Supply chains are often considered as “extended enterprises”. Thus, Information Systems conceived for individual organizations, such as ERP or Business Intelligence solutions, are supposed, once “extended” , to be capable to effectively manage knowledge flows throughout the chain. On the other hand, Supply Chains are considered by other scholars as completely different from traditional organizations, be they extended or not: according to such approaches, supply chains have a network nature. If that is the case, top-down efforts to build hard-wired processes integration should be abandoned, and innovation should be aimed at creating collaborative, web-based ICT tools for extemporary problem solving and relationship management. This paper seeks to integrate these two opposing views. We propose a framework linking market environments, value chain configurations, coordination mechanisms and learning strategies. Four fundamental types of supply chain are identified, and for each type the most strategic ISs are suggested.

De Marco, M., Ricciardi, F., Strategies for managing knowledge in SupplyChains, Paper, in The Tenth Wuhan International Conference on E-Business–Operations & Services Management and Technology, (Wuhan, 28-29 May 2011), Alfred University Press, Wuhan 2011: 1036-1042 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/47840]

Strategies for managing knowledge in Supply Chains

De Marco, Marco;Ricciardi, Francesca
2011

Abstract

Supply chains are often considered as “extended enterprises”. Thus, Information Systems conceived for individual organizations, such as ERP or Business Intelligence solutions, are supposed, once “extended” , to be capable to effectively manage knowledge flows throughout the chain. On the other hand, Supply Chains are considered by other scholars as completely different from traditional organizations, be they extended or not: according to such approaches, supply chains have a network nature. If that is the case, top-down efforts to build hard-wired processes integration should be abandoned, and innovation should be aimed at creating collaborative, web-based ICT tools for extemporary problem solving and relationship management. This paper seeks to integrate these two opposing views. We propose a framework linking market environments, value chain configurations, coordination mechanisms and learning strategies. Four fundamental types of supply chain are identified, and for each type the most strategic ISs are suggested.
2011
Inglese
The Tenth Wuhan International Conference on E-Business–Operations & Services Management and Technology
The Tenth Wuhan International Conference on E-Business–Operations & Services Management and Technology
Wuhan
Paper
28-mag-2011
29-mag-2011
De Marco, M., Ricciardi, F., Strategies for managing knowledge in SupplyChains, Paper, in The Tenth Wuhan International Conference on E-Business–Operations & Services Management and Technology, (Wuhan, 28-29 May 2011), Alfred University Press, Wuhan 2011: 1036-1042 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/47840]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/47840
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