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Book: Scrum Project Management - 2 views

  • Explains how to use Scrum for managing programs and complex projects
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    Scrum, which was originally invented solely for software development, can now be applied to all types of projects. This book shows project managers how to implement Scrum by explaining the artifacts, rituals, and roles used. The text provides Scrum planning methods to control project scope and schedule as well as Scrum tracking methods to focus teams on improving throughput and streamlining communications.
ISM Silicon Valley

PSB Delegation Consulting Ltd.: Titling Your Requests for Supply - 0 views

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    PSB Delegation Consulting Ltd. (PSBDC) is a delegation of management consultants focused on project procurement and contracted services performance management. (( PSBDC has extensive public & private sector experience collaborating with stakeholder groups to develop scope of work, prepare business cases, develop plans and manage project procurement for contracted services and alternative service delivery.
ISM Silicon Valley

Not everyone is impressed by Dell's "smart" supply chain - 0 views

  • To understand Dell's situation, you have to go back to the start. After being founded in Michael Dell's dorm room at the University of Texas at Austin in 1984, the company mastered the science of supply-chain efficiency. It was a model that made Dell the top-performing stock in the S&P 500 during the 1990s. Because it curtailed its retail store business early on and sold directly to consumers and businesses, Dell could build computers "just in time," which meant that it didn't have to assemble a machine and then let it sit in a warehouse or a retail location until someone bought it. Instead, it generally put together PCs only after customers had already ordered them. That meant Dell could order certain parts for its computers just days before they were needed—and often not pay for them until after the assembled computers were shipped off to customers
  • derstand Dell's situation, you have to go back to the start. After being founded in Michael Dell's dorm room at the University of Texas at Austin in 1984, the company mastered the science of supply-chain efficiency. It was a model that made Dell the top-performing stock in the S&P 500 during the 1990s. Because it curtailed its retail store business early on and sold directly to consumers and businesses, Dell could build computers "just in time," which meant that it didn't have to assemble a machine and then let it sit in a warehouse or a retail location until someone bought it. Instead, it generally put together PCs only after customers had already ordered them. That meant Dell could order certain parts for its computers just days before they were needed—and often not pay for them until after the assembled computers were shipped off to customers. But in the past few years, Dell has tried to expand its market by selling in stores. That has forced Dell to deal with several new challenges, among them that big chains such as Best Buy and Wal-Mart stock their shelves with a fixed lineup of PCs rather than customizing machines for each buyer. "We've had to change the entire supply chain to build fixed configurations," the company's chief financial officer, Brian Gladden, recently told Technology Review. And retailers order these machines months in advance, not days or weeks. google_protectAndRun("ads_core.google_render_ad", google_handleError, google_render_ad); As a result, Dell must try to figure out over the summer what to charge for PCs that will actually be made and sold during the holiday season. If the price of a major component such as memory chips jumps between July and December, Dell's profits can get squeezed. That's what happened in 2009. Even a plunge in prices can be damaging, because the company hedges many of its component purchases to lock in prices within a certain range. If prices fall way below the expected level, it has overspent for the parts. E-mail Print Favorite Share 12 Related Articles Bringing Down the High Costs of Business Forecasting Cloud-based services now provide a way for companies to plan ahead without relying on cumbersome spreadsheets. But what's a boon for smaller companies is disrupting the market for higher-end solutions. Dating Sites Try Adaptive Matchmaking New software is inspired by algorithms that target online ads or recommend books and movies. The Brainy Learning Algorithms of Numenta How the inventor of the PalmPilot studied the workings of the human brain to help companies turn a deluge of data into business intelligence. Tags business business impact Dell Predictive Modeling To comment, please sign in or register Username Password Forgot my password Adverti
  • niversity of Texas at Austin in 1984, the company mastered the science of supply-chain efficiency. It was a model that made Dell the top-performing stock in the S&P 500 during the 1990s. Because it curtailed its retail store business early on and sold directly to consumers and businesses, Dell could build computers "just in time," which meant that it didn't have to assemble a machine and then let it sit in a warehouse or a retail location until someone bought it. Instead, it generally put together PCs only after customers had already ordered them. That meant Dell could order certain parts for its computers just days before they were needed—and often not pay for them until after the assembled computers were shipped off to customers. But in the past few years, Dell has tried to expand its market by selling in stores. That has forced Dell to deal with several new challenges, among them that big chains such as Best Buy and Wal-Mart stock their shelves with a fixed lineup of PCs rather than customizing machines for each buyer. "We've had to change the entire supply chain to build fixed configurations," the company's chief financial officer, Brian Gladden, recently told Technology Review. And retailers order these machines months in advance, not days or weeks. google_protectAndRun("ads_core.google_render_ad", google_handleError, google_render_ad); As a result, Dell must try to figure out over the summer what to charge for PCs that will actually be made and sold during the holiday season. If the price of a major component such as memory chips jumps between July and December, Dell's profits can get squeezed. That's what happened in 2009. Even a plunge in prices can be damaging, because the company hedges many of its component purchases to lock in prices within a certain range. If prices fall way below the expected level, it has overspent for the parts. E-mail Print Favorite Share 12 Related Articles Bringing Down the High Costs of Business Forecasting Cloud-based services now provide a way for companies to plan ahead without relying on cumbersome spreadsheets. But what's a boon for smaller companies is disrupting the market for higher-end solutions. Dating Sites Try Adaptive Matchmaking New software is inspired by algorithms that target online ads or recommend books and movies. The Brainy Learning Algorithms of Numenta How the inventor of the PalmPilot studied the workings of the human brain to help companies turn a deluge of data into business intelligence. Tags business business impact Dell Predictive Modeling To comment, please sign in or register Username Password Forgot my password
ISM Silicon Valley

