2016
DOI: 10.1007/s40171-016-0130-8
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Multi-echelon Supply Chain Flexibility Enhancement Through Detecting Bottlenecks

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Cited by 17 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Corporate firms compare these outputs to measure the relative performance of their manufacturing plants. Speedy delivery, low production cost, high product quality, and flexibility of the production system are emphasized to assess operational performance of manufacturing systems (Jayaram et al 1999;Wong et al 2011;Kazemian and Aref 2016). High performing plants produce products with low raw material and overhead costs, and they also offer a sales price lower than their competitors.…”
Section: Operational Performancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Corporate firms compare these outputs to measure the relative performance of their manufacturing plants. Speedy delivery, low production cost, high product quality, and flexibility of the production system are emphasized to assess operational performance of manufacturing systems (Jayaram et al 1999;Wong et al 2011;Kazemian and Aref 2016). High performing plants produce products with low raw material and overhead costs, and they also offer a sales price lower than their competitors.…”
Section: Operational Performancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It helps manufacturing firms to efficiently adapt to the changing requirements of the quantity ordered, product variety and delivery (Lau 1999;Handfield et al 2000;Narasimhan and Das 2000;Pujawan 2004;Swafford et al 2006;Shibin et al 2016). With flexible suppliers, manufacturing firms can transfer and reap the benefits such as quick response time, high quality, consistent delivery, low price, and excellent design embedded in the supplier's products to its final products (Jin et al 2010;Kazemian and Aref 2016;Lu et al 2018). Defender-type organizations operate in a stable environment with minimum product variety, serving a narrow market segment.…”
Section: Suppliers Flexibility (Mf1)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These uncertainties are predominantly in terms of variability of demand and change in types of parts, thereby requiring “variable capacity of supply chain,” which is considered as a flexibility initiative in this study. Different aspects linked with supply chain flexibility are dealt with by a number of researchers (Garavelli, 2003; Singh and Acharya, 2013; Kumar et al , 2013; Mangla et al , 2015; Sillanpää, 2015; Kazemian and Aref, 2016; Shibin et al , 2016). A notable example of demand variability is in terms of fluctuating fuel prices and environmental considerations that affected Honda in the Indian context.…”
Section: Flexibility In Direct Value Chain Activitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%