Thursday, July 17, 2008

US firms eye green supply-chain initiatives

There is a growing level of commitment among both small and midsize US firms toward the adoption of applications that would support more environmentally friendly supply-chain initiatives, IDC said in a report today.

IDC is a Framingham firm that provides IT market intelligence.

"While the social responsibility for establishing green initiatives is now generally regarded as the norm for European companies, US firms have been slow to embrace the technologies that would support this effort,"Judy Hodges, manager of IDC's Small and Medium Business Markets: Enterprise Applications research service, said in a statement. "However, in our most recent IDC AppStats Survey,we find that small and midsize manufacturers, wholesalers, and distributors in the United States are on the path toward leveraging innovative technologies to support a green supply chain."
(By Chris Reidy, Globe staff)

Source: boston

P&G to rethink supply chain

P&G has suggested that it will revisit the design of its supply chain if oil prices remain high. Such a move would represent a reversal of the 'distribution reinvention' which P&G announced last year.

P&G's new head of global supply, Keith Harrison, has said: "A lot of our supply chain design work was really developed and implemented in the 1980s and 1990s, when our capital spending was fairly high as a cost of capacity, and oil was 10 bucks a barrel. I could say that the supply chain design is now upside down. The environment has changed. Transportation cost is going to create an even more distributed sourcing network than we would have had otherwise."

Source by supplychainanalysis.igd.com

OSRAM Sheds Light on Supply Chain With ToolsGroup Solution

Leading Lighting Manufacturer Turns to Experienced Inventory Optimization Vendor to Optimize Components Strategy.

CAMBRIDGE, MA, -- ToolsGroup, a global provider of demand-driven inventory optimization solutions, announced that OSRAM S.p.A. has contracted to implement the company's Service Optimizer 99+ (SO 99+) solution.

With sales of 4.7 billion Euros in 2007, OSRAM is one of the largest lighting manufacturers in the world. Part of the Siemens AG Group, it has a global presence with 41,000 employees in 150 countries, including 48 production and distribution sites in 17 countries. OSRAM operates in North America as OSRAM Sylvania.

OSRAM will leverage ToolsGroup's SO 99+ solution to optimize the planning processes of raw materials and components managed at its production site in Treviso, Italy.

"Our decision to implement ToolsGroup's SO 99+ solutions was principally motivated by the need to review our optimization strategy for purchased components," said Giuseppe Carrer, coordinator of the Inbound Supply Chain improvement project at Treviso. "In addition to advanced technology and targeted solutions, ToolsGroup offers us a great deal of experience in the field."

"We are proud to be able to provide a company like OSRAM with the right tools for optimizing global service levels and delivering on their operational goals," added Joseph Shamir, CEO of ToolsGroup.

About ToolsGroup
ToolsGroup is an innovation partner for companies who want to achieve outstanding customer-service levels with less global inventory. Using our demand-driven inventory optimization solutions, our customers improve daily forecast accuracy and correctly set safety stocks to achieve up to 99+ percent customer-service levels while significantly cutting inventory. ToolsGroup has more than 150 customers in 31 countries worldwide. For more information on ToolsGroup and its solutions, please visit www.ToolsGroup.com.
Media Contact:
Jonathan Bloom
For ToolsGroup
617-374-4298
Email Contact
Source: ToolsGroup

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Business Intelligence Solution for Retail Supply Chain Driven by Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) Information

Digital Movers and Information Solutions (ISI) develop Insight*Point-of-Sale, a completely hosted collaboration solution for retailers and suppliers.

Mashpee, MA (PRWEB) July 15, 2008 -- Digital Movers (www.dmovers.com), a premier provider of outsourced electronic commerce services, and Information Solutions (www.isnetusa.com) a software solution provider to importers of apparel, handbags, and other soft-goods, announced today the joint release of Insight*Point-of-Sale, a web-based business intelligence solution that promotes collaboration between retailers and their supply chain partners.

Using a combination of sophisticated data warehouse design concepts and presentation tools in a completely hosted environment, Insight*Point-of-Sale analyzes POS data provided via EDI transactions and provides retailers and their suppliers with current and historical visibility into the movement of products through the supply chain. Users can query, drill-down and analyze voluminous data in real-time to uncover sales trends, stock-outs, overstocks, missed selling opportunities and a host of relevant data that previously had been difficult or impossible to interrogate intelligently.

