Volume 57 : 3
Liber Amicorum Dedicated to Prof. Marc Lambre
Tribute to Marc Lambrecht
Public Private Partnerships: Look before you Leap into Marriage
Mix, Time and Volume Flexibility: Valuation and Corporate Diversification
Matrix-Analytic Methods in Supply Chain Management: Recent Developments
Managing Variability in Manufacturing and Services
Combining a Quantitative Approach of Planning and Control with a Lean Approach: Reflections on a Case Study
Sales and Operations Planning Revisited: Linking Operational and Financial Performance
The Value of Multi-Echelon Models
Bullwhip in a Multi-Product Production Setting
The Return of the Bullwhip
Liber Amicorum Dedicated to Prof. Marc Lambre
Tribute to Marc Lambrecht
Public Private Partnerships: Look before you Leap into Marriage
Mix, Time and Volume Flexibility: Valuation and Corporate Diversification
Matrix-Analytic Methods in Supply Chain Management: Recent Developments
Managing Variability in Manufacturing and Services
Combining a Quantitative Approach of Planning and Control with a Lean Approach: Reflections on a Case Study
Sales and Operations Planning Revisited: Linking Operational and Financial Performance
The Value of Multi-Echelon Models
Bullwhip in a Multi-Product Production Setting
The Return of the Bullwhip
Year
2012
Volume
57
Number
3
Page
327
Language
English
Court
Reference
N. VANDAELE en I. VAN NIEUWENHUYSE, “Sales and Operations Planning Revisited: Linking Operational and Financial Performance”, RBE 2012, nr. 3, 327-338
Recapitulation
Despite the widespread adoption of enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems, it is known that these systems suffer from inherent shortcomings which undermine their decision support capabilities. The crux of the problem lies at the midterm planning level (i.e. sales and operations planning, S&OP), as the static procedures used at this level are inapt to reflect the complexities and dynamics of today’s increasingly demanding environment. While the academic community has largely focused on fixing this problem by adding additional “intelligence” that allows the systems to reflect dynamic behavior, we claim that the resulting fixes fall short on a key aspect: they focus purely on operational performance indicators, and fail to substantiate the impact on financial performance metrics. This knowledge gap provides a challenging research opportunity, with a potentially huge impact on planning practice. We provide an overview of the recent contributions in this field, and highlight the most urgent topics for further research.