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Keith Oliver

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Keith Oliver is a British top logistician and consultant famous for coining the terms "Supply Chain" and "Supply Chain Management"[1][2][3][4][5][6] first using them in public in an interview with Arnold Kransdorff of the Financial Times on 4 June 1982.[7]

Education and career

Keith Oliver was educated in the United Kingdom at Monmouth School and holds an honours degree from Birmingham University. He is currently on the staff of the management consulting firms, Booz & Company / Booz Allen Hamilton and worked previously as Senior Organizations and Methods Analyst to the West Midlands Gas Board, and then as a consultant for Business Operations Research (Systems) Limited. According to Damon Schechter, Oliver played a critical role in ushering in the third significant evolution of logistical thought in the 1970s and 1980s[8] and has contributed as author and co-author of numerous articles[9][10][11] and the chapter entitled: "Distribution: the total cost-to serve" from the book: "The Gower Handbook of Management Edited by Dennis Lock.[12]

Supply Chain Management term coining

A 2003 article in a Strategy+Business Issue named When Will Supply Chain Management Grow Up? by Tim Laseter and Keith Oliver himself [13] describes anecdotically the moment in which the term Supply Chain Management was coined prior to the Financial Times interview: Oliver began to develop a vision to tear down the functional silos inside an organization (manufacturing, marketing, distribution, sales and finance). He and his team called it Integrated Inventory Management, abbreviated I2M in the late 70's. They believed that the term was catchy and the I2M acronym would be well received, but it all changed during a key steering committee meeting with Dutch electronics giant Philips. At the meeting, he and his team found out that their catchy phrase was not that catchy, and Oliver was challenged by one of the customer's managers: Mr. Van t'Hoff. Oliver explained Mr. Van t'Hoff what he meant by I2M: “We’re talking about the management of a chain of supply as though it were a single entity,” Mr. Oliver replied, “not a group of disparate functions.” “Then why don’t you call it that?” Mr. Van t’Hoff said. “Call it what?” Mr. Oliver asked. “Total supply chain management.”

Scott Stephens, Former Chair of the Supply-Chain Council (SCC) (1983–1997) and Former Chief Technology Officer of the SCC (1997–2005)[14] states in his blog that after knowing the story, he was not really sure if it was Keith Oliver or Mr. Van t'Hoff who coined the term. But as Oliver developed the concept prior to the meeting and used it first in public during the Financial Times interview, gives credit to Oliver's story to be the Ring of Truth.[15]

Keith Oliver's Supply Chain Management definition

Oliver defined in 1982 the Supply Chain concept as follows: “Supply chain management (SCM) is the process of planning, implementing, and controlling the operations of the supply chain with the purpose to satisfy customer requirements as efficiently as possible. Supply chain management spans all movement and storage of raw materials, work-in-process inventory, and finished goods from point-of-origin to point-of-consumption”.[16] Since then, almost all Supply Chain Book authors have developed their own definitions. Some of them are subtle variations and others add more detail, but most of them remain close to Oliver's original definition..

Supply Chain term adulthood and 30th anniversary

Keith Oliver was highlighted and often cited in articles and books during the 2002-2003 period due to the fact that the Supply Chain Management term reached its adulthood with 21 years. Supply Chain Management's term adulthood was an opportunity for some publications to reflect about the concept's evolution in 21 years.[17] A similar effect is being experienced in 2012 due to the term's 30th anniversary. Although the celebration is being used mostly for some firms marketing strategies.[18][19]

References

  1. ^ David Jacoby (2009), Guide to Supply Chain Management: How Getting it Right Boosts Corporate Performance (The Economist Books), Bloomberg Press; 1st edition, ISBN 978-1576603451
  2. ^ Andrew Feller, Dan Shunk, & Tom Callarman (2006). BPTrends, March 2006 - Value Chains Vs. Supply Chains
  3. ^ David Blanchard (2010), Supply Chain Management Best Practices, 2nd. Edition, John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 9780470531884
  4. ^ Betty A. Kildow (2011) A Supply Chain Management Guide to Business Continuity, American Management Association. ISBN 9780814416457
  5. ^ Damon Schechter (2002) Delivering the Goods: The Art of Managing Your Supply Chain, John Wiley & Sons.ISBN 0471211141
  6. ^ Kenneth M. Eades (2010) The Portable MBA, John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9780470481295
  7. ^ Heckmann, Shorten, Engel (2003) Supply Chain management at 21: The hard road to adulthood.
  8. ^ Damon Schechter (2002) Delivering the Goods: The Art of Managing Your Supply Chain, John Wiley & Sons.ISBN 0471211141
  9. ^ Beyond Utopia: The Realist's Guide to Internet-Enabled Supply Chain Management by Keith Oliver, Anne Chung and Nick Samanich (May 1, 2001)
  10. ^ Supply Chain Management: logistics catches up with strategy by Keith Oliver, R. Webber, M. (1982)
  11. ^ “Smart Customization: Profitable Growth Through Tailored Business Streams,” s+b, Spring 2004, Keith Oliver, Leslie H. Moeller, and Bill Lakenan. http://www.strategy-business.com/press/article/04104
  12. ^ The Gower Handbook of Management Edited by Dennis Lock, Chapter 46, Distribution: the total cost-to serve, John Gentles and Keith Oliver. Gower Publishing Company, 1983 ISBN 0566079380
  13. ^ http://www.strategy-business.com/article/03304?gko=54182
  14. ^ http://www.value-chain.org/en/cms/?2807
  15. ^ http://measuredperformance.blogspot.com/2007/12/defining-supply-chain-management-whos_05.html
  16. ^ http://www.supplychainrecruit.com/content/supply-chain-explained-26.htm
  17. ^ http://www.informationweek.com/news/10100101
  18. ^ http://enterpriseresilienceblog.typepad.com/enterprise_resilience_man/2012/06/thirty-years-of-supply-chain-management.html
  19. ^ http://blog.kinaxis.com/2012/03/scm30-what-can-we-learn-from-supply-chain-management-mistakes/