Our customers are soft-goods importers and, as such, have to deal with numerous UPCs, colors, styles and sizes. The volume of POS data they were receiving presented significant challenges when it came to collaboration and business intelligence
"Digital Movers has been a proud partner of ISI for many years providing EDI solutions that integrate seamlessly with ISI's world class supply chain/ERP solutions. The offering of Insight*Point-of-Sale is another natural opportunity to match ISI's development expertise with Digital Movers' hosted EDI services," said Ken Konikowski, president, Digital Movers. "Retailers have increasingly made more and more valuable information, including POS data, available to their supply chain via Electronic Data Interchange. The problem is that many companies do not have the applications or the expertise to properly analyze this data and are unable to effectively mine actionable intelligence from the mounds of data. Insight*Point-of Sale is offered in a hosted, outsourced environment so that these companies need only an Internet connection and a web browser to be able to access and analyze this important information and facilitate collaboration."

"Our customers are soft-goods importers and, as such, have to deal with numerous UPCs, colors, styles and sizes. The volume of POS data they were receiving presented significant challenges when it came to collaboration and business intelligence," claimed Jeffrey Clayton, president of Information Solutions. "Our customers have found that thanks to our unique database design they are able to quickly and effectively manage their POS data and, because it is a hosted solution, they require no additional software or hardware. Insight*Point-of-Sale accommodates analysis for both the executive dashboard level with pre-defined web reports and pull-down menus as well as the intense query capability required by analysts."

A web-based demonstration of Insight*Point-of-Sale can be arranged by visiting Digital Movers' web site at http://www.dmovers.com/informationrequest.aspx.

About Digital Movers:
Digital Movers is the premier provider of Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) outsourcing services to companies that need to communicate commerce transaction data electronically with their suppliers, customers, transportation and financial partners. For over twenty-five years, Digital Movers has provided expert EDI, XML and Communications processing for companies of all sizes in the retail, healthcare, manufacturing, grocery and transportation verticals.

For additional information, please visit www.dmovers.com or contact Digital Movers at sales@dmovers.com or 888-896-7703.

About Information Solutions:
Since 1982, Information Solutions has been providing software solutions to importers of apparel, handbags, and other soft-goods, enabling them to maximize productivity, optimize efficiency, and increase profitability.

ISI's flagship offering is Envision, a complete Supply Chain Management software solution designed in concert with leaders in the apparel and accessories industry. Envision is a completely integrated application that addresses a company's processing requirements including product inception and sourcing, customer fulfillment, distribution management and financial and executive analysis.

For additional information, please visit www.isnetusa.com or contact Information Solutions at sales@isnetusa.com or 732-346-2500.

Improve the efficiency of your supply chain

14th & 15th October 2008, Hilton London Metropole

Implement demand-driven supply strategies to improve the efficiency of your supply chain and provide an unbeatable service to your customers

DDSC 08 will take place in London this October and provides the strategies you need to implement an effective pull-supply chain. This event has been produced by the Extended Supply Chain team following research undertaken with conference delegates and experts in the supply chain arena.

Business advantage has recently been gained through the use of Total Quality Management, technological advances & Lean Manufacturing methods - what's next? Industry has shifted from the factory-centric world, where the manufactures have the power to a customer-centric world where manufacturers must align themselves and their activities with the conditions of the global marketplace. Is your supply chain ready for this?

In today's competitive environment, product features and price have to obey the requirements of the market and product quality is no longer the major differentiator. Companies must now compete on the performance and quality of their delivery service, and demand driven supply chains are increasingly being utilised to go beyond customer requirements in efficiency and accuracy of supply.

If you are involved in the supply of a product where the customer's requirements matter, whether you are delivering a physical, infrastructural or electronic product, then you will benefit from attending the DDSC 08.
Event experts include:

Chris Dyson, Head of Supply Chain, Nokia Siemens will share his experiences of connecting customers to the back end to maximise supply chain excellence
Ensuring top down commitment from the boardroom to demand creation and supply capability team-working for Aidan Murphy, Managing Director, Supply Chain Bulmers Ireland

AMR Research will explain the role that globalisation, multi-channel distribution and increased competition are playing in driving forward demand driven supply chains

To find out more or reserve your place visit our website - www.ddsc2008.com - call +44 (0) 20 7970 4770 or email ddsc@centaur.co.uk Preferential rates for this event end on the 31st July 08, so get in touch soon.

