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Posts Tagged ‘sales improvement’

What is Sales and Operations Planning and Why Should we Worry About it?

Monday, May 24th, 2010

By:  Donald Clark CFPIM, CSCP

Balancing demand with supply is the basic objective of every single enterprise.  This is easy to state but as it turns out, not so simple in practice.  Some organizations meet this balance well, while others survive through crisis management.

Those that do not bring supply and demand into balance suffer the consequences.  Excess inventory, disrupted production schedules, missed deliveries, etc., become the norm.  All of these conditions create a huge amount of waste and then the finger pointing begins, pitting departments against each other.  Ultimately, it is our customers who suffer and sure enough, they will begin to go away.

On the other hand, a thorough understanding of demand, along with developing a comprehensive supply strategy to meet that demand, will allow organizations to effectively produce and deliver product, with greatly reduced waste.  A vital tool to achieve this goal is the sales and operations planning process.

Sales and operations planning (S&OP) brings together all of the functions of an organization to create a companywide game plan.  The output of this plan forms the basis for all of our short-term decisions and activities.  Beyond the immediate result of creating this agreed upon plan, sales and operations planning helps in breaking down the barriers that exist between our departments and helps the company to move forward as a cohesive team.

Once a month, at least, the top people from each department work together to review actual performance since the last meeting, identify areas of improvement, determine the next period’s projected demand and then make sure the resources exist to meet that demand.

Dynamics AX 2009 provides users with the tools they need to perform the S&OP processes.  It has item forecast capability, resource profiles to see how much work can be done and load profiles to see the effect of operations plans on existing capacity.

If you would like to take a look at it, let us know.  Thanks and have a great day.

Social Networking Pitfalls – Stay out of trouble

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

Social networking is the hottest subject area on the internet right now.  Currently the most popular site for this by far is Facebook.  A similar site, but one that is much more business oriented is LinkedIn. 

Some sub-topics of social networking include the red-hot Twitter.

Sites like Facebook and LinkedIn can be used to help promote business.  Most of them are well positioned within the search engines so topics you may write about will often have higher rankings than on your own website.

The general concept around Social Networking is that you create a mini-website usually consisting of your background, photos you want to share, sometimes what you are currently doing, and then threaded conversations with your ‘friends’ or colleagues.

TechRepublic has a good article on how to be careful however.  See below.  My opinion is you simply should just not mix a personal account and business account.  Or better yet, use LinkedIn for your business networking and Facebook for your personal.  If you want Facebook for both, simply setup two different accounts.  As the article states, friendly conversations among your friends may very well offend a prospective customer or employer.

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