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Supply chain process design toolkit (SCPDT)
Full text PdfPdf (241 KB)
Source Winter Simulation Conference archive
Proceedings of the 33nd conference on Winter simulation table of contents
Arlington, Virginia
SESSION: Transportation, logistics, and distribution table of contents
Pages: 1146 - 1154  
Year of Publication: 2001
ISBN:0-7803-7309-X
Authors
Perakath Benjamin  Knowledge Based Systems, Inc., College Station, TX
Mike Graul  Knowledge Based Systems, Inc., College Station, TX
Richard Mayer  Knowledge Based Systems, Inc., College Station, TX
Michael Painter  Knowledge Based Systems, Inc., College Station, TX
Charles Marshall  Knowledge Based Systems, Inc., College Station, TX
Sponsors
INFORMS/CS : Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences/College on Simulation
IEEE/SMCS : Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers/Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society
NIST : National Institute of Standards and Technology
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
SCS : The Society for Computer Simulation International
SIGSIM: ACM Special Interest Group on Simulation and Modeling
IIE : Institute of Industrial Engineers
IEEE/CS : Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers/Computer Society
ASA : American Statistical Association
Publisher
IEEE Computer Society  Washington, DC, USA
Bibliometrics
Downloads (6 Weeks): 1,   Downloads (12 Months): 27,   Citation Count: 1
Additional Information:

abstract   references   cited by   index terms   collaborative colleagues  

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ABSTRACT

A characteristic that will distinguish successful manufacturing enterprises of the next millennium is agility: the ability to respond quickly, proactively, and aggressively to unpredictable change. The use of extended virtual enterprise Supply Chains (SC) to achieve agility is becoming increasingly prevalent. A key problem in constructing effective SCs is the lack of methods and tools to support the integration of processes and systems into shared SC processes and systems. This paper describes the architecture and concept of operation of the Supply Chain Process Design Toolkit (SCPDT), an integrated software system that addresses the challenge of seamless and efficient integration. The SCPDT enables the analysis and design of Supply Chain (SC) processes. SCPDT facilitates key SC process engineering tasks including 1) AS-IS process base-lining and assessment, 2) collaborative TO-BE process requirements definition, 3) SC process integration and harmonization, 4) TO-BE process design trade-off analysis, and 5) TO-BE process planning and implementation.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
Fillion, F., and W. Crump. 1998. A truly integrated environment for enterprise modeling and analysis. In Handbook on architectures for information systems, ed. P. Bernus, K. Mertins, and G. Schmidt. Springer-Verlag. Forthcoming.
 
2
Malone, T. W., K. G Crowston, J. Lee, B. Pentland, 1993. Tools for inventing organizations: toward a handbook of organizational processes. Technical report #141. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Center for Coordination Science, Cambridge, MA:


Collaborative Colleagues:
Perakath Benjamin: colleagues
Mike Graul: colleagues
Richard Mayer: colleagues
Michael Painter: colleagues
Charles Marshall: colleagues