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Suggested Citation: "Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Surviving Supply Chain Integration: Strategies for Small Manufacturers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/6369.

Bibliography

SUPPLY CHAIN CONCEPTS

Theory and Concepts

Bovet, D.S., and Y. Sheffi. 1998. The brave new world of supply chain management. Supply Chain Management Review 34(4): 14–22.

Bowman, R.J. 1997. Link by link: global supply chains. Distribution 96(8): 88–90.

Burgess, R. 1998. Avoiding supply chain management failure: lessons from business process re-engineering. International Journal of Logistics Management 9(1): 15–23.


Copacino, W.C. 1998. Copacino on strategy: get the complete supply chain picture. Logistics Management and Distribution Report 37(11):45.


Fox, M.L., and J.L. Holmes. 1998. A model for market leadership. Supply Chain Management Review 34(2): 54–61.


Krause, D., and R. Handfield. 1999. Developing a world class supply base. Tempe, Ariz.: National Association of Purchasing Managers Center for Advanced Purchasing Studies.


La Londe, B.J. 1999. Executing in the red zone. Supply Chain Management Review 35(2): 7–9.


Mariotti, J.L. 1999. The trust factor in supply chain management. Supply Chain Management Review 35(2): 70–77.


Narus, J.A., and J.C. Anderson. 1996. Rethinking distribution: adaptive channels. Harvard Business Review 74(4): 112–120.

Suggested Citation: "Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Surviving Supply Chain Integration: Strategies for Small Manufacturers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/6369.

Schlegel, G.L. 1999. Supply chain optimization: a practitioner's perspective. Supply Chain Management Review 35(1): 50–57.

Approaches and Trends

Atkinson, H. 1999. Sun is rising on plan to remove bar between customers, suppliers. Journal of Commerce, 419(29, 379): 1–14.


Fine, C. 1999. The primacy of chains. Supply Chain Management Review 35(2): 79–88.


Guzak, R.J., and D.M. Hill. 1998. Operations franchise: leveraging your supply chain for profitable growth. Supply Chain Management Review 34(2): 62–69.


Hutchinson, B., and J.G. Welty. 1998. Global trends in the consumer markets. Supply Chain Management Review 34(4): 58–66.


Laseter, T.M. 1999. Integrating the supply web. Supply Chain Management Review 35(1): 87–94.


Mentzer, J.T., and C.C. Bienstock. 1998. The seven principles of sales-forecasting systems. Supply Chain Management Review 34(4): 76–83.


Schwalbe, R.J. 1998. SMART 2001: supply chain management, Siemens style. Supply Chain Management Review 34(4): 69–75.

SUPPLY CHAIN INITIATIVES

Financial

Cooke, J.A. 1998. Panning for gold. Logistics Management and Distribution Report 37(11): 59–62.


Malone, R. 1998. Balancing inventory with customer service. Inbound Logistics 18(8): 10–11.

Inventory

Quinn, F.J. 1998. Balancing demand and supply. Logistics Management and Distribution Report 37(10): 67.

Logistics

Huppertz, P. 1999. Market changes require new supply chain thinking. Transportation & Distribution 40(3): 70–74.

Suggested Citation: "Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Surviving Supply Chain Integration: Strategies for Small Manufacturers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/6369.

Manufacturing

Adaptable manufacturing: agility to cost-effectively produce on demand. 1998. Modern Materials Handling 53(6): 14–16.

Postponement

van Hoek, R.I. 1998. Reconfiguring the supply chain to implement postponed manufacturing. The International Journal of Logistics Management 9(1): 95–110.


Postponement systems: waiting to the last minute is a virtue. 1998 Modern Materials Handling 53(6): 27–28.

Procurement

Anderson, M.G., and P.B. Katz. 1998. Strategic sourcing. International Journal of Logistics Management 9(1): 1–13.


Handfield, R.B., and D.R. Krause. 1999. Think globally, source locally. Supply Chain Management Review 35(1): 36–46.

Hoffman, K.C. 1998. Automakers push for ever-closer collaboration with suppliers. Global Sites and Logistics 2(8): 38–42.

Warehousing and Distribution Centers

Bowman, R.J. 1998. It's not your father's warehouse. Warehousing Management 5(5): 32–33.

Third-Party Providers

Menon, M.K., M.A. McGinnis, and K.B. Ackerman. 1998. Selection criteria for providers of third-party logistics services: an exploratory study. Journal of Business Logistics 19(1): 121–137.


Thomas, J. 1999. Chain reaction. Logistics Management and Distribution Report 38(1): 55.

