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Introduction to E-Business: Lesson 3A - E-Supply Chain Manangement About this Lesson About this Lesson 2 of 36 Lesson 3, E-Supply Chain Management and E-Customer Relationship Management, is the second of four independent study lessons in the Introduction to E-Business course. There are two parts to the lesson: 3A - E-Supply Chain Management; and, 3B - E-Customer Relationship Management. Subsequent lessons will cover: technology, security, and privacy; and, taxation and regulatory issues. A guest speaker, in the last of five Centra discussion sessions, will give a presentation about the future of E- Business. Taxation, and Overview regulatory issues Technology, security, and privacy eSCM and eCRM Introduction to E-Business: Lesson 3A - E-Supply Chain Manangement About this Lesson (cont.’d) About this Lesson (cont.’d) 3 of 36 Lesson 3A - E-Supply Chain Management is the first of two parts for Lesson 3. E-Supply Chain Management E-Customer Relationship Management Introduction to E-Business Introduction to E-Business 4 of 36 Lesson 3A E-Supply Chain Management Introduction to E-Business: Lesson 3A - E-Supply Chain Manangement Lesson 3A Objectives Lesson 3A Objectives 5 of 36 Upon completion of this lesson you will be able to: • Define the concept of E-Supply Chain Management. • Describe the scope of eSCM. • Discuss the three core propositions of eSCM. • Explain the three levels of eSCM collaboration. • Discuss the meaning of virtual communities in eSCM. Introduction to E-Business: Lesson 3A - E-Supply Chain Manangement The Integrated Supply Chain Defined The Integrated Supply Chain Defined 6 of 36 A supply chain is a network used to deliver products and services from raw materials to end customers through an engineered flow of information, physical distribution, and cash. Traditionally, the information flow communicates supply and demand across the supply chain in a unidirectional manner. Physical distribution commences with the procurement of raw materials and ends with the shipment of finished products to the customer. Raw materials are transformed through a connected series of activities into intermediary and finished products that eventually reach the end-consumer via people, processes, and technological enablers. This transformation occurs incrementally as products navigate through the various stages of the supply chain where they are altered, exchanged, delivered, and sold. (Continued on next slide.)
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