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Process approach to supply chain integration

Peter Trkman (Faculty of Economics, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia)
Mojca Indihar Štemberger (Faculty of Economics, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia)
Jurij Jaklič (Faculty of Economics, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia)
Aleš Groznik (Faculty of Economics, University of Ljubljana, Ljubljana, Slovenia)

Supply Chain Management

ISSN: 1359-8546

Article publication date: 20 March 2007

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Abstract

Purpose

Business renovation, the effective utilisation of information technology and the role of business process modelling and simulation, are all vital in supply chain integration projects. This paper aims to show through a combination of these methods how the performance of the supply chain can be improved with the renovation and integration of processes at various tiers in the chain and by the sharing of information between companies.

Design/methodology/approach

Simulation‐based methodology for measuring the benefits of the creation and renovation of business process models combines the methodology of developing process models and its simulation with the simulation of supply and demand. A procurement process in the oil/retail petrol industry is examined in a case study.

Findings

Using the proposed methodology, different business process models can be investigated and simulated. The benefits for each company involved in the presented case are substantial and can be estimated through a simulation. Substantial benefits in costs, quality and lead times were identified, however, their distribution is not symmetric. Inter‐organisational IS and applied technology were enablers for supply chain integration. However, organisational changes and new business models were prerequisites for obtaining those benefits.

Practical implications

The process approach to supply chain integration presents a mechanism that can be applied to any industry. It represents a systematic methodological business renovation approach involving cost cuts, quality improvements and lead‐time improvements. The costs of supply chain integration projects were not studied. The benefits should be measured against the cost of testing the economic feasibility of such projects.

Originality/value

The effective utilisation of business process modelling and a simulation of the necessary business renovation are shown. The novel combination of business process and demand/supply simulation enables an estimation of changes in lead‐times, process execution costs, quality of the process and inventory costs. Although the methodology is presented through a case study of the oil/retail petrol industry, it can also be used to estimate the benefits and monitor supply chain integration projects in other industries.

Keywords

Citation

Trkman, P., Indihar Štemberger, M., Jaklič, J. and Groznik, A. (2007), "Process approach to supply chain integration", Supply Chain Management, Vol. 12 No. 2, pp. 116-128. https://doi.org/10.1108/13598540710737307

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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