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Supply Chain Software & Manufacturing Software

 
 
21st Century supply chain: BASDA    
At both prosperous and challenging economic times, most warehouse and logistics managers come under relentless pressure to achieve cost savings, whilst improving their supply chain performance. With the ever-increasing demands of customers, suppliers and end users, coupled with the additional pressure of constant legislative changes, businesses can find it daunting to carry out changes to procedures and put in place truly beneficial processes. With this in mind, BASDA has produced this guide with the objective of making the process of implementing best practice easier. Compiled by thought leaders in the supply chain industry, the recommendations outlined here are the result of accumulated knowledge gained through many years’ experience in the supply chain market.
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Business systems project framework    
This template provides a graphical view of every action in an IT project – the key deliverables, who should run each project element and who should sign every element off.
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Guide to project planning    
The project plan is the backbone of all project management. It defines what is to be done, how it is to be done and when it is to be done. The project plan identifies responsibilities for providing the specific products that will ultimately deliver real business benefit. A poorly planned project may be delivered late and cause frustration to everybody involved. Needless to say, a poorly managed project will probably be more expensive to deliver than a well-planned one. 1. Project plan overview. A detailed project plan will add gravitas and credibility to all decisions made during the life of the project.
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Guide to investment appraisal    
Many businesses have numerous project requests which need to be prioritised and assessed, and every business wants to quantify the financial benefits of a project before proceeding. There are a number of ways of evaluating projects and this document outlines the most common methods – using capital and ongoing project costs and comparing them with projected business benefits. As with any model, the results are only as good as the quality of data provided in the first place. It is important that all project costs (internal as well as external) are captured and that the business benefit numbers are supported by the associated managers.
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Business requirements document    
This is a key document for the whole project. It defines the most important measure against which everything else must be benchmarked – business value. The Business Requirements Document defines the business need and the commercial opportunity. Before considering technology or other solutions, it is essential that business managers are clear about the business outcome they want to achieve and why. The problem or opportunity should be described in business terms and should be clear enough to enable someone with no previous knowledge of the business to understand the context of the requirement.
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