Tuesday, February 09, 2010

Supply Chains Are Cool
 
 

Responsibility Means More Than Good Business

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From polluting the environment to creating sweat shops, poorly managed supply chains can tarnish the reputation of any company - not only that it makes good business sense.

AMR's Top 25 Highs and Lows

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It's become almost an annual ritual, similar to the Fortune 500, the top billionaires and the AMR Top 25 Supply Chain report. ... read more 

Shipping My Stuff One More Time

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First, some exciting news. After nearly two years of exciting work at the IBM Global Delivery Center in Brno, Czech Republic I am on the move again. ... read more 

The Pony Express and Outsourcing Logistics

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The outsourcing of logistics is really nothing new. Corporations have been doing it since the 1800s, choosing to use the U.S. Pony Express over their own internal resources to ship parcels. ... read more 

Supply vs. demand in the razor business

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I am back from holiday, fresh and rejuvenated, with a new story for you.
As I was packing to leave for vacation in Spain I ran out of my favorite razor, the Gillette Fusion. ... read more 

BMW excels at customer fulfillment

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It's not often that I get to talk about customer fulfillment on my blog. It's obviously a critical part of the supply chain because any screw up in the fulfillment process could leave a lasting impression on the customer...read more 

My new car comes with 18 inch rims and real time manufacturing updates

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If you have been following the drama unfold on my blog, you read about the ups and downs of my attempt to ship my beloved Mini Cooper from New York to Austria...read more 

Improving the logistics of delivering pizza

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Domino's Pizza has created the Pizza Tracker...read more 

The dream is over: Mini is not going to make it.

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Back in October, when I was hopeful, ignorant and optimistic I blogged about shipping my 2002 Mini Cooper to Europe from the US. I had a shipper lined up I had the paperwork ready to go and I was all set to transfer the funds - when reality set in. Here is the collapse of my dream in order...read more 

IBM Global logistics in Italy circa 1951-1960

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I recently came across the following photos that illustrate how IBM shipped its mainframes to clients in various parts of Italy between 1951-1960.

IBM GondolaObviously, this was shot in Venice, Italy. I'm not sure what type of mainframes are in the two crates (I am guessing anIBM 650), which weighed nearly 2,000 pounds and rented for $3200 per month. Just a little risky putting two of them on a wooden gòndola, don't ya think? I would have loved to see how they loaded them on and how they planned to take them off.

IBM Crate

Again, not sure what is in the crate or where in Italy this was shot. But I appreciate the fact that its being delivered on a wheelbarrow. I wonder how many wheelbarrow's FedEx, UPS and DHL have in their fleet. You can't make it out in this resolution, but in the middle of the crate it reads "Do not drop." Classic.

IBM 7070This would make a great poster illustrating really bad supply chain security. TheIBM 7070 was a data processing system that hit the market in 1960 and it cost back then $813,000. So you gotta love the fact that IBM is not only advertising what is inside the trucks, but also where they are going "Banco di Napoli." To their credit, there probably were only a few dozen people in Italy in the 1960s who actually knew what to do with that 7070, but still not something we would ever promote in this day and age. Though, if would be great to live in a world where we could. The logistics carrier is a company called Barghi or Borghi, I can't really tell from the logo, but both come up empty in Google and Yahoo.

   
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