{"title":"零售供应链组织的角色和能力","authors":"C. Defee, Wesley S. Randall, B. Gibson","doi":"10.22237/JOTM/1254355440","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Supply chain management (SCM) has become a critical strategic function in many industries during the past 20 years. SCM has developed into an integrative discipline incorporating strategic elements with process and collaboration (Gibson et al. 2005). Further, SCM has become a critical competitive weapon favored by C-level executives searching for competitive advantage (Manrodt et al. 2005). Supply chain research has increased significantly in recent years, and many techniques have been suggested for achieving supply chain goals including collaboration (Sinkovics and Roath 2004), process integration (Min and Mentzer 2004), information sharing (Sanders and Premus 2005), standardization (Bowersox et al. 1999), and aligning measures and rewards (Mentzer 2004). In addition, SCM research is now acknowledged as providing theoretical and practical insight into a variety of areas including collaboration in production (Nativi and Barrie 2006; Pfohl and Buse 2000), new product innovation (De Luca and Atuahene-Gima 2007; Zacharia and Mentzer 2007), quality (Harding 1998; Liker and Choi 2004), transportation (Lieb and Butner 2007; Van Hoek 1999) and just-in-time manufacturing (Giunipero et al. 2005; Sillince and Sykes 1993). The importance of SCM to business strategy, and ultimately business success, appears to be on solid footing. During this same period there has been an increasing awareness of a fundamental shift in marketplace power from production to retail (LaLonde and Masters 1994; Maloni and Benton 2000). Where product and production once dominated (e.g., Procter and Gamble, General Motors), organizations closer to the consumer (e.g., Wal-Mart, Target) have taken a leadership role in the supply chain. Entire streams of research have picked up on the shift from a product to customer orientation (Kirca et al. 2005; Kohli and Jaworski 1990; Slater and Narver 1995). Retailers face unique supply chain challenges, and require distinct capabilities not required of upstream suppliers and manufacturers. Great retailers survive and thrive through outstanding supply chain capabilities (Browna et al. 2005), but the penalty for disappointing customers because of a single glitch in the supply chain can be steep. One study shows retailer's share prices fell an average of 9 percent on the day a supply chain problem was disclosed, with an additional 9 percent drop recorded over the next 90 days (Morrison and Assendelft 2006). Yet from a supply chain perspective, the power shift to retail and the recognition of retail as a critically important supply chain area has been neglected, revealing a substantial gap in research. Our understanding of retail supply chain management (R-SCM) may be limited at a time when effective management of the retail supply chain is more important now and into the future than in the past (Davies 2009). The goal of this research is to address the knowledge gap identified by the relative lack of research in the area and provide insight into the supply chain capabilities developed by best-in-class retail organizations. (1) A slowing economy suggests this need is more critical today than ever before. We address two primary research questions. First, what supply chain challenges are driving strategic actions in the retail industry? Second, what are the capabilities retailers leverage to perform the role of SCM? Neither of these questions have been explored in great depth in previous research. Initially, the literature is reviewed to clarify the knowledge gap. Next, we describe the study approach built on a robust grounded theory methodology including interviews with 25 senior retail SCM executives and follow-on survey execution. Then we reveal our key findings in the areas of R-SCM role definition and best-in-class capabilities. Results of our interviews confirm the importance of SCM to long-term retail success. LITERATURE REVIEW AND STUDY RATIONALE It is surprising that the retail supply chain has been given so little attention in both the logistics and retail disciplines. …","PeriodicalId":242296,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Transportation Management","volume":"75 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2009-09-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"8","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Roles and Capabilities of the Retail Supply Chain Organization\",\"authors\":\"C. Defee, Wesley S. Randall, B. 