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|  Follow the leaders: Scoring high on the supply chain maturity model - The Indian experienceRead results of the 2006 India Value Chain Study, which indicates that many Indian companies are gearing up to meet the challenges and opportunities, while others have significant room for improvement in delivering high performance with increased responsiveness. |
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IBM Institute for Business Value study Last updated: 03 Nov 2006
 | Summary |  |
In this India Value Chain Study report, we describe how companies in India are responding to the challenge of cost control and responsiveness in five key supply chain areas. These areas are: - Synchronising supply, managing demand: Customer-driven planning
- The perfect product launch: Product introduction and lifecycle management
- Effective customer order management: Perfect order attainment through realtime order processing
- The procurement opportunity: Realising benefits through holistic sourcing
- Efficient logistics services: Driving efficiencies in logistics operations
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 | Abstract |  |
In 2003, when IBM last undertook a supply chain management study of this magnitude, the top objective of leading supply chains was to increase profitability – while, at the same time, reducing costs and improving quality. Now, companies are moving away from a direct focus on cost reduction to put increasing responsiveness and customer servicing within its set of three top objectives. Globally, the focus on supply chain quality seems to have reduced significantly since 2003, but Indian respondents still expect some delay before quality can be de-focused. Among other subtle differences in supply chain across the globe, Indian supply chains are the most focused on responsiveness, followed by Australia/New Zealand (ANZ) (see Figure 1). The United States and Japan, meanwhile, have maintained their focus on profitability. The Indian supply chain is still being tasked with ongoing focus on profitability, hence the new supply chain challenge: how to maintain profitability and, at the same time, meet new demands for service and flexibility.
To read the full study, download the PDF file at the top of this page. |
 About the authors Clifford Patrao Clifford Patrao is a Managing Consultant in the Indian Supply Chain Management Team.
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Karthik Rajan Karthik Rajan is Senior Consultant in the Indian Supply Chain Management Team.
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Heino Huettner Heino Huettner is a Senior Consultant within the IBM Institute for Business Value Supply Chain Management Team.
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Matina Zervos Matina Zervos is a Senior Consultant in the Australian Supply Chain Management Practice, IBM Business Consulting Services.
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