Managing
Your Supply Chain Using Microsoft Axapta: A Book Excerpt
Part One: Sales and Operations Planning
Featured
Author - Dr.
Scott Hamilton
- March 23, 2004
Introduction
A
firm's sales and operations planning (S&OP) process starts with the
definition of all demands for the firm's goods and services. It formulates game
plans that drive supply chain activities to meet those demands. Hence,
an effective S&OP game plan requires consideration of both demands and supplies.
The nature of each product's game plan depends on the environment. The game
plan may focus on stocked end-items in distribution and make-to-stock manufacturing
environments. The game plan for a make-to-order manufactured product depends
on the level of stocked components, the approach to defining product structure,
and the need for direct linkage between production orders and sales orders.
In this case, the game plan can be expressed as master schedules for stocked
components and finishing (or final assembly) schedules for make-to-order items.
Other considerations impact the nature of the game plans. A multisite environment
may require consideration of inventory replenishment across a distribution network.
Variations in operations such as projects and lean manufacturing also affect
the game plan. The saleable products and services for many firms represent a
mixture of environments.
Independent demands provide the logical starting point for formulating an S&OP game plan. The logic underlying planning calculations and demand-pull philosophies is built on chasing demands. Independent demands typically consist of sales orders or forecasts or a combination of both.
Since
the nature of an item's S&OP game plan depends on the environment, several common
scenarios are used to illustrate considerations about demand and how to formulate
a game plan. The scenarios included here represent several types of distribution
and manufacturing environments.
An
effective S&OP game plan results in fewer stock outs, shorter delivery lead-times,
higher on-time shipping percentages, a manageable amount of expediting, and
improved customer service. Several guidelines are suggested to improve a firm's
sales and operations planning process and the effectiveness of each product's
game plan.
This
is Part One of a four-part excerpt from the book Managing Your Supply Chain
Using Microsoft Axapta by Dr. Scott Hamilton.
The
book can be ordered on amazon.com.
Part
Two will discuss "Understanding Planning Calculations".
Part
Three will present "Common Scenarios".
Part
Four will propose "Guidelines and Case Studies".
Reprinted
with permission from McGraw-Hill
Identifying Demands
Sales orders identify actual demands. Actual demands drive all supply chain activities when visibility of the sales order backlog exceeds the cumulative lead-time to obtain and ship a product. Lead-time reduction efforts stemming from just-in-time philosophies can help companies produce to actual demand. However, actual demands must be anticipated in many situations such as selling a product from inventory or producing items from stocked components. One approach to stocking products involves a sales forecast, and the combination of sales forecast and sales orders defines demand for the saleable item. A second approach involves an order-point replenishment method where the minimum quantity point represents forecasted demand over the item's lead-time.
Sales
Order Demand
A sales order line defines an actual demand for an item, expressed as a quantity, delivery date and ship-from warehouse. Another type of sales order—a subscription sales order for a recurring sale—also defines actual demand. In addition, a quotation sales order and CRM quotation can optionally represent a demand. A CRM quotation is considered a demand when its probability exceeds a specified percentage.
Sales
Forecast Demand
A sales forecast defines an item's estimated demand, expressed as a quantity, date, ship-from warehouse, and forecast identifier. A sales forecast represents the desired inventory level on the specified date.
Each
forecast entry for an item has a user-defined forecast identifier termed the
forecast model. Using different forecast identifiers allows multiple
sets of forecast data. Planning calculations are based on a specified set of
forecast data. Multiple sets of forecast data often reflect various scenarios
for simulation purposes, or forecast revisions based on changing market conditions.
This approach supports comparison of actual demand to a selected set of forecasted
demand. In addition, a sales forecast for an item can be associated with a specific
customer or group of customers for comparison purposes.
Some companies use the concept of a two-level forecast model. With a two-level forecast model, for example, the forecast identifier representing the company-wide forecast can be associated with several forecast identifiers representing regional forecasts. Each forecast entry has a forecast identifier corresponding to a regional forecast, so that the system automatically rolls up the company-wide forecast.
Alternative Methods for Entering Forecast Data
Several alternative methods can be used as shortcuts for entering multiple forecasts for an item. These methods include a repeating pattern and a group of items, and the two methods can be used in combination.
