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SCM 300 Exam 2 ASU Davila Study Guide

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SCM 300 Exam 2 ASU Davila Study Guide

Institución
SCM 300 Etuuide
Grado
SCM 300 Etuuide

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SCM 300 Exam 2 ASU Davila Study Guide
1. Brick-and-Mortar Business: a business that operates in a physical store without an internet presence


2. Online or E-tailing: All products and services are sold to customers through an online website. Example:

Amazon.com

3. Brick and Clicks: Companies that use both a physical store and the Web to sell their products and services.


4. Clicks and Calls: In addition to taking orders via the company website, some companies will also otter sales

via the phone. Examples: Lands' End and L.L. Bean

5. Omni-channel retailing: Retailers that are fully committed to engaging customers via catalogs, phone calls, websites,

email, internet chatrooms, social media sites or mobile apps, and of course also in stores.

6. Retail sources of supply: manufacturers, wholesalers, drop shippers


7. drop shippers: An organization that ties manufactures and/or wholesalers directly to consumers. They never

posses the product, they just take orders to fulfill by another party.

8. Chargebacks: ettectively penalties charged by retail organizations to their suppliers/vendors for any number of minor and major

supply chain ottenses

9. Collaborative Planning, Forecasting, and Replenishment (CPFR): A formalized ettort by supply chain

partners to share data and collectively develop forecast in an attempt to reduce supply chain cost through better planning

10. vendor-managed inventory (VMI): An arrangement where retailers allow vendors to monitor

in-store inventories, initiate orders/shipments to the store when inventories are low, and also bring the items into the store and onto the

shelf.

11. Last Mile: the portion of the supply chain between the final inventory holding facility and the end consumer


12. Prototype Stores: A series of stores that have common design, construction and layout. Standardized

plans that will work across many stores for chain retailers.


,13. Rationalized Retailing: This retail strategy has retail chains develop rigid control structures to develop and

manage processes such that all the retail outlets are managed in the same way. An employee would easily be able to work at almost

any store since everything is done the same way.

14. Planogram: A map of where every product goes on a retail store shelf.


15. Customers cost for waiting lines: Time


16. Company cost for waiting line: Money paid to maintain the line (employees)


17. Waiting line Input Source: The population of people that might want service


18. Waiting Line: The area in which customers wait for service


19. Waiting line Service Facility: The area in which customers actually receive service


20. Infinite population of customers: The number of possible customers that may come into the store is very

high (or unlimited). When a customer enters the system, the odds of another entering the system are not impacted in any significant

manner.

21. Finite Population of Customers: number of customers is limited


22. Balking: When a potential customer sees the line, but never joins the line because they think it looks too long

and/or too slow.

23. Reneging: When a customer joins the line, gets frustrated and leaves the line


24. λ: Lambda


25. Lambda: Number of customers arriving/unit of time

ex. 15 customers per hour

26. μ: Mu


27. Mu: Number of customers helped/unit of time


, ex. 24 customers per hour

28. ρ: Rho


29. ρ=λ/μ: Percentage of time worker is busy


30. n1=ρ[λ/(μ-λ)]: Average number of customers in the line


31. t l =ρ[1/(μ-λ): Average amount of time a customer waits in the line


32. n s =λ/(μ-λ): Average number of customers in the system


33. ρn=(1-ρ)ρ^n: Probability there are n customers in the system


34. Order size required=(Actual Demand)/(Proportion of Acceptable Product per Order): Shrinkage

Calculation. Must be performed at every stage of the supply chain in upstream direction (customer back to manufacturer)

35. Consumer demands 300 units. Retail store allows 2% theft shrinkage: -

300/(1-.002)=300/.98=306.12 or 300/(100%-2%)=300/98%, always round up, in this case 307

36. Inventory future= inventory present[(warehouse future)/(warehouse pre- sent)]: Square

Root Rule

37. bullwhip effect: the phenomenon in supply chains whereby ordering patterns experience increasing

variance as you proceed upstream in the chain

38. Causes of Bullwhip Effect: order batching, forward buying, rationing, shortage gaming


39. Everyday Low Pricing (EDLP): When suppliers resist the urge to have sales promotions and instead

otter their lowest prices each day, buyers do not see an advantage to buying in bulk

40. vendor managed inventory system (VMI): Buyers share inventory information with suppliers. Suppliers in

turn take on the responsibility of managing inventory levels for buyer by placing deliveries

41. Push System: A system in which consumer demand is known and expected. As a result a supply chain will

Escuela, estudio y materia

Institución
SCM 300 Etuuide
Grado
SCM 300 Etuuide

Información del documento

Subido en
26 de abril de 2026
Número de páginas
16
Escrito en
2025/2026
Tipo
Examen
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