Reverse Logistics

Buxbaum, P. 1998. The reverse logistics files. Inbound Logistics 18(9): 62–67.


Marien, E.J. 1998. Reverse logistics as competitive strategy. Supply Chain Management Review 34(2): 43–52.

Suggested Citation: "Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Surviving Supply Chain Integration: Strategies for Small Manufacturers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/6369.

SUPPLY CHAIN IMPLEMENTATION

Benchmarking and Metrics

Dawe, R.L. 1998. Mobilizing for global excellence. Supply Chain Management Review 34(2): 11–13.


Jennings, B.D. 1998. Supply chain economics making your shots count. Logistics, Winter/Spring newsletter, pp. 2–5. Mercer Management Consultants, 2300 N. St N.W., Washington, D.C. 20037.

Cost Analysis

Braithwaite, A., and E. Samakh. 1998. The cost-to-serve method. International Journal of Business Logistics 9(1): 69–84.


La Londe, B.J. 1998. The costs of "functional shiftability." Supply Chain Management Review 34(1): 9–10.

e-Commerce

Gross, N. 1998. The supply chain: leapfrogging a few links. Business Week 3583: 140–142.


Mottley, R. 1998. Spinning supply chains via the Internet. American Shipper 40(11): 26–28.

Information Technology Integration and Enterprise Resource Planning

Appleton, E.L. 1997. Supply chain brain. CFO 13(7): 51–54.


Bundy, W. 1999. Leveraging technology for speed and reliability. Supply Chain Management Review 35(2): 62–69.

Buxbaum, P. 1998. Technology tightens links in supply chain. Transport Topics 3308: 12–14.

CASE STUDIES

Industry

Brunell, T. 1999. Managing a multicompany supply chain. Supply Chain Management Review 35(2): 45–52.


Simison, R.L. 1997. New data illustrates reshaping of auto parts business: firm's makeover reflects car industry's assigning more assembly to suppliers. Wall Street Journal, September 2, 1997.

Suggested Citation: "Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Surviving Supply Chain Integration: Strategies for Small Manufacturers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/6369.

Stein T., and J. Sweat. 1998. Killer supply chains. Information Week 708: 36–46.

Retail and Wholesale

Hoffman," K.C. 1999. Elizabeth Arden's supply chain gets dramatic facelift. Global Sites and Logistics 3(1): 20–28.


Lampe, J., and R.W. Gray. 1998. The Bridgestone/ Firestone perspective: betting on the supply chain. Supply Chain Management Review 34(2): 24–30.


Reuland, T. 1999. Thomson Consumer Electronics: listening to the customer's voice. Supply Chain Management Review 35(1): 28–34.

Global Supply Chain

Fites, D.V. 1996. Make your dealers your partners. Harvard Business Review 74(2): 84–95.


Harrington, L.H. 1999. The high tech sector: meeting supply challenges at warp speed. Transportation and Distribution 40(3): 49–53.

Hoyt, J.B. 1998. Lessons learned on a supply chain journey. Supply Chain Management Review 34(4): 84–92.


Margerita, J. 1998. Fast, global, and entrepreneurial: supply chain management, Hong Kong Style. An interview with Victor Fung. Harvard Business Review 76(5): 103–114.

McIntyre, K., H.A. Smith, A. Henham, and J. Pretlove. 1998. Logistics performance measurement and greening supply chains: diverging mindsets. International Journal of Logistics Management 9(1): 57–68.


Scharlacken, J.W. 1998. The seven pillars of global supply chain planning. Supply Chain Management Review 34(2): 32–40.

Manufacturing

John, C.G., and M. Willis. 1998. Supply chain re-engineering at Anheuser-Busch. Supply Chain Management Review 34(4): 28–36.

Suggested Citation: "Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Surviving Supply Chain Integration: Strategies for Small Manufacturers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/6369.
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Suggested Citation: "Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Surviving Supply Chain Integration: Strategies for Small Manufacturers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/6369.
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Suggested Citation: "Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Surviving Supply Chain Integration: Strategies for Small Manufacturers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/6369.
Page 136
Suggested Citation: "Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Surviving Supply Chain Integration: Strategies for Small Manufacturers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/6369.
Page 137
Suggested Citation: "Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Surviving Supply Chain Integration: Strategies for Small Manufacturers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/6369.
Page 138
Suggested Citation: "Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Surviving Supply Chain Integration: Strategies for Small Manufacturers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/6369.
Page 139
Suggested Citation: "Bibliography." National Research Council. 2000. Surviving Supply Chain Integration: Strategies for Small Manufacturers. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/6369.
Page 140
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