Repeating
Pattern. A repeating pattern (termed an allocation method)
results in the automatic generation of quantity and date entries, either as
fixed or variable quantities per period. The repeating pattern approach can
be used for forecasting an individual item or a group of items.
-
Fixed quantity per period. The user specifies a fixed quantity,
a period (such as month), and a starting and ending date. The system automatically
generates a periodic sales forecast for the fixed quantity across the specified
time horizon.
-
Variable quantity per period. This method employs a user-defined
template (termed a period allocation key) that spreads out a total
quantity across several periods based on a mix percentage per period. The
period allocation key, for example, could have percentages assigned to each
month in a twelve month horizon, such as 5 percent for January, 9 percent
in February, and so forth. This approach can be used to model a seasonal or
trend demand pattern.
Group
of Items. A forecast can be defined for an item group rather than an
individual item. This method employs a user-defined template (termed an item
allocation key) that spreads out a total quantity across several items
based on a mix percentage per item. The items must be in the same item group,
and each template entry also defines the ship-from warehouse. For example, the
template entries could define the mix percentages for shipping the same item
from different warehouses.
Handling the Combination of Actual and Estimated Sales Demand
When
using forecasted demand, the combination of sales orders and forecasts must
be considered to avoid doubled-up requirements. Some companies manually maintain
the sales forecast to correctly model the combined demand, where planning calculations
do not employ any forecast consumption logic. However, the system supports two
other approaches for automatically handling the combined demand. The approach
to handling the combined demand is termed the forecast reduction principle
(also known as forecast consumption logic) for planning calculation purposes.
The three forecast consumption approaches are described below.
-
No Forecast Consumption Logic. Planning calculations add the two
demands (stemming from sales forecasts and sales orders) for determining requirements.
This approach applies to environments with no forecasted demand, or with a
manually maintained forecast that models the combined demand.
-
Forecast Consumption by Open Orders. The forecast reduction principle
of "open orders" means that sales orders consume forecasts within each forecast
period. The forecast period provides a logical time span (such as monthly)
for comparing actual sales orders to sales forecasts within the period, and
making assumptions about the combined demands for an item. For simplicity's
sake a monthly forecast period will be used for further explanation.
In a given month, an item may have a single forecast or multiple forecasts;
multiple forecasts typically indicate weekly, intermittent or even daily demands
that drive supply chain activities. Any sales order line item with a delivery
date within the month consumes the sales forecasts within the month, starting
with the earliest forecast and consuming forward. The sales forecasts within
a given month can be over consumed; there is no carry-forward effect to consume
forecasts within a future period. As time moves forward, an item's sales forecast
becomes past due when the system work date matches or exceeds the forecast
date. Planning
calculations ignore past due sales forecasts; there is no carry-forward effect
within a forecast period.
-
Forecast Consumption based on Reduction Percentages. The reduction
percentage approach ignores actual sales orders for forecast consumption purposes.
It automatically reduces forecasts based on a user-defined template (termed
a reduction key) of a reduction percentage by forecast period. This
approach reflects the concept of a demand fence where planning calculations
ignore forecasted demands within a specified time horizon, and the time horizon
represents the sold-out backlog for an item. Let's say an item always has
a sold-out backlog of one month and a partially sold-out backlog in the second
month, so that 100 percent of an item's sales forecast can be ignored for
the first month and 50 percent for the second month relative to today's date.
The user defines these percent reductions in the reduction key assigned to
the item, and different keys reflect the nature of a sold-out backlog for
different items.
The last two approaches to forecast consumption apply to stocked end-items, and to make-to-order standard products with stocked components. In the latter case, the backlog of sales orders drives the near-term production of make-to-order items while the combination of sales forecasts and sales orders drive the procurement and production of long lead-time items.
A forecast period can be daily or yearly rather than monthly. For example, a
daily forecast period might be used in conjunction with a daily repeating pattern,
and a sales order line item only consumes a day's forecast.
Statistical Forecasting and Demand Planner
The Demand Planner supports the development of a statistical forecast based on extracted data about an item's shipment history. It automatically determines the best fit with various statistical models to suggest a sales forecast. Projected quantities can be optionally overridden, and then used to automatically update a set of sales forecast data.
