The 21st Century Supply Chain

2 Responses to “The mobile revolution hits the supply chain”

  1. Jim Ashmore

    Actually, we already have that software. It is called a phone and a conversation with the affected production planner. He or she can simulate the order and check for constraints and options.

    If the sales force had that software, that would be the scariest day of my life. Sales managers are not planners and rarely understand planning and the issues of accepting an order inside the planning time fence. Even sophisticated software struggles with the details required to fill rush orders. There are so many variables and many are not linear in nature. That is, accepting the rush order may cascade into a chain of events that result in less throughput and missed orders to multiple other customers. And, that is why we need experienced planners supported by adequate simulation software and clear visibility throughout the supply chain.

  2. John Westerve;d

    Thanks for your comment, Jim.

    In some situations, I agree that the conversation with the affected planner is required. Specifically, if the available date returned by the back-end supply chain tool doesn’t satisfy the customer’s needs you could contact the planners to see if a better date could be achieved.
    However, if the date returned by the supply chain system (which should take into account supply and capacity availability throughout the supply chain and any ordering rules defined within the host ERP system) is satisfactory to the customer, why not accept the order?

    The problem with just relying on the same old methodologies to confirm orders is that the companies who have done that are quickly replaced by those companies who respond faster and more accurately (all other things being equal).

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