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The Ongoing Challenge: Creating an Enterprise-Wide Detailed Supply Chain Plan for Semiconductor and Package Operations

In: Planning Production and Inventories in the Extended Enterprise

Author

Listed:
  • Kenneth Fordyce

    (IBM Corporation)

  • Chi-Tai Wang
  • Chih-Hui Chang
  • Alfred Degbotse
  • Brian Denton
  • Peter Lyon
  • R. John Milne
  • Robert Orzell
  • Robert Rice
  • Jim Waite

Abstract

In the mid-1980s, Karl Kempf of Intel and Gary Sullivan of IBM independently proposed that planning, scheduling, and dispatch decisions across an enterprise’s demand-supply network were best viewed as a series of information flows and decision points organized in a hierarchy or set of decision tiers (Sullivan 1990). This remains the most powerful method to view supply chains in enterprises with complex activities. Recently, Kempf (2004) eloquently rephrased this approach in today’s supply chain terminology, and Sullivan (2005) added a second dimension based on supply chain activities to create a grid (Fig. 14.1) to classify decision support in demand-supply networks. The row dimension is decision tier and the column dimension is responsible unit. The area called global or enterprise-wide central planning falls within this grid.

Suggested Citation

  • Kenneth Fordyce & Chi-Tai Wang & Chih-Hui Chang & Alfred Degbotse & Brian Denton & Peter Lyon & R. John Milne & Robert Orzell & Robert Rice & Jim Waite, 2011. "The Ongoing Challenge: Creating an Enterprise-Wide Detailed Supply Chain Plan for Semiconductor and Package Operations," International Series in Operations Research & Management Science, in: Karl G Kempf & Pınar Keskinocak & Reha Uzsoy (ed.), Planning Production and Inventories in the Extended Enterprise, chapter 0, pages 313-387, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:isochp:978-1-4419-8191-2_14
    DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4419-8191-2_14
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    Cited by:

    1. Uday Venkatadri & Shentao Wang & Ashok Srinivasan, 2021. "A Model for Demand Planning in Supply Chains with Congestion Effects," Logistics, MDPI, vol. 5(1), pages 1-24, January.

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