`Too little' or `Too late': the timing of supply chain demand collaboration
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2629677
DOI10.1016/j.ejor.2014.09.006zbMath1339.90071OpenAlexW2076825418MaRDI QIDQ2629677
Publication date: 6 July 2016
Published in: European Journal of Operational Research (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejor.2014.09.006
asymmetric informationsupply chain managementincentive contractsupply chain collaborationproduction-planning decision
Management decision making, including multiple objectives (90B50) Transportation, logistics and supply chain management (90B06) Production models (90B30)
Related Items
Collaboration and evolution of e-commerce and express delivery industry supply chain ⋮ Two-part tariffs, inventory stockpiling, and the bullwhip effect ⋮ Supply chain forecasting when information is not shared ⋮ The multivariate bullwhip effect
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- A multi-objective approach to supply chain visibility and risk
- The valuation of options on capacity with cost and demand uncertainty
- Modelling imperfect advance demand information and analysis of optimal inventory policies
- Impact of information sharing and lead time on bullwhip effect and on-hand inventory
- Optimal regulation with unknown demand and cost functions
- Predicting retailer orders with POS and order data: the inventory balance effect
- The value of real time yield information in multi-stage inventory systems -- exact and heuristic approaches
- Supply Chain Inventory Management and the Value of Shared Information
- Efficient Supply Contracts for Fashion Goods with Forecast Updating and Two Production Modes
- Information Sharing in a Supply Chain: A Note on its Value when Demand Is Nonstationary
- Contracting to Assure Supply: How to Share Demand Forecasts in a Supply Chain
- The Effect of Collaborative Forecasting on Supply Chain Performance
- Models for Supply Chains in E-Business
- Value of Information in Capacitated Supply Chains
- Capacity Choice and Allocation: Strategic Behavior and Supply Chain Performance
- The Quantity Flexibility Contract and Supplier-Customer Incentives
- Note: Optimal Ordering Decisions with Uncertain Cost and Demand Forecast Updating
- Quantifying the Bullwhip Effect in a Simple Supply Chain: The Impact of Forecasting, Lead Times, and Information
- The Value of Information Sharing in a Two-Level Supply Chain
- Modeling the Benefits of Sharing Future Demand Information
- Optimal Operating Policies in the Presence of Exchange Rate Variability
- Information Distortion in a Supply Chain: The Bullwhip Effect
- Quick Response in Manufacturer-Retailer Channels
- Improved Fashion Buying with Bayesian Updates
- Periodic Review Production Models with Variable Capacity, Random Yield, and Uncertain Demand
- Trust in Forecast Information Sharing
- Collaboration in contingent capacities with information asymmetry
- Inventory models of future supply uncertainty with single and multiple suppliers
This page was built for publication: `Too little' or `Too late': the timing of supply chain demand collaboration