Supply Chain Network Design [PI.19s]
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Date: July 13-14, 2009 | Tuition: $1,500 | Continuing Education Units (CEUs): 1.2
Program Co-Sponsor |
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Updates
* Course schedule and registration times
Save $500 by taking both this course and Demand-Driven Supply Chain Management [PI.20s]. Combined tuition is $2,500.
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Overview
In today’s volatile business environment, many companies are expanding, merging, contracting, or otherwise redesigning their supply chain networks. This course examines applications of optimization models to the analysis of these network design problems. Modeling concepts are reviewed as well as practical methods for data gathering and validation, model implementation, and scenario construction. New applications will be presented including network design models to plan for new products, to manage production and inventories of products with short shelf lives, to select vendor contracts, and to control CO2 emissions. Several case studies will be presented along with discussions of network design problems faced by course attendees.


Fundamentals: Core concepts, understandings and tools (30%)
Latest Developments: Recent advances and future trends (35%)
Industry Applications: Linking theory and real-world (35%)


Lecture: Delivery of material in a lecture format (60%)
Discussion or Groupwork: Participatory learning (25%)
Labs: Demonstrations, experiments, simulations (15%)


Introductory: Appropriate for a general audience (35%)
Specialized: Assumes experience in practice area or field (65%)
Learning Objectives
- Comprehend the form and purposes of holistic supply chain network optimization models and their applications in network design.
- Understand the goals of and methods for coordinated and collaborative supply chain management.
- Examine guidelines for creating and using models including: model selection; data collection, preparation, and validation; scenario planning; and organizational process change.
- Gain knowledge of optimization modeling and software systems for supply chain network design.
- Acquire insights from case studies where supply chain models were successfully applied to network design problems.
Who Should Attend
This program is intended for:
- Managers and analysts responsible for network design decision-making
- Managers and analysts responsible for acquiring or developing, and applying data-driven modeling systems to support network design decision-making
- Consultants who direct or participate in network design studies
- Academics who teach supply chain subjects to students in management and engineering
Participants will not need advanced analytical skills to fully absorb material presented in the program.
Program Materials
At the start of the program, participants will be given a copy of the recently published second edition of Professor Shapiro’s book, Modeling the Supply Chain, plus other recently published and unpublished papers.
Topics Covered
- Overview of supply chain network optimization models
- Developments in information technology supporting supply chain analytics
- Incorporation of global supply chain issues in network design models
- Network design for new products
- Scenario planning methodology
- Analysis of supply chain risks
- Integration of inventory deployment with facility location decisions
- Analytics for multi-echelon inventory optimization
- Tactical planning with network optimization models
- Prototyping with spreadsheet optimization software
- Network design for green supply chains
- Case study: Distribution network expansion in a retailing company
- Case study: Post-merger consolidation in a food products company
- Case Study: Worldwide sourcing in an industrial chemicals company
- Case Study: New product introduction
PARTICIPANT CASE STUDIES
Participants will be invited via email to submit descriptions of network design problems in their companies. Two or three of these problems will be selected for discussion and analysis during course sessions.
Course schedule and registration times
Class runs 9:00 am - 5:00 pm on Monday and 8:30 am - 4:30 pm on Tuesday.
Registration is on Monday morning from 8:00 - 8:30 am.
The two-day program will consist of four sessions per day. The first session will be devoted to an overview of the course material. Follow-on sessions will cover supply chain concepts, modeling fundamentals, case studies, and software demonstrations.
Instructors
This two-day course will be presented by Jeremy F. Shapiro, Professor of Operations Research and Management, Emeritus, at the Sloan School, MIT. He will be joined by Nathan Srikant, Senior Director, Field Operations at Optiant, Stephen Wagner, Senior Manager at CHAINalytics, and Sean Willems, Associate Professor in the Graduate School of Business, Boston University.
* A limited number of partial-tuition scholarships are available. You may submit a scholarship request by filling out the Scholarship Request Form no more than two weeks after your application to the course has been submitted. Please note that these scholarships are only for partial tuition and do not cover travel, lodging, or other expenses associated with the course. Incomplete requests and requests that are not preceded by a course application will not be reviewed.
If you have any questions please contact the Short Programs office.
Members of the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP) are eligible for an additional 5% discount off this course. Email the Short Programs office in order to receive this discount.
If you have any questions please contact the Short Programs office.

















