5.00 crédits
30.0 h
Q1
Enseignants
Agrell Per Joakim;
Langue
d'enseignement
d'enseignement
Anglais
Préalables
This course is reserved for students with a bachelor's degree in business engineering or students with equivalent quantitative method skills.
Thèmes abordés
The course provides an indepth treatment of the relationships between independent firms in a supply chain through the analysis of their behavior, contractual frame, product, process and market choices. The first part of the course aims at understanding and modelling the strategic behavior between firms using the tools of LSM2031 and game theory in order to understand how to design the features and parameters of supply chain information. The second part looks at supplier relationsships from a strategic perspective, interfacing with procurement, production planning and product innovation, to understand the scope and limits of the previously defined tools in contexts such as e.g. armslength, partnerships and supplier pools. Strategic sourcing is a collaborative and systematic approach to reduce external spending, while improving quality, internal processes and total cost of ownership or usage.
Acquis
d'apprentissage
d'apprentissage
A la fin de cette unité d’enseignement, l’étudiant est capable de : | |
1 |
During their programme, students of the LSM Master's in management and Master's in Business engineering will have developed the following capabilities' KNOWLEDGE AND REASONING
|
Contenu
The purpose of the course is to provide analytical skills in supply chain coordination techniques. The base models will be primarily the standard newsboy model for inventory management and simple two-period investment-production models for the strategic game models. Some topics that will be studied:
● Mechanisms for coordination (Information, Relational, Contractual)
● Quantity Discounts
● Buy-back contracts
● Revenue Sharing
● Price Protection and Quantity Flexibility
● Game-theoretical models in supply chain coordination
● Hold-up problems (investment, inventory)
● Investment incentives for product and process innovation
● Mechanisms for coordination (Information, Relational, Contractual)
● Quantity Discounts
● Buy-back contracts
● Revenue Sharing
● Price Protection and Quantity Flexibility
● Game-theoretical models in supply chain coordination
● Hold-up problems (investment, inventory)
● Investment incentives for product and process innovation
Méthodes d'enseignement
The class is mainly analytical and based on modern readings in the area. The sessions are devoted to theoretical discussions of selected aspects and debriefs of cases and assignments. Applied examples for the concepts using real firms, newspaper clips and numerical illustrations are provided at the lectures. At some occasions, interactive games are used to illustrate the intuition or complexity of certain models. Inbetween lectures, participants work on the reading assignments and the course cases.
Modes d'évaluation
des acquis des étudiants
des acquis des étudiants
Continuous evaluation
- Date: will be announced on Moodle
- Type of evaluation: Group work (I & II)
- Comments: No
- Oral: No
- Written: No
- Unavailability or comments: No
- Oral: No
- Written: Yes (3hours)
- Unavailability or comments: Case grade valid also in retake session.
Autres infos
Prerequisites (ideally in terms of competencies) LSM2030 LSM2031 LSM2032
Ressources
en ligne
en ligne
Moodle webpage
Bibliographie
All required teaching material and supplementary texts available on Moodle.
Support de cours
- CachonG(2003)SupplyChainCoordinationwithContracts.Ch6in ed. S Tayur, R Ganeshan and M Magazine, Quantitative Models for Supply Chain Management, pp. 198-232.
- Cachon G and S Netessine (2004) Game Theory in Supply Chain Analysis. Ch 6 in David Simchi-Levi, S. David Wu and Zuo-Jun (Max) Shen (Eds.), Supply Chain Analysis in the eBusiness Era, Kluwer.
- Agrell (2021) C1: Toner for the World, Agrell, UCL/LSM, 2021.
- Agrell (2021) C2: Mattel Supply Chain Organization, Agrell, UCL/LSM, 2021
Faculté ou entité
en charge
en charge
CLSM