Source by mhwmagazine.co.uk

Significance Of SCM For SMEs

Supply chain management (SCM) is a critical element in today’s highly complex and competitive business environment. It has direct influence on key issues like cost to market, time to market, responsiveness to changing customer demands and market dynamics and – in fact – on the overall business.

The SCM market in India, however, is still to mature and get organised. The process seems to have started but it has a long way to go.

To a great extent, due to the huge resources at their disposal, large enterprises have learnt to leverage SCM to their advantage.

Not surprisingly, most of the solutions and services available in the market tend to focus on the big players – leaving out SMEs who anyways start with a disadvantage due to their inherent resource constraints. Consequently, SMEs have been rather slow (and at times reluctant) to adopt and adapt SCM to their businesses.

However, various factors related to globalisation have now rendered implementation of SCM an imperative even for the SMEs. Mr Rajesh, MD, Rajathi Group highlights the relevance. He says, “The need for SCM is more than ever before because of the challenges unleashed on the competitiveness of the Indian industry by deregulation and globalisation.”

True, competition has now acquired a cross-border dimension and cost will play a key role with regards to competitiveness. “Effective and efficient SCM can help Indian SMEs to reduce their cost and compete aggressively in the international markets,” states Dr K Rangarajan, Head, Indian Institute of Foreign Trade (Kolkata).

The mammoth challenge for SMEs is to maintain the balance between demand and supply and, while doing so, provide the best possible products or services at the lowest possible cost. SMEs, obviously, do not have enough resources to employ at various stages of the chain. Hence, they often concentrate on individual components for optimising their internal operations.

But this is just a starting point and is never enough in the long run. The need is to optimise the supply chain in its totality and derive the highest possible value from it. “The objective of every supply chain is to maximise the overall value generated by an enterprise. It consists of all stages involved, directly or indirectly, in fulfilling a customer request,” remarks Mr Nikhil Shah, Executive Director, Elbee Express Pvt Ltd.

SCM is an ongoing process that involves precision in demand forecasting, inventory optimisation, reduction in warehouse costs and efficient as well as cost-effective handling of both incoming and outgoing stocks.

“Effective SCM brings down operating costs by a reduction in cost leakages like inventory pile-ups and reverse logistics, thereby ensuring a better planned environment wherein the production and supply sides are better synchronised and optimised,” says Mr Nikhil Sen, Director, Rosebys.

Thus, SCM is really about enhancing the efficiencies of the supply chain right from the planning stage to the execution stage while coordinating with diverse partners located at different locations. “As Indian SMEs go global it becomes even more imperative that their supply chains are linked with their global suppliers as well as vendors,” adds Mr Shah.

Efficient SCM needs an integrated approach; Indian SMEs need to start identifying and addressing various factors of their businesses so that they can enhance their supply chains accordingly. “An essential first step in the process is to assess the current supply chain capability and then linking that strategy to deliver bottom line results through SCM, competitiveness, order fulfilment, inventory management, etc,” says Mr Rajesh.

A good system will integrate not only information and processes but also people and technology. This is crucial if SMEs want to advance their market position. “An integrated SCM system can act as a powerful differentiator to significantly improve the competitiveness of the Indian SMEs,” says Mr Chittilappily, MD, V-Guard Industries.

As SMEs are gradually realising the significance of having an effective control over their supply chains, the SCM market in the country too is evolving in response. While the IT sector is gearing up to tap the growth, third party players, both at the level of consultation as well as implementation, are emerging on the landscape.

“SMEs are now increasingly relying on 3PL (Third Party Logistics) specialists to manage their entire supply chains, from procurement of raw materials to distribution of goods, in the domestic market as well as exports, so that they can focus on their core competencies,” explains Mr K Prabhakar, President and CEO, XPS.

It does make more sense to rely on specialists and to outsource it ‘to professional supply chain service providers that are well versed in the latest technologies and processes and have the cost benefit of economies of scale which they can pass on to the SMEs’ as Mr Shah says.

