Paradigm shift in supply chain management (SCM)

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2013

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American Society for Engineering Management

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Industrial Engineering
(1998)
Industrial Engineering is a field of engineering that develops and applies methods and techniques to design, implement, develop and improve systems comprising of humans, materials, machines, energy and funding. Our department was founded in 1998, and since then, has graduated hundreds of individuals who may compete nationally and internationally into professional life. Accredited by MÜDEK in 2014, our student-centered education continues. In addition to acquiring the knowledge necessary for every Industrial engineer, our students are able to gain professional experience in their desired fields of expertise with a wide array of elective courses, such as E-commerce and ERP, Reliability, Tabulation, or Industrial Engineering Applications in the Energy Sector. With dissertation projects fictionalized on solving real problems at real companies, our students gain experience in the sector, and a wide network of contacts. Our education is supported with ERASMUS programs. With the scientific studies of our competent academic staff published in internationally-renowned magazines, our department ranks with the bests among other universities. IESC, one of the most active student networks at our university, continues to organize extensive, and productive events every year.

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Abstract

In today's world, the way we do business is not the only changing phenomenon but also the pace of change is changing. The business is global, highly competitive, technology-intense, prices are market driven with shorter product life cycles, integrated processes starving to collaboration. Within this context, supply chain management (SCM) has earned its right place in the strategic management arena. Technology became the enabler for SCM development, making visibility, transparency and integrity possible among the SC partners. This leads the transformation of SC's from dyadic, material management oriented relationships into complex, collaborative, networked, web-enabled, extended architectures. With multiple, global actors and complex dependencies, enterprise borders vanish and enterprise-centric strategy development becomes insufficient. What defines success in such an environment is a network-centric, collaborative and holistic approach characterized by network level strategy development and decision making based on business intelligence with the partners. Integration of multi-function and multi-agent systems will be the main key performance index (KPI) for the SCM development. This is a radical paradigm shift in which collaborative long-term partnerships reign, managerial borders extend, and network-level results dominate the enterprise-centric results. Thus, this study provides a comprehensive discussion of this paradigm shift in SCM from organizational, technological, and managerial perspectives. Following the "leagile" philosophy, capabilities and advantages of lean and agile SCM can be achieved. In this paradigm, network level performance and risk management is the key for chain-level managerial control and trust among partners is the vital binding glue keeping the partnerships alive.

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Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; Missouri University of Science and Technology; St. Cloud State University; University of Arkansas

Keywords

Paradigm, Strategic management, Supply chain management

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2

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International Annual Conference of the American Society for Engineering Management 2013, ASEM 2013 -- International Annual Conference of the American Society for Engineering Management 2013, ASEM 2013 -- 3 October 2013 through 5 October 2013 -- Minneapolis, MN -- 105863

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Start Page

291

End Page

302

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