SCM Report
SCM Report
CHAIN
MANAGEME
NT
Submitted By :
Nirmal Maloo
Vinay Lohiya
Khushnuma Bathena
Monika Bharara
Ankit Vajpayee
Shashi Kabra
Sec – “A”
Definition & Scope
Supply Chain Management encompasses the planning and
management of all activities involved in sourcing and procurement,
conversion, and all Logistics Management activities. Importantly, it also
includes coordination and collaboration with channel partners, which can be
suppliers, intermediaries, third-party service providers, and customers. In
essence, Supply Chain Management integrates supply and demand
management within and across companies.
Strategic
Tactical
• Milestone payments
Operational
• 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).
• Order promising, accounting for all constraints in the supply chain, including
all suppliers, manufacturing facilities, distribution centers, and other
customers.
Goals of SCM
Users - The users of SCM systems are workers of supply chain participants at
all levels.
Disadvantages
1. Supply chain management is tailored to specific industry and particular
company.
2. Systems are often tightly integrated a limited few suppliers and trading
partners.
3. The purposes of SCM is more of collaboration than price negotiation.
4. The cost of implementation is higher.
5. Many mistakes are done at first.
Another benefit of RFIDs is that, unlike barcodes, RFID tags can be read
automatically by electronic readers. Imagine a truck carrying a container full
of widgets entering a shipping terminal in China. If the container is equipped
with an RFID tag, and the terminal has an RFID sensor network, that
container’s whereabouts can be automatically sent to Widget Co. without the
truck ever slowing down. It has the potential to add a substantial amount of
visibility into the extended supply chain.
Conclusion
SCM is now a days one of the greatest emerging technological
implication. Supply chain management (SCM) is a concept that has flourished
in manufacturing, originating from Just-In-Time (JIT) production and logistics.
Today, SCM represents an autonomous managerial concept, although still
largely dominated by logistics. SCM endeavors to observe the entire scope of
the supply chain. All issues are viewed and resolved in a supply chain
perspective, taking into account the interdependency in the supply chain.
SCM offers a methodology to relieve the myopic control in the supply
chain that has been reinforcing waste and problems. Construction supply
chains are still full of waste and problems caused by myopic control.
Comparison of case studies with prior research justifies that waste and
problems in construction supply chains are extensively present and
persistent, and due to interdependency largely interrelated with causes in
other stages of the supply chain. The characteristics of the construction
supply chain reinforce the problems in the construction supply chain, and
may well hinder the application of SCM to construction. Previous initiatives to
advance the construction supply chain have been somewhat partial.
The generic methodology offered by SCM contributes to better
understanding and resolution of basic problems in construction supply
chains, and gives directions for construction supply chain development. The
practical solutions offered by SCM, however, have to be developed in
construction practice itself, taking into account the specific characteristics
and local conditions of construction supply chains.