Although certain factors related to SCM are common to all industries, each industry vertical has its unique set of issues. Naturally, SCM requirement and implementation would differ from vertical to vertical. Mr Sivaram, Executive Director, Royal Classic Group, brings in the perspective from the apparel sector.

He says, “Being a fashion oriented business, our merchandise always has a limited shelf space and hence SCM has to be very effective. The co-ordination from design forecasting, conceptualising, samples production, bulk production, warehouse management & maintenance, effective distribution network are key activities involved in the process...” Similarly, other industries like auto-components, pharma, gems & jewellery, retail, etc. would have their distinctive SCM needs.

Moreover, each of these sectors is going through a different phase and hence its needs would change accordingly. The point is – SMEs from each industry would have to go for SCM solutions that are well-suited for their industry as well as their individual requirements and not blindly follow any trend.

Being small (or mid-sized) isn’t always bad; it has its advantages. As Mr Shah says, “SMEs have an advantage over their larger competitors as their smaller size gives them less bureaucracy to change and greater agility to respond.” Due to their leaner operations they are well-positioned to implement strategic changes quicker. This agility must be used to exploit business opportunities.

“However they have to do their homework on issues like getting the right team, dealing with lower volumes in the initial stages, keeping firm process documentation in position etc,” says Mr Ramkumar, Executive Director, Gemini Communication Ltd.

Globalisation has not just thrown up new challenges but has also opened up new opportunities. Likewise, just as SMEs have certain inherent limitations, they also have definite intrinsic strengths. SCM is all about aligning your strengths to take advantage of the opportunities while overcoming weaknesses and challenges. SMEs can definitely do it.

Source by indiatimes

Monday, July 14, 2008

Food Manufacturer to Use RFID to Increase Supply Chain Safety

Matiq, the information technology subsidiary of Nortura, Norway's largest food supplier ,has joined with IBM to use radio frequency identification (RFID) technology to track and trace poultry and meat products from the farm, through the supply chain, to supermarket shelves. Currently the food manufacturing industry is facing both government regulations and industry requirements for quality and traceability.

The tracking solution will help ensure that meat and poultry products are kept in optimal condition throughout the supply chain. The system calls for product packaging to be tagged with RFID chips to help ensure that products are kept in optimal condition.

Norwegian suppliers and supermarkets use software that complies with GS1 EPCglobal's Electronic Product Code Information Services (EPCIS) standard -- which allows sharing of RFID data across and between enterprises.

"Consumers are becoming increasingly aware of food quality, safety, origin and traceability. This creates greater pressure on manufacturers to keep track of every component in the manufacturing process, in order to ensure that their products are safe for the consumer," said Are Bergquist, CEO of Matiq.

At the core of the system will be IBM's WebSphere RFID Information Center, software for enterprises seeking to share product movement information with trading partners which are also using EPCIS compliant solutions.

Source by industryweek.com

Church’s Chicken Enjoys Supply Chain Efficiency, Low TCO with ArrowStream OnDemand

CHICAGO - Arrowstream, a leading provider of supply chain management and logistics services for the foodservice industry, announced that it is working with Church’s Chicken to help the leading fast food chain achieve growth objectives. Church’s has more than 1,600 locations worldwide in 19 countries and sales exceeding $1 billion.

Church’s Chicken sought a new solution to manage the purchasing process for its volume of stores and 12 distribution centers, because the company desired technology that would enable it to automate critical purchasing actions such as invoice management at the restaurant level.

The company required a solution that would increase efficiencies, could be quickly utilized, would integrate readily with Church’s distributors’ systems, and would also require little to no initial investment in hardware and software.

Church’s found ArrowStream OnDemand to be the right solution that delivered fully-integrated and automated purchasing management with low total cost of ownership.

“ArrowStream was unique for three reasons. First, it allowed us to get the system running quickly, with no investment in hardware and software,” said Alan Stukalsky, CIO, Church’s Chicken. “It offered complete visibility from the supplier to the backdoor of the store and includes logistics information. And it synchronized our distributors’ data with our own.”

To effectively capture share of increasing consumer demand, Church’s has plans to expand its menu and its presence by growing the chain by almost a thousand new restaurants by 2010.

