Back to school for the ABCs of SCM

In the IT world, supply chain management is often associated with software packages offered by ERP vendors, but it’s still a business process many organizations struggle to master.

To better educate executives on both the tech and non-tech elements of supply chain management and logistics,

York University’s Schulich School of Business has launched an executive development program aimed at supply chain managers.

The program will be offered through the school’s Executive Centre for Supply Chain and Logistics Management and will include 11 courses in 2002-03. The number of courses will double in the next two years, says Alan Saipe, the centre’s program director.

“”By the end of 2004 we’d like to be up to a full complement (of courses),”” he says. The cornerstone is a five-day residential course called Essentials of Supply Chain Management that is offered three times a year.

The school already offers two courses and is now adding eight more. Saipe says the initial two were well-received. “”We had a sense there was a demand,”” he adds, hence the expansion of programs offered.

Participants can take individual courses, says Saipe, or enrol in the centre’s certificate program, which offers a wide selection of courses. There are four streams: management; functional and process; technology; and industry. They cover a wide range of topics, including collaborative business, outsourcing, supply management, technology for transportation management, customer management and network optimization.

The “”Advanced”” certificate is granted for completing the “”Essentials”” course plus six additional courses within four years. Most coursework is done outside of the executive’s regular working hours.

Saipe says one of the centre’s strengths is its interaction outside the academic environment. The centre has assembled a blue-chip advisory board with strong industry ties to develop the program and deliver curriculum. “”We staff our courses with experienced practitioners,”” he says.

Phillipe Lamarche, project manager for logistics at Petro-Canada, decided to take courses at the centre because he found himself working on a project.

“”Initially in the planning phase I wanted to validate my thinking and recommendations,”” he says. That led him to enrol in Logistics Management, and as he moved out of planning and directly into implementation, he says he began thinking about how he might leverage the decisions he had made months earlier.

“”It was at this point I decided I required a more comprehensive view of the ‘state-of-the-art thinking’ in and around supply chain and logistics,”” says Lamarche. His next step was to take the Essentials course, and since then he has attended the Collaborative Planning and Forecasting seminar.

Lamarche intends to continue to round out his knowledge with courses offered by the Centre, but says it was difficult to find training in this area for someone such as himself who is already midway in his career, even though there are a lot of degree options available.

“”A ‘one off’ three day seminar is not adequate to make one fully conversant with all the topical issues in this field of study,”” says Lamarche. “”That is why the Essentials course and the remaining courses are a valuable offer to practitioners. I did consider Northwestern’s one week seminars but was interested in something that would allow me to accumulate a more complete body of knowledge via follow-up seminars such as I am doing at Schulich.””

Lamarche says it’s important to note that supply chain management and logistics is not about being a technician. “”Technology is the enabler,”” he says. “”This is about process, about change management, about creating a vision that will render service to your customer and/or allow you to create a competitive advantage,”” adding that managers need a more holistic perspective on how to change the entire enterprise.

Lamarche says the training he has received so far relates to what he was experiencing at Petro-Canada and what he is trying to accomplish at his job. “”The case studies provided valuable insights into where others have tread before me.””

For more on the school’s Executive Centre for Supply Chain and Logistics Management, please see the Nov. 28 issue of Computing Canada

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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Gary Hilson
Gary Hilson
Gary Hilson is a Toronto-based freelance writer who has written thousands of words for print and pixel in publications across North America. His areas of interest and expertise include software, enterprise and networking technology, memory systems, green energy, sustainable transportation, and research and education. His articles have been published by EE Times, SolarEnergy.Net, Network Computing, InformationWeek, Computing Canada, Computer Dealer News, Toronto Business Times and the Ottawa Citizen, among others.

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