).
• Online stores are not just about selling products. Many work on more sophisticated functions such as flight or hotel booking systems, comparison sites, online brokers or affiliate marketing schemes. It’s a big area but still many companies operate in sectors where this model of business isn’t always appropriate so looking more widely at the internet and emerging technology is important in presenting a presentation that is of use to each and every person accessing it.
13
• Growing competition, changing consumer preferences, cheaper
alternatives in the Liberalization, Privatization and Globalization
(LPG) era have thus posed great challenges and threat to the
producers of booth products/services, particularly in the supply
chain process.
• In this context, standardization, quality control and supply chain
management can make a significant difference in the marketing of
any products and the same need to be extended to rural
enterprises too
• The nature of competition in a given industry is ever changing
replacing direct competition between firms with emphasis on
better managed “information float” for the total supply chain
more so for rural industries.
• Information technology application in every facet of business is
changing the business culture worldwide of enterprises and
organizations, where logistics and supply chain management are
prime areas, to sustain in the present competitive world with
QUALITY
top related