A review of supply chain complexity drivers |
| |
Authors: | Seyda Serdarasan |
| |
Affiliation: | Istanbul Technical University, Industrial Engineering Department, Macka 34367, Istanbul, Turkey |
| |
Abstract: | Studies on supply chain complexity mainly use the static and dynamic complexity distinction. While static complexity describes the structure of the supply chain, the number and the variety of its components and strengths of interactions between these; the dynamic complexity represents the uncertainty in the supply chain and involves the aspects of time and randomness. This distinction is also valid when classifying the drivers of supply chain complexity according to the way they are generated. Supply chain complexity drivers (e.g., number/variety of suppliers, number/variety of customers, number/variety of interactions, conflicting policies, demand amplification, differing/conflicting/non-synchronized decisions and actions, incompatible IT systems) play a significant and varying role in dealing with complexity of the different types of supply chains (e.g., food, chemical, electronics, automotive). |
| |
Keywords: | Supply chain complexity Supply chain complexity drivers Supply chain complexity management Good practices Qualitative meta-synthesis |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录! |
|