Logistics management and strategy
Material type: TextPublication details: Pearson Education New York 2019Edition: 6thDescription: xxxiv, 457 pISBN:- 9781292183688
- 658.5 HAR
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Indian Institute of Management LRC General Stacks | Operations Management & Quantitative Techniques | 658.5 HAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 001768 |
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Table of Contents
Foreword
Preface
How to use this book
Plan of the book
Part One COMPETING THROUGH LOGISTICS
1 Logistics and the supply chain
2 Putting the end-customer first
3 Value and logistics costs
Part Two LEVERAGING LOGISTICS OPERATIONS
4 Managing logistics internationally
5 Managing the lead-time frontier
6 Supply chain planning and control
7 Lean thinking and agile supply chains
Part Three WORKING TOGETHER
8 Integrating the supply chain
9 Sourcing and procurement
Part Four CHANGING THE FUTURE
10 Logistics future challenges and opportunities
Index
Description
From Preface:
This text has a clear European foundation and an international appeal. In line with the globalisation of logistics, we have included cases from other parts of the world than Europe – diverse though European logistics solutions are – including South Africa, the United States, Japan, China and Australia.
Accordingly, we start in Part One with the strategic role of logistics in the supply chain. We continue by developing the marketing perspective by explaining our view of ‘putting the end-customer first’. Part One finishes by exploring the concept of value and logistics costs. In Part Two, we review leveraging logistics operations in terms of their global dimensions, and of the lead-time frontier. Part Two continues by examining the challenges of coordinating manufacturing and retail processes, and the impact on logistics of just-in-time and the agile supply chain. Part Three reviews working together, first in terms of integrating the supply chain and second in terms of sourcing and supply management. Our book ends with Part Four, in which we outline the logistics future challenge.
This text is intended for MSc students on logistics courses, and as an accompanying text for open learning courses such as global MSc degrees and virtual universities. It will also be attractive as a management textbook and as recommended reading on MBA options in logistics and supply chain management.
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