The coordination of all activities involved in sourcing, procurement, production, and delivery of products from raw materials to end customers.
SCM encompasses the entire flow of goods — from raw material suppliers through manufacturing, warehousing, and distribution to the final customer. Effective SCM minimizes costs, reduces lead times, and improves customer satisfaction. Key components include: demand planning and forecasting, supplier management and procurement, inventory optimization, production scheduling, warehouse management, logistics and transportation, and reverse logistics (returns). Modern ERP systems integrate SCM with financial accounting for real-time cost tracking and profitability analysis.
A furniture company's supply chain: Timber supplier (Assam) → Sawmill processing → Furniture factory (Rajasthan) → Quality inspection → Warehouse (Delhi) → Last-mile delivery to customers across India. SCM ensures timber arrives on time, production meets demand forecasts, and customers receive orders within 7 days.
Ensures accurate financial reporting and record-keeping
Helps maintain regulatory and tax compliance
Enables better-informed business decisions
Improves operational efficiency and cash flow management
Logistics is one component of SCM — it handles the physical movement and storage of goods. SCM is the broader strategy that includes supplier relationships, demand planning, production, inventory management, AND logistics. Think of logistics as 'moving things' and SCM as 'planning everything'.
ERP integrates SCM with finance, HR, and sales in one system. Benefits: real-time inventory visibility across locations, automated reorder points, purchase order automation, demand forecasting using sales data, supplier performance tracking, and end-to-end cost analysis from procurement to delivery.
A comprehensive list of raw materials, components, and sub-assemblies required to manufacture a finished product, along with quantities and specifications.
A ratio that measures how many times a company's inventory is sold and replaced over a specific period, indicating sales efficiency and inventory management.
The inventory level at which a new purchase order should be placed to replenish stock before it runs out, accounting for lead time and demand.
A formal document issued by a buyer to a seller specifying the types, quantities, prices, and terms of products or services to be purchased.
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