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Készletgazdálkodás beszállítói menedzsmenttel×Agregált tervezés×Ostornyakhatás×
TudományterületTermelésmenedzsmentTermelésmenedzsmentTermelésmenedzsment
MódszercsaládMachine learningMachine learningMachine learning
Keletkezés éve200619921961
MegalkotóDisney, S. M., & Towill, D. R.Wallace, T. F.Jay Forrester
TípusBusiness and inventory modelDemand-supply planning frameworkPhenomenon and analysis framework
AlapműDisney, S. M., & Towill, D. R. (2006). Vendor-managed inventory: A taxonomy of approaches and implications. International Journal of Production Economics, 106(2), 440-456. link ↗Wallace, T. F. (1992). Sales & Operations Planning: The how-to handbook. Cincinnati: APICS Publications. link ↗Lee, H. L., Padmanabhan, V., & Whang, S. (1997). The bullwhip effect in supply chains. Sloan Management Review, 38(3), 93–102. link ↗
Alternatív nevekVMI, supplier-managed inventorysales and operations planning, production planningdemand amplification, Forrester effect
Kapcsolódó555
ÖsszefoglalóVendor-Managed Inventory (VMI) is a supply chain arrangement in which the supplier (vendor) has visibility into the customer's inventory levels and assumes responsibility for replenishing inventory to pre-agreed levels. Rather than customers placing orders based on internal forecasts, the supplier monitors actual consumption and triggers replenishment shipments automatically. VMI reduces administrative burden, minimizes stock-outs, improves cash flow (by reducing inventory in the supply chain), and fosters collaboration between supplier and customer.Aggregate Planning (or Sales & Operations Planning, S&OP) is a collaborative, iterative process that balances demand and supply at a high level—typically grouping products into families and planning over a 3–18 month horizon. Developed formally by Tom Wallace and popularized through APICS, aggregate planning helps organizations align sales forecasts, production capacity, inventory, and workforce to meet demand efficiently while managing costs. It serves as the bridge between strategic business plans and detailed operational execution.The Bullwhip Effect is a phenomenon in supply chain management where small fluctuations in end-customer demand cause progressively larger fluctuations in orders as one moves upstream from retail to distributors to manufacturers to suppliers. First formally documented by Jay Forrester in his 1961 system dynamics work, and later popularized by Lee, Padmanabhan, and Whang in 1997, the effect reveals how information delays and ordering strategies amplify demand variability throughout supply chains, leading to excess inventory, inefficient production scheduling, and increased costs.
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ScholarGateMódszerek összehasonlítása: Vendor-Managed Inventory · Aggregate Planning · Bullwhip Effect. Letöltve 2026-06-20, forrás: https://scholargate.app/hu/compare