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In addition, SCM research is now acknowledged as providing theoretical and practical insight into a variety of areas including collaboration in production (Nativi and Barrie 2006; Pfohl and Buse 2000), new product innovation (De Luca and Atuahene-Gima 2007; Zacharia and Mentzer 2007), quality (Harding 1998; Liker and Choi 2004), transportation (Lieb and Butner 2007; Van Hoek 1999) and just-in-time manufacturing (Giunipero et al. 2005; Sillince and Sykes 1993). The importance of SCM to business strategy, and ultimately business success, appears to be on solid footing. During this same period there has been an increasing awareness of a fundamental shift in marketplace power from production to retail (LaLonde and Masters 1994; Maloni and Benton 2000). Where product and production once dominated (e.g., Procter and Gamble, General Motors), organizations closer to the consumer (e.g., Wal-Mart, Target) have taken a leadership role in the supply chain. Entire streams of research have picked up on the shift from a product to customer orientation (Kirca et al. 2005; Kohli and Jaworski 1990; Slater and Narver 1995). Retailers face unique supply chain challenges, and require distinct capabilities not required of upstream suppliers and manufacturers. Great retailers survive and thrive through outstanding supply chain capabilities (Browna et al. 2005), but the penalty for disappointing customers because of a single glitch in the supply chain can be steep. One study shows retailer's share prices fell an average of 9 percent on the day a supply chain problem was disclosed, with an additional 9 percent drop recorded over the next 90 days (Morrison and Assendelft 2006). Yet from a supply chain perspective, the power shift to retail and the recognition of retail as a critically important supply chain area has been neglected, revealing a substantial gap in research. Our understanding of retail supply chain management (R-SCM) may be limited at a time when effective management of the retail supply chain is more important now and into the future than in the past (Davies 2009). The goal of this research is to address the knowledge gap identified by the relative lack of research in the area and provide insight into the supply chain capabilities developed by best-in-class retail organizations. (1) A slowing economy suggests this need is more critical today than ever before. We address two primary research questions. First, what supply chain challenges are driving strategic actions in the retail industry? Second, what are the capabilities retailers leverage to perform the role of SCM? Neither of these questions have been explored in great depth in previous research. Initially, the literature is reviewed to clarify the knowledge gap. Next, we describe the study approach built on a robust grounded theory methodology including interviews with 25 senior retail SCM executives and follow-on survey execution. Then we reveal our key findings in the areas of R-SCM role definition and best-in-class capabilities. Results of our interviews confirm the importance of SCM to long-term retail success. 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引用次数: 8
摘要
在过去的20年中,供应链管理(SCM)已经成为许多行业的关键战略功能。供应链管理已经发展成为一门综合学科,将战略要素与过程和协作结合在一起(Gibson et al. 2005)。此外,供应链管理已成为寻求竞争优势的c级高管青睐的关键竞争武器(Manrodt et al. 2005)。近年来,供应链研究有了显著的增长,为实现供应链目标提出了许多技术,包括协作(Sinkovics and Roath 2004)、流程集成(Min and Mentzer 2004)、信息共享(Sanders and Premus 2005)、标准化(Bowersox et al. 1999)以及调整措施和奖励(Mentzer 2004)。此外,供应链管理研究现在被认为为包括生产协作在内的各个领域提供了理论和实践见解(Nativi和Barrie 2006;Pfohl and bus 2000),新产品创新(De Luca and Atuahene-Gima 2007;Zacharia and Mentzer 2007),质量(Harding 1998;Liker and Choi 2004),交通运输(Lieb and Butner 2007;Van Hoek 1999)和准时生产(Giunipero et al. 2005;silince and Sykes 1993)。SCM对业务战略的重要性,以及最终的业务成功,似乎是建立在坚实的基础上的。在同一时期,人们越来越意识到市场力量从生产向零售的根本转变(LaLonde和Masters 1994;Maloni和Benton 2000)。在产品和生产曾经占主导地位的地方(例如,宝洁,通用汽车),更接近消费者的组织(例如,沃尔玛,塔吉特)已经在供应链中发挥了领导作用。整个研究流程已经从产品导向转向客户导向(Kirca et al. 2005;Kohli and Jaworski 1990;Slater and Narver 1995)。零售商面临着独特的供应链挑战,需要上游供应商和制造商不需要的独特能力。优秀的零售商通过出色的供应链能力生存和发展(Browna et al. 2005),但由于供应链中的一个小故障而使客户失望的惩罚可能是巨大的。一项研究表明,在供应链问题被披露的当天,零售商的股价平均下跌9%,在接下来的90天里,股价还会再下跌9% (Morrison and Assendelft, 2006)。然而,从供应链的角度来看,权力向零售的转移以及对零售作为供应链至关重要领域的认识一直被忽视,这表明研究存在很大差距。我们对零售供应链管理(R-SCM)的理解可能会受到限制,因为零售供应链的有效管理现在和未来比过去更重要(Davies 2009)。本研究的目标是解决由于该领域相对缺乏研究而确定的知识差距,并提供对一流零售组织开发的供应链能力的见解。经济放缓表明,如今这种需求比以往任何时候都更为迫切。我们解决两个主要的研究问题。首先,哪些供应链挑战正在推动零售业的战略行动?其次,零售商发挥SCM作用的能力是什么?这两个问题在以前的研究中都没有深入探讨过。首先,回顾文献以澄清知识差距。接下来,我们描述了建立在强大的理论基础上的研究方法,包括对25名高级零售供应链管理人员的访谈和后续调查执行。然后,我们揭示了我们在R-SCM角色定义和同类最佳能力领域的主要发现。我们的访谈结果证实了供应链管理对长期零售成功的重要性。令人惊讶的是,零售供应链在物流和零售学科中得到的关注如此之少。…