IMPROVE EFFICIENCY FOR CONSUMER AND FRANCHISE SATISFACTION

Church’s identified invoice management as an area that could quickly deliver efficiencies with ArrowStream OnDemand. Managers at each of Church’s 275 U.S. stores were spending about one and one-half hours processing invoices for each of the twice-weekly distribution deliveries.

“With the new automated system, it now takes the average manager just five minutes to enter in each invoice, offering time savings of about 500 man hours per week.” said David Taylor, director of restaurant systems for Church’s Chicken. “This allows restaurant managers to spend more time on customer service, which ultimately improves customer satisfaction and store profitability.”

These new efficiencies, according to Stukalsky, are also having an unintended benefit by creating goodwill throughout the franchise network and contributing to franchisee’s greater satisfaction with the organization’s quality.

ATTAIN FAST START UP AND INTEGRATION WITH DISTRIBUTOR SYSTEMS

ArrowStream OnDemand integrates distributor data with its other chain operator customers, enabling a rapid start-up of the system that was fully synchronized with Church’s distributors.

“ArrowStream possesses such broad expertise and relationships with distributors that we were able to begin to reap benefits immediately,” said Stukalsky.

“To gain optimal visibility from the supplier to the back door of the store, we sought a system that would readily link distributor information to our systems,” he continued. “And if a franchisee wishes to add suppliers, we can rapidly accommodate them and integrate that distributor into the system.”

AUTOMATE PURCHASING PROCESSES WITH LOW TCO

“ArrowStream OnDemand requires no initial investment in hardware and software, unlike other software application providers,” explained Stukalsky. For companies like Church’s that are trying to control overhead, this is a profitable benefit.

Stukalsky believes that low cost of ownership is also enabling Church’s to redirect resources to channels that deliver more direct value to its customers.

SUPPORT GROWTH OBJECTIVES WITH SCALABLE APPLICATIONS

As Church’s continues on its steep growth trajectory, ArrowStream OnDemand is able to rapidly scale to meet Church’s needs in functionality and scope.

“We are working with ArrowStream to adopt software applications that will continue to give us greater visibility of product movement and pricing, and help us automate limited time offer processes,” said Stukalsky.

“We have aggressive growth targets, and with ArrowSteam OnDemand, our software can easily grow with us,” said Stukalsky. “The system is fully scalable to adapt to the chain operator’s needs in terms of function and capacity,” he explained. “With ArrowStream, I have access to more resources than I could possibly gather on my own, and I have a team that is always on the cutting edge of supply chain and logistics solutions,” said Stukalsky.

###

About ArrowStream

ArrowStream has helped chain operators and distributors in the food service industry to more effectively manage their supply chain and reduce logistics costs by an average of 20 percent. ArrowStream OnDemand is a software suite that gives chain operators and manufacturers tools to synchronize and manage their supply chain data, thereby enabling panoramic visibility into the supply chain. This software suite has a lower total cost of ownership that is proven to save time and improve decision-making regarding product supply, pricing, and LTO promotion management. ArrowStream’s management team, with more than 60 years of experience in the food service, software, and logistics industries, developed an innovative logistics management network that optimizes each customer’s inventory replenishment and routing, and substantially reduces transportation costs. To learn more, visit www.ArrowStream.com.



View Company Website: http://www.arrowstream.com

PCC awarded $1.2 million federal grant

WINTER HAVEN - In recognition of its national leadership role in providing training for high-paying jobs in Florida's supply chain management and logistics industries, the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) has awarded a $1.2 million grant to Polk Community College's Supply Chain Management Institute, one of eight institutes within PCC's Corporate College division.

PCC was one of only five institutions of higher education in the nation to receive full funding from the DOT through its Transportation Education Development Pilot Program (TEDPP). Other fully funded TEDPP grants were awarded to Penn State University, the University of Idaho, the University of Vermont, and California State University. Partially funded grants went to the University of Baltimore, North Dakota State University and the University of Missouri.

"We are elated and proud to be the only community college in the nation to receive a fully funded federal grant that will enable us to develop, refine, and expand degree and certificate programs offered by PCC's Supply Chain Management Institute," PCC President Eileen Holden said in a news release. "This grant not only reflects favorably on PCC, but also on our industry partners who have collaborated with us in bringing the Institute to fruition."

