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Encyclopedia > Logistic engineering
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Logistic Engineering deals with the science of Logistics. Logistics is about the purchasing, transport, storage, distribution, warehousing of raw materials, semi-finished/work-in-process goods and finished goods. Managing all these activities efficiently and effectively for an organisation is the main question at the back of the mind of any logistic engineer. Inside Nexus Distribution, a United States logistics provider. ... Inside Nexus Distribution, a United States logistics provider. ... Look up Trade in Wiktionary, the free dictionary Trade centers on the exchange of goods and/or services. ... Storage is the at least semi-permanent holding of an amount of something. ... Distribution is one of the four aspects of marketing. ... Inside Green Logistics Co. ...


Different performance measures are used to examine the efficiency of an organisation's logistics. The most popular and widely used performance measure is the landed cost. The landed cost is the total cost of purchasing, transporting, warehousing and distributing raw materials, semi-finished and finished goods. No free-content definition of performance measure is available. ...


Another performance measure equally important is the end customer fillrate. It is the percentage of customer demand which is satisfied immediately off-shelf. Logistics is generally a cost-center service activity, but it provides value via improved customer satisfaction. It can quickly lose that value if the customer becomes dissatisfied. The end customer can include another process or work center inside of the manufacturing facility, a warehouse where items are stocked or the final customer who will use the product.


Another much more popular derivative and a complete usage of the logistic term which has appeared in recent years is the supply chain. The supply chain also looks at an efficient chaining of the supply / purchase and distribution sides of an organisation. While Logistics looks at single echelons with the immediate supply and distribution linked up, supply chain looks at multiple echelons/stages, right from procurement of the raw materials to the final distribution of finished goods upto the customer. It is based on the basic premise that the supply and distribution activities if integrated with the manufacturing / logistic activities, can result in better profitability for the organisation. The local minima of total cost of the manufacturing operation is getting replaced by the global minima of total cost of the whole chain, resulting in better profitability for the chain members and hence lower costs for the products. Jump to: navigation, search A supply chain is a network of facilities and distribution options that performs the functions of procurement of materials, transformation of these material into intermediate and finished products, and distribution of these finished products to customers. ...


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Logistic (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (131 words)
Logistics is the management of resources and their distribution.
Logistic engineering is the scientific study of logistics.
Logit, the inverse of the logistic function, is fundamental to logistic regression.
Logistic engineering - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (345 words)
Logistics is about the purchasing, transport, storage, distribution, warehousing of raw materials, semi-finished/work-in-process goods and finished goods.
Logistics is generally a cost-center service activity, but it provides value via improved customer satisfaction.
Another much more popular derivative and a complete usage of the logistic term which has appeared in recent years is the supply chain.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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