Purchase
Forecast Demand
A purchase forecast defines an estimated demand for a stocked component, expressed as a quantity, date, ship-to warehouse, and forecast identifier. A purchase forecast is different from a sales forecast, and it requires consideration of forecast consumption logic to avoid doubled-up requirements. The three approaches to purchase forecast consumption are described below
-
No Forecast Consumption Logic. This approach applies to environments
with no purchase forecasts, or with a manually maintained forecast that models
the combined demand.
-
Forecast Consumption by Open Orders. The creation of a purchase order
consumes the purchase forecast for a purchased item. In a similar fashion,
the creation of a production order consumes the purchase forecast for a manufactured
item. The previously described logic about the forecast period applies to
a purchase forecast.
-
Forecast Consumption based on Reduction Percentages. This approach
automatically reduces purchase forecasts based on a user-defined template
of reduction percentages, as described above.
Anticipating
Demand Using Order Point Logic
An order-point replenishment method provides an alternative to forecasts when anticipating demand for a warehouse's stocked material. Time-phased order point logic (such as min/max) suggests replenishment when an item's inventory balance falls below its minimum quantity. The minimum quantity represents estimated demand over the item's lead-time. The system supports fixed or variable quantities for minimum and maximum quantities, where a variable quantity might be expressed in monthly periods. In addition, the minimum quantity can be automatically calculated based on historical usage.
Anticipating
Demand Variations Using Safety Stock
Many
firms carry additional inventory to anticipate variations in customer demand,
and meet customer service objectives regarding stockouts, partial shipments,
and delivery lead-times. The additional inventory is commonly called an inventory
plan or safety stock. An inventory plan is typically expressed
for items at the highest possible stocking level, such as saleable end-items
that are purchased or manufactured to stock. A make-to-order manufacturer, on
the other hand, typically expresses an inventory plan for stocked components.
An item's inventory plan can be explicitly expressed as a safety stock quantity when using a period or order-driven reorder policy. The system supports a fixed or variable safety stock quantity, and can calculate it based on historical usage. An inventory plan can also be expressed implicitly. An implicit inventory plan, for example, represents the extent to which a minimum order quantity exceeds typical demand over lead-time. An order quantity multiple can also inflate the order quantity so that it exceeds typical demand over the reorder cycle.
Other Sources of Demand
Visibility of all demands is critical to formulating an effective S&OP game plan. Surprise demands can cause shortages that impact customer service or production, and result in expediting. Some sources of demand may need interpretation or alternative ways to express the demand, as illustrated in the following examples.
Customer
Schedules. Customer schedules represent a combination of sales orders (in
the near-term) and forecast (in the longer term), and often require time-frame
policies for proper interpretation.
Internal
Sales Orders. An internal sales order may be required to initiate production
or procurement activities prior to obtaining the customer's purchase order.
Once obtained, the designated customer can be changed on the sales order.
Customer
Service Demands. Customer service may require material for loaners, exhibition
items, donations, replacement items and repairs.
Field
Service Demands. Field service may require spare parts for selling to customers,
and for repair and field service projects.
Engineering
Prototypes. Prototypes may be built for internal or external customers,
with requirements for material and production capacity. Procurement and production
activity may also be initiated on new products with partially defined bills.
Quality.
Quality often requires validation lots or first articles, especially during
ramp up to production lot sizes. Other quality-related demands can be embedded
in planned manufacturing scrap, so that planning calculations identify the additional
requirements for material and capacity.
Purchase
Returns to Vendor. Anticipated returns to vendor represent demands, as
defined by return purchase orders that have not yet been posted as shipped.
Projects.
The demands associated with internal and external projects can be forecasted.
This
concludes Part One of a four-part excerpt from the book Managing Your Supply
Chain Using Microsoft Axapta by Dr. Scott Hamilton.
The
book can be ordered on amazon.com.
Part
Two will discuss "Understanding Planning Calculations".
Part
Three will present "Common Scenarios".
Part
Four will propose "Guidelines and Case Studies".
Reprinted
with permission from McGraw-Hill
About
the Author
Dr.
Scott Hamilton has specialized in information systems for manufacturing
and distribution for three decades as a consultant, developer, user, and researcher.
Hamilton has consulted worldwide with over a thousand firms, conducted several
hundred executive seminars, and helped design several influential ERP packages.