A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) - Fourth E... - 1 views

  • The PMBOK® Guide–Fourth Edition continues the tradition of excellence in project management with a standard that is even easier to understand and implement, with improved consistency and greater clarification.
ISM Silicon Valley

Carbon Disclosure Project - Global climate change reporting system - 1 views

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    The Carbon Disclosure Project is an independent not-for-profit organization holding the largest database of primary corporate climate change information in the world.
ISM Silicon Valley

Basware and Cortex Announce E-Invoicing Project with Apache Corporation - MarketWatch - 0 views

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    service company that improves efficiencies, reduces costs and streamlines procurement and supply chain processes for its customers.
ISM Silicon Valley

SourceMap - Open Supply Chains - 0 views

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    Sourcemap is an open source project dedicated to tracking, documenting, and mapping where all of the components for our everyday goods come from. We believe transparency is the first step towards global supply chain improvement.
ISM Silicon Valley

Source One - Procurement Service Provider, Strategic Sourcing Services - 0 views

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    Strategic Sourcing, Procurement Best Practices, e-Sourcing (visit www.whyabe.com), Project Management, Negotiation, Telecommunications, Logistics, Inventory Management, Purchasing Management and Strategic Planning.
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Greening the Manufacturing Supply Chain, Part 2 - 0 views

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    "Back to supply chains (although if you are a builder of commercial space then Interface is probably in your supply chain). A recent Environmental Leader article discussed a survey of the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) regarding their attitudes towards suppliers (supply chain) that do not manage their carbon. These are real companies in the survey (like PepsiCo, Dell, Google, IBM, Kellogg, HP and Unilever.) The results are enlightening. Over 1000 suppliers to these companies were surveyed. Survey reported that 38% of the supply chain respondents have some type of carbon reduction targets in place. Of these respondents, almost two thirds report Scope 1 and Scope 2 emission. Scope 3 emissions are reported by 8%. Strikingly, 56% of the CDP members (remember the big companies listed above?) say that they may eliminate suppliers who don't manage carbon."
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Bridgepoint Education's Ashford University: Bachelor of Arts in Supply Chain Mgt - 0 views

  • Bridgepoint Education, Inc. (NYSE: BPI), a provider of post-secondary education services focused on providing higher access to higher education, announced today that Ashford University has introduced a new Bachelor of Arts degree in Supply Chain Management and a new Bachelor of Arts degree in Project Management. The latest additions to Ashford's degree offerings were designed to give students a broad understanding of business as a whole, while building expertise in two in-demand focus areas.
ISM Silicon Valley

Procurement Savings of $400 Billion Are There for the Asking - 0 views

  • President Barack Obama’s deficit commission is struggling to reach consensus around its recommendations to trim a projected $1.3 trillion budget gap. Critics, meanwhile, are lining up to attack every proposal. But the Obama administration doesn’t need to wait and see how the fight plays out to pick up the pace of budget cuts everyone agrees are needed.
ISM Silicon Valley

Carbon management becomes key supply chain strategy - 0 views

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    Major companies are increasingly requiring their suppliers to manage their greenhouse gas emissions as a condition for doing business with them. ...
ISM Silicon Valley

The top five unified communications issues for 2010 :: SearchVoIP.com.au - 0 views

  • Unified communications is one of the most promising of all horizontal applications for productivity enhancement because it supports the key activities of customer/sales support, team building for projects and general business communications. It's also an application that has been battered by competitive positioning, vendor consolidation and a host of industry forces. How it reacts to these pressures will determine the form unified communications (UC) will take in the coming decade, and many UC issues will be highly visible in 2010. Here, in inverse order of importance, are the top five unified communications issues for the year.
ISM Silicon Valley

Harsco Selects IBM for Global Supply Chain Initiative - 0 views

  • Worldwide industrial services company Harsco Corporation (NYSE: HSC) has selected IBM (NYSE: IBM) as its consulting partner for a business transformation initiative designed to create significant operating and cost efficiencies throughout Harsco's global supply chain, the companies announced today. 
  • "The intelligent supply chain of the future aligns perfectly with our One Harsco objectives for creating long-term strategic advantage as a more globally integrated and optimized enterprise," said Harsco Chairman and CEO Salvatore D. Fazzolari. "Working with IBM gives us access to one of the premier leaders in this field. Moreover, when completed at the end of 2010, we expect this project to improve our Return on Invested Capital and also contribute to Harsco's Economic Value Added (EVA®) growth." 
ISM Silicon Valley

5 Simple Ways to Create a Green Procurement Program - 0 views

  • Develop a Code of Conduct that includes Green. Be clear with what you are looking for in a supplier. Many industry trade groups have codes of conduct that spell out expected behaviors in terms of labor, products, GHG emissions and handling of waste. Point to those, or develop your own, but make it clear that it is more than a pamphlet; it is the way you do business and you expect your suppliers to do business.
  • Reward good behavior. Keeping tabs on your suppliers, either by encouraging them to respond to the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) or through other audit mechanisms. That way you can see which suppliers have made a commitment to operating more sustainably. Reward that good behavior with a larger share of your business.
ISM Silicon Valley

More Companies Finding Cost and Carbon Savings in Supply Chains - 0 views

  • The Carbon Disclosure Project's latest supply chain report looks at what the 57 members of its Supply Chain program and 1,000 of their suppliers have been doing to integrate climate change into their businesses.
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