Charles E. Oyibo
A supply chain is a sequence of organizations--their facilities, functions, and activities--that are involved in producing and delivering a product or service. The sequence begins with the basic supplier of raw materials and extends all the way to the final consumer. There are two kinds of movement in these systems: the physical movement of material, generally downstream--in the direction of the chain, and exchange of information, which moves in both directions along the chain.\
Supply chains are often referred to as value chains, a term that reflects the concept that value is added as goods and services progress through the chain. Moreover, for each organization, the value chain has two components: the supply component (which starts at the beginning of the chain and stops with the internal operations of the organization) and the demand component (which starts where the organizations output is delivered to its immediate customer and ends with the final customer in the chain; the demand chain is the sales and distribution portion of the value chain with respect to the organization in question).
| Strategic Issues | Tactical Issues | Operating Issues |
|---|---|---|
|
|
|
Logistics refers to the movement of materials and information within a facility and to incoming and outgoing shipment of goods and materials. The following are considerations under the umbrella of logistics:
Page Last Updated: Wednesday December 8, 2004 6:33 PM