According to Rob Clancey, director of the PCC Corporate College, PCC will receive $300,000 in each of the next four years and use the funds to expand and fine tune the Supply Chain Management Institute's curriculum, establish a technically advanced training lab featuring new computer hardware and software, and provide scholarship assistance for incumbent workers in the supply chain field who wish to pursue studies at the Institute.

"The grant will also give us much-needed flexibility to add new programs to keep pace with the needs of our private-sector partners and also allow us to share our expertise with other schools throughout the nation," Clancey said, noting that the federal funding will help PCC achieve its goal of molding the Supply Chain Management Institute into a "model for the nation."

Launched last summer, PCC Corporate College's Supply Chain Management Institute evolved from a cooperative effort involving the Florida Banner Center, PCC, and leading firms in Polk County's supply chain and logistics industry. Since its inception, the certificate-granting entity, under the leadership of Director Wayne Kline, has trained hundreds of people for jobs in Polk County's supply chain industry.

Currently, PCC is one of only two community colleges in Florida offering training and educational program in Supply Chain Management leading to an associate of science or associate of applied science degree.

"PCC is proud to be meeting the special training needs of one of the fastest growing components of Florida's economy through its Supply Chain Management Institute," Holden said. "The Institute offers a classic example of the great things that can be accomplished when the public and private sectors work together for the common good."

According to the Employ Florida Banner Center, the average annual wage in Florida's logistics and distribution sector is $48,669, as opposed to $36,804 in industry in general. Well-trained workers in this sector can command up to $54 per hour, and the industry needs 11,000 men and women to meet current and future staffing needs.

Source by newschief

Thursday, July 10, 2008

How Good Is Your Supply Chain Data Quality? (Part 3)

Many companies claim that the reason that they do not measure data quality is that it is too hard to do, or that looking at all that data takes resources they do not have or that the volume of data is so large that it is an overwhelming task. A few companies have found a creative way to assess data quality, implementing a Data Cycle Count program where they “cycle” through the data in their system and “count” the number of data errors found. By looking at a sample on a regular basis the task is more manageable.

Companies have been using cycle counts to assess the accuracy of one of their most important assets, inventory, for a very long time. Accuracy of the on hand quantity is important to the success of the company. But cycle counting is more than tracking inventory accuracy; the key purpose of cycle counting is to identify items in error, thus triggering research, identification, and elimination of the cause of the errors. It is this process of continuous improvement that yields benefits.

How do you apply cycle counting to data? Data can be viewed as an asset too, and like inventory assessing, its accuracy is important to understanding if the processes in place are sufficient to control the input and maintenance of data. As in inventory cycle counting, it is the process of error identification and elimination of the cause of the error that yields benefits.

The data cycle count process is simple; you select a data record to audit, you compare it to the field requirements for that data record and then you report out the rate of the errors, perform root cause analysis tracking the errors by type. Then attack the largest error group as an improvement project to fix the source of the error. That is the basic process.

As with inventory cycle counting, deciding what to count and how often to count can vary by company. The same is true for data. Data can be grouped by type, importance, frequency of change, or how prone it is to entry error. However you choose to classify the data assigning an ABC classification will help you manage the selection of the data records to count.

What are the benefits of data cycle counts?

  • Data cycle counts are a quantitative measurement of data quality, no more gut feel measurements that are prone to second guessing.
  • Data cycle counts measure accuracy over time, tracking how well improvement efforts are working.
  • Cycle counting data is a sampling process and is easier to execute than a full data review. The sample accuracy rate can be extended to approximate the error rate for a group of data.
  • Cycle counting the data encourages an environment of problem solving and continuous improvement through ongoing corrective action.

Data cycle counting is a simple process that any company can implement and get tangible benefits from. Data is a valuable asset and it is time for companies to make the effort to measure data quality. By borrowing from measurement methodologies used in other parts of the business, companies can develop formal processes to measure and track data quality.

Accurate information and the flow of data is critical to today’s extended supply chains; data drives the choices companies make, whether tactical or strategic. It is data that is used in the measurement of processes and outcomes, so if it is not accurate, your performance measure will not be accurate. Yet, few companies measure the quality of their data or appreciate how poor data quality impacts their performance. Include data quality in your performance metrics program; it is easy to do using methods you already have in place and it will drive significant and long-lasting improvement!

Source by scdigest.com