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A Look Inside Outsourcing Decisions

Complexity is just the beginning, as these global manufacturers reveal

Knowledge at Wharton
Thu, 07/25/2013 - 11:22
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Global companies struggle with decisions about how much to outsource. Too little means an organization may lose the pricing advantages that can come with using competitive providers worldwide. Too much—or the wrong kind of outsourcing—and quality and knowledge management can suffer.

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A panel at a recent Wharton Global Forum in Tokyo titled “Global Supply Chain Management: Outsourcing, Re-shoring, and Near-Shoring,” looked at the reshaping of the global supply chain, and how companies choose where and whom to source from in a fast-changing environment. During the discussion, led by Wharton professor of operations and information management Morris A. Cohen, the panelists suggested that the cheapest solution is not always the best, and that the architecture of supply chains can vary widely depending on the industry and products involved.

Boeing’s supply chain evolves from extensive research into customers and the environments in which they operate, says Beth Anderson, a Boeing vice president. “We go through the entire cycle of designing the airplane and designing the production system, and understanding who our customers are going to be and how we’re going to support [the aircraft] once it goes into service.”

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Submitted by umberto mario tunesi on Thu, 08/08/2013 - 22:08

To do or not to do?

To buy or not to buy? Two apparently different facets of the same dilemma: even in the highly integrated production plants of former USSR not everything run always smoothly, and they were delivering in their own Country and the Iron Curtain only, though vast the territory was. To look for more viable solutions to this dilemma we may should better think in terms of "logistics", not merely of warehousing and transportation; and we could learn something from Alexander the Great's logistics, or General Sherman's. Just to walk on my own ground, Italy itself and european Countries are connected by the roads designed and built by the ancient Romans, while even the most recent motorways miserably fail to fulfil their duty. I think in the US is more or less the same, so the problem has to be looked at differently: we hear of floating factories, why not flyng factories? Like hitchhiking, buying goods along the way would improve local economies. Time for logistical thoughts, therefore. Thank you. 

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