He previously co-authored the APICS CIRM textbook on How Information Systems
Impact Organizational Strategy and recently authored Managing Your
Supply Chain Using Microsoft Navision. Hamiliton is currently
working closely with Microsoft partners involved with manufacturing and distribution,
and can be reached at ScottHamiltonPhD@aol.com
or 612-963-1163.
ERP and SCM Implementations
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Part Five: More on ERP Evolution | Managing Your Supply Chain Using Microsoft Axapta: A Book Excerpt
Part Four: Guidelines and Case Studies | Managing Your Supply Chain Using Microsoft Axapta: A Book Excerpt
Part Three: Common Scenarios | Managing Your Supply Chain Using Microsoft Axapta: A Book Excerpt
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Edwards Touts Leadership in Collaboration and Flexibility -- There Seems to be Some Notable Functionality Too | Onyx Thinks ASP Opportunities Are A Gem | i2 Technologies Lives Life In The Fast Lane | Demantra Secures More Venture Financing | Is Baan Showing Signs of Life After Death? | i2 e-Business Strategy Services Not For Everyone | Informix Decides to Start Analyzing Websites | DoubleClick Merger Good News For Privacy Advocates? | Commerce One Selects Entrada Software For Affiliate Program | Microsoft Kills a Flock of Birds with One Stone | Candle Releases New Command Center App for IBM MQSI 2 | Provia Software Rises To The Challenge | They Know When You Have Gas | Oracle – How to Disappoint Analysts by Doubling Profits | Ross Systems Ends Year On a Sour Note and Braces Itself For Survivor’s Game | Syncra Systems Helps Kimberly-Clark Clean Up | Walker Propelled by Winds of Change | Enterprise Intelligence Tools Tame Business Knowledge Glut | Will Oracle’s Freebie Shot Hurt (Or Only Graze) Siebel? | Commerce One: First SAP, then Microsoft. But What About Clarus? | Broadbase Continues to Expand | Great Plains – An SME Market Leader, But At What Cost? | Transmeta to Intel/AMD: Eat Our Dust | Great Plains ASP - Evolution, Revolution, Innovation | Razorfish: A Pure Play Offering Digital Strategy | IFS Marches On, Although With a String of Losses | Siebel: Great Plans for Great Plains | Strategy: What Digital Business Service Providers Mean When They Say It | Commerce One Holds Announcement Festival | Ariba Holds Announcement Festival | Fourth Shift Corporation: Working Overtime To Provide Complete Customer Care | Sun Buys Cobalt | Negotiating the Best Software Deal | SynQuest Posts Mixed Results | My Network Engineers are Talking about Implementing Split DNS. What Does that Mean? | J.D. Edwards’ Mixed Blessings | IBM PC Line Redrawn | VA Linux Releases NAS Server | Tired Of Losing Your Oil Derricks? | QAD Continues to Wade Through Red Ink | eConnections Expands Web With IPNet | How Do You Categorize Notebooks? | Customer Relationship Analysis Firm Extends Reach | IBM Tries to Take More Market Share from Oracle, BMC, and CA | BoldFish’s Opt-In E-Mail Delivery System ~ ‘Oh My That’s Fast!’ | Geac Trying Its Luck in Partnering | IBM and Partners Load the Guns in Europe | IMI Sees Red In Dawn Of Fiscal 2001 | Ultimate Connection Seeking Its US Retail Connection Through Solomon Software Partners | EXE and i2 Advance Relationship | The New Manugistics Faces A New Millennium | New Release For Ariba’s Software | Thru-Put Announces Features For New APS Release | Oracle Applications - An Internet-Reinvented Feisty Challenger | EAI - The 'Crazy Glue' of Business Applications | Turmoil in CPU-Land | American Software Has Been Starving While Delivering Innovations | Interelate: More on Tap Than Apps | Intentia Has Been Bleeding For Its Platform Independence | Mortice Kern Systems Goes Vertical (Sky, that is) | ICARUS Ends Solo Flight With Aspen | Traffic Audits Make Strange Bedfellows: Part II - The Audit Process | Red Hat’s Linux Domination Weakens | Traffic Audits Make Strange Bedfellows: Part I - The Why’s and What’s of Auditing | SAS Institute Shoots for the Two-Stop-Shop with new Release of Warehouse Administrator | PowerCerv Facing Another Stormy Season | The Pros and Cons of Collaborative Planning | Logility FY 2001 Comes In Like a Lamb | MAPICS Back On Track, But Not Without Restructuring Pains | Global Vendor Negotiation Strategies | Winner Takes All – Siebel Ousts SalesLogix From Solomon’s Deal | GNOME Will Try to Buff Up Linux | Aspen Technology Built Success From The Ground Up | New Internet Appliances Coming from Compaq | PeopleSoft 8 Launched – Anything to Write Home About? | Lipstream Speaks to Kana | The Wheres of Electronic Procurement | PeopleSoft: No More a Humble Kid From a Rough Neighborhood? | Merant Goes South on the Stock Market | How Do You Categorize Servers? | Human-Machine Interaction Company Ramps Up Firewall Product Line | Simplexis Says 'Watch Our (Chalk) Dust' | Security Information Market Heading for Growth | Implications and Attitudes As the Andersen's Split under the ICC Ruling: Consulting To Go for a Name Change | Compaq to Offer Co-Branded iPAQ BlackBerry Wireless E-mail Solution | Remedy Welcomes You To Your New Office. Now Get To Work! | Peregrine Welcomes Loran to Its Nest In Network Management Matrimony | i2 Paints Broad Strokes at eDay | Is Something Fishy Happening To Your Website? | Ensim to Host HP OpenMail as an ASP | Compaq Wins Supercomputer Contract, But Is It Enough? | More Marketplace Success For Manugistics? | SAP Remains Solid While Transitioning | Vendors Beware! It’s Not What You Say, It’s How You Say It. | Yahoo! Goes Mobile in Greece | Computer Manufacturers Shifting Their Focus to Start-Ups | Lasership.com Looks To Descartes For Same-Day Delivery Help | Rackmount Server Sales Surge | Symantec Swallows AXENT; Takes on Network Associates | Back to the Future: Olde JWT Comes Back and Agency.com Feels the Pinch | Novatel Wireless and Diversinet Team Up to Provide Security for Wireless Modems | Baan Defectors – Is This Only Tip of an Iceberg? | When You Realized the Need for a Unified View of Your Customers, that is E.piphany | Concur Gives Up The Boast | Manhattan Associates Completes Second Quarter On Record Pace | Red Hat Releases Clustering Software | It’s All About User Experience But, How Can We Measure User Experience? | Windows 2000 Bug Fixes Posted | Is Fourth Shift Succeeding in Providing 'Complete Customer Care'? | SAP - A Leader Under Reconstruction | Baltimore Technologies Doubles Revenues, Offers World-Class PKI Hosting | GE and Commerce One Turn on the Lights - But You Ain’t Seen Nothin’ Yet | 80 Million Ways to be Agile | How Detrimental Can a 2nd-In-Charge’s Departure Be? | Microsoft Certified Fresh | OmniSky Selects WorkSpot to Develop Wireless Internet Services | e-Business Service Provider Evaluation & Selection | Jamcracker Dredges a New Channel | Microsoft Hopes to Win Over Consumer Privacy Advocates
| Logistics.com Solutions Target A Grand Scale | EXE Technologies Begins Life In The Public Eye | True to its Texas Roots, i2 Does Everything Big | Never Was A Story Of More Woe Than This Of RJR And Nabisco | Manhattan Partnership With E3, MarketMAX Strikes Compromise | Aspen - To Netfinity and Beyond | SCT Fygir To Lubricate Valvoline’s Supply Chain | American Software - A Tacit Avant-Garde? | Microsoft New Online Messenger ~ Dope Slaps AOL’s Instant Messenger | The Handspring Visor Goes Wireless ~Look out Palm VII! | Optum Unveils Tradestream For Collaborative Fulfillment | License Revenue Up At The New Manugistics | Blink.com Takes Bookmarks Mobile | Logility Collaborative Planning Solutions Offer Sound Proposition | Oracle Proud To Be Number Two | E&Y Spins-Off eSecurity Online and Unveils Security Vulnerability Assessment Services | The RIM 957 ~ Probably Your Next Pager (and a Whole Lot More.) | J. D. Edwards FOCUSes on Active Supply Chain | Fenestrae Offers WAP Support for Mobile