Inventory positioning and optimization of global supply chain

Companies today need to maintain efficient operations management and a lean supply chain management to remain competitive. Gone are the days when manufacturers could stockpile large quantities of raw materials, load-up with work-in-process; and pack warehouses with finished goods. These ways cost to...

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Main Author: Muhammad Aadil Dafir.
Other Authors: Shaligram Pokharel
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/39996
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-399962023-03-04T19:20:53Z Inventory positioning and optimization of global supply chain Muhammad Aadil Dafir. Shaligram Pokharel School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Suzlon Energy Pte Ltd DRNTU::Engineering::Industrial engineering::Supply chain Companies today need to maintain efficient operations management and a lean supply chain management to remain competitive. Gone are the days when manufacturers could stockpile large quantities of raw materials, load-up with work-in-process; and pack warehouses with finished goods. These ways cost too much, require too much working capital, and contribute to inconsistent and longer lead times. Cash unnecessarily tied up in inventory could be better spent elsewhere such as product development, expanded marketing and sales, reengineering, expansion, acquisitions and also debt reduction. Inventory positioning is important as well. Expanding to areas with cheaper labour offers the possibility of radical cost reductions. However, exploiting the promise of low-cost sourcing requires rethinking supply chain strategy. With the benefits are risks and hidden costs that some only discovered after making significant investments. However, with proper research and strategic planning, expanding various functions globally will reap long term benefits. For this study, we posit that for a global company to remain competitive as it expands in the prospective wind energy industry, it has to constantly maintain a streamline global supply chain and a strategically planned inventory positioning system. We address the problem of inventory management. Subsequently, we touch on inventory positioning by determining the supply chain nodes and subsequently investigate where inventory should be held to minimize holding costs given a pre-specified order fill rate. We propose a suitable inventory positioning approach for Suzlon. Bachelor of Engineering 2010-06-09T01:34:29Z 2010-06-09T01:34:29Z 2010 2010 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/39996 en Nanyang Technological University 63 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Industrial engineering::Supply chain
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Industrial engineering::Supply chain
Muhammad Aadil Dafir.
Inventory positioning and optimization of global supply chain
description Companies today need to maintain efficient operations management and a lean supply chain management to remain competitive. Gone are the days when manufacturers could stockpile large quantities of raw materials, load-up with work-in-process; and pack warehouses with finished goods. These ways cost too much, require too much working capital, and contribute to inconsistent and longer lead times. Cash unnecessarily tied up in inventory could be better spent elsewhere such as product development, expanded marketing and sales, reengineering, expansion, acquisitions and also debt reduction. Inventory positioning is important as well. Expanding to areas with cheaper labour offers the possibility of radical cost reductions. However, exploiting the promise of low-cost sourcing requires rethinking supply chain strategy. With the benefits are risks and hidden costs that some only discovered after making significant investments. However, with proper research and strategic planning, expanding various functions globally will reap long term benefits. For this study, we posit that for a global company to remain competitive as it expands in the prospective wind energy industry, it has to constantly maintain a streamline global supply chain and a strategically planned inventory positioning system. We address the problem of inventory management. Subsequently, we touch on inventory positioning by determining the supply chain nodes and subsequently investigate where inventory should be held to minimize holding costs given a pre-specified order fill rate. We propose a suitable inventory positioning approach for Suzlon.
author2 Shaligram Pokharel
author_facet Shaligram Pokharel
Muhammad Aadil Dafir.
format Final Year Project
author Muhammad Aadil Dafir.
author_sort Muhammad Aadil Dafir.
title Inventory positioning and optimization of global supply chain
title_short Inventory positioning and optimization of global supply chain
title_full Inventory positioning and optimization of global supply chain
title_fullStr Inventory positioning and optimization of global supply chain
title_full_unstemmed Inventory positioning and optimization of global supply chain
title_sort inventory positioning and optimization of global supply chain
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/39996
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