Technology Industry
Industry: Email Alert RSS FeedValue Chain Management - Industry Trend or Event
ENT, Jan 12, 2000 by Robert Craig
There has been a lot written lately about the impact of e-commerce. The so-called dot-corns are hot these days. I think most analysts agree, however, that the long-term impact of these companies, with their business-to-consumer orientation of buying and selling goods over the Web, will be relatively minor compared with the impact of companies focused on delivering business-to-business One area of business-to-business applications that has particularly important during the past year is value chain management (VCM).
Most RecentTechnology Articles
A corporation's value chain is the set of materials, information,. processes, and procedures used to manage a product's lifecycle. This includes the design development, implementation: distribution, and delivery of goods and services to the consumer. VOM is becoming crucial to the successful evolution of many organizations in the business-to-business arena. This is particularly any true in the manufacturing, pharmaceutical, consumer-packaged goods, and transportation sectors.
The difference between a supply chain and a value chain that a supply chain is unidirectional and focused on improving the efficiency of the flow of goods from manufacturing to the consumer. Value chain management is bidirectional and has a broader scope, covering the entire product lifecycle, services, and goods.
The members of a value chain include upstream and downstream members. An upstream member provides the raw materials or finished goods that are put into a business process. For example, a computer manufacturer's chip and disk drive suppliers are upstream members of the value chain. These companies as also have upstream vendors that supply them with raw materials or subassemblies for the manufacturing processes. A downstream member consumes the output of a corporation's business processes. For a computer manufacturer, this would be a distributor, retailer, or an end-user consumer.
A value chain system improves design, engineering, sales, and customer service through a closed-loop feedback mechanism. If the manufacturer decides to modify a product's attributes, for example, change management processes and documents - such as design specifications, engineering diagrams, cost allocation, or schedules - must be generated and shared between the manufacturer and supplier. A VCM system improves the efficiency of this process, reducing time-to-market, product errors, and rework. It can also provide feedback to the supplier if users report failures or marketing develops additional product requirements.
VCM is becoming crucial. The companies that will be the winners in the Web-based economy of the next millennium are those that understand how to manage the value chain to add more value relative to the overall cost of the value chain.
An example of efficient VCM from the retail sector is Wal-Mart. Wal-Mart leverages its information technology infrastructure -- based on a combination of point-of-sales systems and a data warehouse -- to help its suppliers manage their products on Wal-Mart's retail shelves. By providing suppliers with up-to-date information about which products are selling at certain locations, Wal-Mart helps them directly monitor and adjust inventory levels to reflect sales at a fine level of granularity. This, combined with Wal-Mart's huge size, enables it to demand massive discounts and rapid replenishment, which is the core of Wal-Mart's competitive advantage in its markets.
How does a company improve the velocity and efficiency of its value chain? The key is to eliminate nonelectronic processes -- such as paper reports, faxes, and telephone calls -- and implement online, Web-based access to value chain data for all authorized users in the process.
This reduces time-to-decision barriers that are created by non-electronic media. It also externalizes a company's internal processes to value chain members. This empowers them to make decisions based on timely information and to wring out costs and inefficiency.
What should you look for if your company is thinking about using its information technology to improve the efficiency and velocity of its value chain? In my colunm next issue, I will describe some requirements for a VCM product and tell you about some of the vendors that are emerging in this market. --Robert Craig is vice president of marketing at Viador Inc. (Burlington, Mass), and a former director at the Hurwitz Group Inc.
CXO UnpluggedSmart Business interviews on BNET
Brought to you by CBS MoneyWatch.com
- Best- and Worst-Paid College Degrees
- 6 Things You Should Never Do on Twitter or Facebook
- How Much Sleep Do You Really Need?
- 6 Big Myths about Gas Mileage
Most Recent Technology Articles
- INTERVIEW WITH BEN BUTTERS, DIRECTOR OF EUROPEAN AFFAIRS AT EUROCHAMBRES : "A PERFECT ROAD MAP FOR EU CLUSTERS DOES NOT EXIST".
- AGENDA.(Brief article)(Conference notes)
- FIGHT AGAINST INTERNET PIRACY.
- INTERNET : AUTHORS' SOCIETIES URGE ACTION AGAINST PIRACY.
- TELECOMMUNICATIONS : BUSINESSEUROPE HOSTILE TO FURTHER CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS.(Brief article)
Most Recent Technology Publications
Most Popular Technology Articles
- What is precision air conditioning and why is it necessary?
- Business process re-engineering in the small firm: A case study
- 3G: naughty or nice? PhoneErotica.com generates over 300 million hits per month, and rings up more minutes of use per month than MSN
- BizRate to monitor in-store customer satisfaction for Office Depot stores - Market Intelligence
- Speed control of separately excited DC motor