Data Server | i2 To Power Best Buy | IFS Far Cry From Running Out of Breath | Mail.com to Join the Microsoft Exchange 2000 ASP GoldRush | Descartes Plots A Record Course In New Millennium | Wireless Palm VII ~ Look Ma No Hands! | Supply Chain Management Audio Conference Transcript | AspenTech Completes Another Piece of the Refining Puzzle With Petrolsoft | IBM Continues RS/6000 Performance Focus | HK Systems Gives Birth To Software Company, irista™ | IBM’s Newest NUMA-Q Server to Handle 64 Intel CPUs | Cisco’s Complete Network in a Box | What Good Is Information If Nobody Sees It? | BroadVision and Bank of America Erect Enterprise as Portal Purveyors | Caldera eDesktop Edges Out Microsoft Windows 2000 in Functionality – Part II | IA-64 Linux From Red Hat | Trend Micro Steps into PDA/Wireless AntiVirus Information Market | Manugistics To Help Amazon.com In Global Expansion | Novell Releases (Yet Another) Internet Messaging System | After Strong Game, Logility Suffers Fourth Quarter Loss | New Plan, 13% Layoffs, Mark Concur’s Third Quarter Disappointment | Gateway & AOL Follow Crusoe’s Footprints | Ross Systems’ Renaissance Yet to Happen | Information Builders Announces New Release of WebFOCUS | Microsoft Tech Ed 2000 Win2K Attendee Network Fails Miserably | CryptoSwift Takes Rainbow Revenues Up 620% | Layer 3 or Bust | Bezos to McNealy: Drop Dead! | Ariba Gains Legs Courtesy of Descartes | Eppraisals.com Gives Lante High Marks | Secure in a Foundry | IBM Loads Linux on Mainframes | MessageClick to Provide Unified Messaging to RCN’s Business Clients | Adexa Reports Record First Quarter Results | Smart Shoppers Go Abroad for Affordable Information Security Programs | Anti-Virus Advisories: Rating Them | Qwest Cyber.Solutions: “A Number 3 Please, and Make It Grande” | IBM’s Marketplace Solutions: Is Ariba Not Enough? | Mirapoint Adds Web-Mail Client to Messaging Appliance Line | webMethods Gets Active (Software That Is) | Symix Systems’ Slips Into Red During Its E-Commerce Transition | They Test Web Sites, Don’t They? | Case Study: Service Provider Xcelerate Speeds CommerceScout Along New Trail | The Arrow Now Points To Cisco | SurfAid is Not Enough: IBM Partners with WebCriteria | Network Appliance to Ship Sub-$10K Caching Hardware | The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Security | 1 Little GB, 2 Little GB, ..., 10 Little Gigabit | i2 Technologies Gets Reporting Help From Hyperion | Fischer’s Prio! SecureSync ~ A Solution to Enterprise Directory Chaos | Dell Tops in Customer Satisfaction | Saltare.com Prepares LEAP Into B2B Fray | EAI Vendor Active Software Activates Transactions | Should PeopleSoft be Overly Happy? | EarthLink’s Pilot of Wireless Email via BlackBerry Handhelds | Intel Faces 820 Chipset Problems (Again) | Antidisintermediation | SAP Gives in to CRM (Part Time) Matrimony | Intel Small Server Market | ChemicalsWorld.com Debuts On The Web | Adexa Prepares To Step Into The Spotlight | Spring Brings New Growth To Manhattan Associates | Catalyst Emerges Strong in 2000 | i2 Enlists Honeywell in Process Industry Play | NeoModal Launches Corporate Ship On Promising Journey | SynQuest, Ford Deliver a Novel Application for Inbound Logistics | SynQuest Teams With InterWorld for Internet Sales and Fulfillment | IMI Hopes Vivaldi Plays Well for Reverse Auctioneer | Will That Wretched ERP Finally Die? Possibly, But Only the Acronym! | Go Fygir! SCT Defeats Incumbent AspenTech at Texaco, Shell Venture | Internet Makes SCP All That It Can Be | Symix Launches eSyte Supply Chain | Is J. D. Edwards’ xtr@ Ordinary? | Cyclone Untangles Digital Partnerships | SynQuest Ships Manufacturing Software for AS/400 | Manugistics: An Old Dog Learns New Tricks | Logility, IBM to Offer Mid Market Solutions on AS/400 | i2’s Aspect Acquisition Not Overpriced | Komatsu Employs “Mod Squad” For Logility Implementation | Supply Chain Planning in 2000: The Brains Behind