Topic
Supply chain management
About: Supply chain management is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 39055 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1082949 citations. The topic is also known as: SCM.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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01 Jan 2004TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of e-business on supply chain integration can be described along the dimensions of information integration, synchronized planning, coordinated workflow, and new business models, and significant value can be created by e-Business enabled supply-chain integration.
Abstract: e-Business has emerged as a key enabler to drive supply chain integration. Businesses can use the Internet to gain global visibility across their extended network of trading partners and help them respond quickly to changing customer demand captured over the Internet. The impact of e-business on supply chain integration can be described along the dimensions of information integration, synchronized planning, coordinated workflow, and new business models. As a result, many of the core supply chain principles and concepts can now be put into practice much more effectively using e-business. Significant value can be created by e-business enabled supply chain integration.
374 citations
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TL;DR: Observations and insights from this paper could provide the guideline for academia and practitioners in implementing big data analytics in different aspects of supply chain management.
373 citations
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TL;DR: An integrated fuzzy AHP-VIKOR approach-based framework for sustainable global supplier selection that takes sustainability risks from sub-suppliers (i.e., (1 + n) th-tier suppliers) into account is presented in this article.
373 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a novel analytical framework (Twitter Analytics) for analyzing supply chain tweets, highlighting the current use of Twitter in supply chain contexts, and further developing insights into the potential role of Twitter for supply chain practice and research.
372 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors employ confirmatory factor analysis and path analysis to examine empirically the relationships among supplier selection criteria (quality, delivery reliability, product performance and unit price), supplier involvement on design teams and in continuous improvement programs, four dimensions of customer satisfaction (competitive pricing, product quality, product variety, and delivery service), and overall firm performance.
Abstract: Supply chain management as a system of operation continues to evolve. This study employs confirmatory factor analysis and path analysis to examine empirically the relationships among supplier selection criteria (quality, delivery reliability, product performance and unit price), supplier involvement on design teams and in continuous improvement programs, four dimensions of customer satisfaction (competitive pricing, product quality, product variety, and delivery service), and overall firm performance.
372 citations