Postponement Strategies in Supply Chain Management [recurso electrónico] / by T. C. Edwin Cheng, Jian Li, C. L. Johnny Wan, Shouyang Wang.

Por: Cheng, T. C. Edwin [author.]Colaborador(es): Li, Jian [author.] | Wan, C. L. Johnny [author.] | Wang, Shouyang [author.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries International Series in Operations Research & Management Science ; 143Editor: New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 2010Edición: FirstDescripción: XVIII, 166p. online resourceTipo de contenido: text Tipo de medio: computer Tipo de portador: online resourceISBN: 9781441958372Tema(s): Economics | Industrial engineering | Operations research | Economics/Management Science | Operation Research/Decision Theory | Production/Logistics/Supply Chain Management | Industrial and Production EngineeringFormatos físicos adicionales: Printed edition:: Sin títuloClasificación CDD: 658.40301 Clasificación LoC:HD30.23Recursos en línea: Libro electrónicoTexto
Contenidos:
Analysis of Pull Postponement by EOQ-based Models -- Analysis of Postponement Strategy by EPQ-based Models -- Evaluation of a Postponement System with an (r, q) Policy -- Simulation of a Two-End-Product Postponement System -- Application of Postponement: Examples from Industry -- Conclusions, Implications and Future Research Directions.
En: Springer eBooksResumen: Within supply chain management (SCM), postponement is a deliberate action to delay final manufacturing or distribution of a product until receipt of a customer order. This reduces the incidence of wrong manufacturing or incorrect inventory deployment. Postponement strategies and practices serve to reduce the anticipatory risk in a supply chain. It can be fine-tuned or staged so that only the generic parts shared by a firm’s various end products are warehoused, used only once orders come in for whichever products are selling, and will reduce inventory pressures throughout the firm. Despite much existing research in the area, no one book devoted solely to postponement has been published. At its core, Postponement Strategies in Supply Chain Management analyzes how both pull postponement strategy and form postponement strategy can be leveraged to yield substantial benefits to adopting firms in different competitive environments. The book is intended for researchers in supply chain management interested in conducting in-depth studies on postponement strategies. It is also intended for practitioners trying to understand the workings of postponement strategies and looking for guidance and decision support for the implementation of postponement strategies. Therefore, the book can be useful not only for researchers but also for practitioners and graduate students in operations management, management science, and business administration.
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Tipo de ítem Biblioteca actual Colección Signatura Copia número Estado Fecha de vencimiento Código de barras
Libro Electrónico Biblioteca Electrónica
Colección de Libros Electrónicos HD30.23 (Browse shelf(Abre debajo)) 1 No para préstamo 371519-2001

Analysis of Pull Postponement by EOQ-based Models -- Analysis of Postponement Strategy by EPQ-based Models -- Evaluation of a Postponement System with an (r, q) Policy -- Simulation of a Two-End-Product Postponement System -- Application of Postponement: Examples from Industry -- Conclusions, Implications and Future Research Directions.

Within supply chain management (SCM), postponement is a deliberate action to delay final manufacturing or distribution of a product until receipt of a customer order. This reduces the incidence of wrong manufacturing or incorrect inventory deployment. Postponement strategies and practices serve to reduce the anticipatory risk in a supply chain. It can be fine-tuned or staged so that only the generic parts shared by a firm’s various end products are warehoused, used only once orders come in for whichever products are selling, and will reduce inventory pressures throughout the firm. Despite much existing research in the area, no one book devoted solely to postponement has been published. At its core, Postponement Strategies in Supply Chain Management analyzes how both pull postponement strategy and form postponement strategy can be leveraged to yield substantial benefits to adopting firms in different competitive environments. The book is intended for researchers in supply chain management interested in conducting in-depth studies on postponement strategies. It is also intended for practitioners trying to understand the workings of postponement strategies and looking for guidance and decision support for the implementation of postponement strategies. Therefore, the book can be useful not only for researchers but also for practitioners and graduate students in operations management, management science, and business administration.

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