Internet Fulfillment | IMI, IBM Take First Step in Third Quarter | Microsoft Windows Me -- The Millennium DOES Begin in 2001 | Commerce One and Adexa Build Castles in the Air | i2 Adds More Verticals To Ra-b2b-it Stew | Acquisition Places Descartes Before E-Transport | J.D. Edwards Names SynQuest Preferred Solution | Manugistics Takes Another Hit on Earnings as CFO Resigns | Descartes Systems Group Makes D&T Growth List | Catalyst International Secures French Connection with Steria | i2 Announces e-Business Strategy | Catalyst International Bit by Y2K Bug | Geac and JBA Join Forces to Form New ERP Giant | Optum Gets a Hand From Categoric | Computer Associates, Baan Japan and EXE Announce Strategic Alliance to Provide Total Supply Chain Management Solutions | New Management at Manhattan Associates | i2 Technologies Garners Semiconductor Award | Aspen Technology Posts First-Quarter Loss but Beats Estimates | Hershey's Halloween Nightmare All Too Common for Supply Chain Implementations | Deloitte & Touche Alliance with SynQuest Largely Symbolic | Logility Surges on Second Quarter Earnings Announcement | More Than 600 Customers Live on J.D. Edwards OneWorld. Dot.Com and Brick & Mortar Customers Alike Select J.D. Edwards to Achieve E-Business Agility | SAP Announces Investment in Catalyst International | Fortune Smiles on i2 Technologies | Baan Acquisition Expands Product Set and Integration Issues | Descartes Evolution Yields Revenue Growth But No Profits | Cap Gemini Eyeing Ernst & Young Business Unit | Industri-Matematik Posts 2Q00 Loss But Sells CRM | SAP Finds CRM Partner for Marketing Tools | Andersen Consulting to Grab a Piece of the Internet Pie | Aspen Technology Signs Pact with PWC | SAP Highlights Supply Chain Management Tools | Manugistics Posts Third Quarter Loss But Sees License Growth | PeopleSoft, Lawson To Resell Integration Tools | Heads Roll at Consulting Giant in Wake of SEC Investigation | Manhattan Associates Partners with Intentia | Analysis of Manhattan Associates' New Partnership with CommercialWare | Logility Signs First ASP Deal with ebaseOne | Aspen Follows Good Quarter With Internet Launch | EXE Latest Vendor to Join IBM Supply Chain Club | AspenTech Launches e-Business InitiativeFinally | ERP Vendors Moving to Aerospace and Defense Markets | SCT Corp Previews New B2B Planning, Execution, and eProcurement Suite | Company Makes Good On B2B Collaboration | Siebel Sees Farther on Shoulders of Giants | G-Log Offers New Start For CEO, Management Team | The New Manugistics Debuts eBusiness Products | SAP Posts Solid Q499, but Warns of Q100 | What's in a Name for Supply Chain Vendors? | i2 Technologies: Is the Boom Over? | IBM and Deutsche Telecom Announce Plans for 100 Terabyte Data Warehouse | BAAN Announces "Open World": Business-To-Business Collaboration Over The Internet | B2Big Deal for IBM, Ariba, and i2 | EMC to Buy Data General | Compaq Buys a Chunk of Inacom - But Will It Help? | Compaq, HP, IBM, Intel and Microsoft Create New PC Security Alliance | i2 Technologies at the Front of the Supply Chain | AspenTech Searching for Definition in FY2000 | Manugistics Faces Uncertain Future | J.D. Edwards and Numetrix Ponder the Future as One | SAP APO: Will it Fill the Gap? | SSA: Evolving into systems integrator to survive | JBA: Will it remain "@ctive Enterprise"? | Industri-Matematik Faces Uphill Climb | Advanced Planning and Scheduling: A Critical Part of Customer Fulfillment | Enterprise Resources Planning (ERP) Market - Dismal 1999, the New Millennium to bring Relief (for Some) | Descartes Systems Group: Small Company With Large Ambition | Logility: Voyager in B2B Collaborative Commerce | QAD Inc.: The Art of Vertical Focus | "Ads are us", boasts CMGI | J.D. Edwards - Creating OneWorld of Mid-sized ERP Users | Catalyst International Ties Fate to SAP | Compaq's High-End Wintel-based Rack Servers - Working Hard to Stay #1 | Surf's Up at Akamai |