Remove Data Remove Study Remove Supplier management Remove Tools
article thumbnail

End-to-end Omnichannel Planning & Fulfilment

Logistics Business Magazine

The platform is designed for B2B and DTC brands that need to scale growth and improve their omnichannel experiences but have not had the right tools to make timely, optimal decisions within the full context of their financial, operational, and service impacts.

article thumbnail

Cost To Serve – A Smarter Way to Improved Supply Chain Profitability

Logistics Bureau

Too much leads to resources being monopolised on gathering tons of data and a subsequent risk of “paralysis by analysis” Cost to Serve (CTS) is an approach that helps you avoid both extremes. If profits start to decline afterwards, your CTS data can offer valuable information about what changed and how to get back on track.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

8 Things Companies Common Mistakes in Supply Chain Management

Logistics Bureau

With so many analytics applications available and all the hype about big data, a lot of companies are drowning themselves in supply chain data to the point where it’s hard to see the wood for the trees. Of course, manual systems allow small business owners to manage inventory with limited investment in systems.

article thumbnail

8 Things Companies Get Wrong in Supply Chain Management

Logistics Bureau

With so many analytics applications available and all the hype about big data, a lot of companies are drowning themselves in supply chain data to the point where it’s hard to see the wood for the trees. Of course, manual systems allow small business owners to manage inventory with limited investment in systems.

article thumbnail

Waking up to a new dawn

Automotive Logistics

Data also shows positive results in other vehicle segments. An international DHL study estimated that demand for professionals in the logistics sector exceeds supply by a ratio of 6:1. A DHL study found that demand for professionals in the logistics sector exceeded supply by a ratio of 6:1.