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  • Essay / Supply Chain Management - 2921

    Supply Chain Management (SCM) is the integration of information, technology and management of key business functions that are directly or indirectly related and provide services to the same client. It promotes the downstream flow of products from raw materials to the final consumer and the upstream flow of information from the consumer to the supplier [1]. In the figure above, it explains that raw materials are purchased and then sent to the supplier for raw material processing. , suppliers supply the processed raw materials to manufacturers, producers process these raw materials into finished products, distributors deliver the finished products and packaged materials to customers or retailers, and retailers sell this product to consumers. Supply chain management was introduced due to the inability of organizations. understand all the activities that govern the delivery of the product to the end customer. Previously, businesses were too narrow-minded and only concerned about activities within their own borders. Essentially, supply chain management integrates the management of supply and demand within and between businesses. SCM ensures greater efficiency of modern businesses, by coordinating and synchronizing various supply chain organizations [2]. There are a variety of supply chain models, addressing both upstream and downstream. The SCOR (Supply-Chain Operations Reference) model. This literature review provides a brief description of the SCOR.2 model. BACKGROUND2.1. THE SUPPLY CHAIN ​​COUNCILSupply Chain Council (SCC) is a global non-profit organization (NGO) whose framework, improvement methodology, training, certification and benchmarking tools help member organizations make spectacular progress,...... middle of paper...... Widespread use of the SCOR model.10. REFERENCES[1] SASCM Student Supply Chain Management Association, Weber State University.[2] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supply_chain[3] Supply Chain Council (2010), Supply-Chain Operations Reference (SCOR) model, version 10, Supply-Chain Council, Inc, 2010[4] Supply Chain Council (2008), Supply Chain Operations Reference (SCOR) Model, Overview Version 9, Supply-Chain Council, Inc, 2008.[5] Peter Bolstorff and Robert Rosenbaum. Supply Chain Excellence: A Playbook for Dramatic Improvement Using the SCOR Model. Broadway, New York: American Management Association, 2003.[6] https://supply-chain.org/f/SCOR-Overview-Web.pdf[7] Samuel H. Huan, Sunil K. Sheoran, Ge Wang, (2004) “A review and benchmark analysis of chain operations supply chain (SCOR) model", Supply Chain Management: An International Journal, Vol. 9 Iss: 1, p..23 - 29