Roles and Capabilities of the Retail Supply Chain Organization
Supply chain management (SCM) has become a critical strategic function in many industries during the past 20 years. SCM has developed into an integrative discipline incorporating strategic elements with process and collaboration (Gibson et al. 2005). Further, SCM has become a critical competitive weapon favored by C-level executives searching for competitive advantage (Manrodt et al. 2005). Supply chain research has increased significantly in recent years, and many techniques have been suggested for achieving supply chain goals including collaboration (Sinkovics and Roath 2004), process integration (Min and Mentzer 2004), information sharing (Sanders and Premus 2005), standardization (Bowersox et al. 1999), and aligning measures and rewards (Mentzer 2004). In addition, SCM research is now acknowledged as providing theoretical and practical insight into a variety of areas including collaboration in production (Nativi and Barrie 2006; Pfohl and Buse 2000), new product innovation (De Luca and Atuahene-Gima 2007; Zacharia and Mentzer 2007), quality (Harding 1998; Liker and Choi 2004), transportation (Lieb and Butner 2007; Van Hoek 1999) and just-in-time manufacturing (Giunipero et al. 2005; Sillince and Sykes 1993). The importance of SCM to business strategy, and ultimately business success, appears to be on solid footing. During this same period there has been an increasing awareness of a fundamental shift in marketplace power from production to retail (LaLonde and Masters 1994; Maloni and Benton 2000). Where product and production once dominated (e.g., Procter and Gamble, General Motors), organizations closer to the consumer (e.g., Wal-Mart, Target) have taken a leadership role in the supply chain. Entire streams of research have picked up on the shift from a product to customer orientation (Kirca et al. 2005; Kohli and Jaworski 1990; Slater and Narver 1995). Retailers face unique supply chain challenges, and require distinct capabilities not required of upstream suppliers and manufacturers. Great retailers survive and thrive through outstanding supply chain capabilities (Browna et al. 2005), but the penalty for disappointing customers because of a single glitch in the supply chain can be steep. One study shows retailer's share prices fell an average of 9 percent on the day a supply chain problem was disclosed, with an additional 9 percent drop recorded over the next 90 days (Morrison and Assendelft 2006). Yet from a supply chain perspective, the power shift to retail and the recognition of retail as a critically important supply chain area has been neglected, revealing a substantial gap in research. Our understanding of retail supply chain management (R-SCM) may be limited at a time when effective management of the retail supply chain is more important now and into the future than in the past (Davies 2009). The goal of this research is to address the knowledge gap identified by the relative lack of research in the area and provide insight into the supply chain capabilities developed by best-in-class retail organizations. (1) A slowing economy suggests this need is more critical today than ever before. We address two primary research questions. First, what supply chain challenges are driving strategic actions in the retail industry? Second, what are the capabilities retailers leverage to perform the role of SCM? Neither of these questions have been explored in great depth in previous research. Initially, the literature is reviewed to clarify the knowledge gap. Next, we describe the study approach built on a robust grounded theory methodology including interviews with 25 senior retail SCM executives and follow-on survey execution. Then we reveal our key findings in the areas of R-SCM role definition and best-in-class capabilities. Results of our interviews confirm the importance of SCM to long-term retail success. LITERATURE REVIEW AND STUDY RATIONALE It is surprising that the retail supply chain has been given so little attention in both the logistics and retail disciplines. …