SCOR Model
SCOR Model
Operations Reference
Model
(SCOR)
• Developed by Supply Chain Council (SCC): Independent, not-
for-profit corporation organized in 1996 by a Global management-
consulting firm, Pittiglio Rabin Todd &McGrath (PRTM) and
Market research firm, Advanced Manufacturing Research (AMR)
In Cambridge, Massachusetts.
• SCC Objective: To develop a standard supply-chain process
reference model enabling effective communication among the
supply chain partners, by using standard terminology to better
communicate and learn the supply chain issues Using standard
metrics to compare and measure their performances
• SCOR is an acronym for supply chain operations reference model,
which was developed to assist businesses in understanding,
structuring, and evaluating the performance of supply chains.
• According to dictionary version:
• The SCOR model describes the business activities associated with
satisfying a customer’s demand, which include plan, source, make,
deliver, and return. Use of the model includes analyzing the current
state of a company’s processes and goals, quantifying operational
performance, and comparing company performance to benchmark
data. SCOR has developed a set of metrics and best practices
information that companies can use to evaluate their supply chain
What is SCOR?
performance.
• Combining four techniques into a single integrated approach
Capture the “as-is” Quantify relative Identify practices and Assess skills and
business activity and performance of similar software solutions that performance needs and
design the future “to-be” supply chains and result in significantly align staff and staffing
state establish internal targets better performance needs to internal targets
Deliver Source Make Deliver Source Make Deliver Source Make Deliver Source
Return Return Return Return Return Return
Return Return
Suppliers Supplier Your Company Customer Custome’s
’Supplier Customer
Internal or External Internal or External
SCOR Model
Processes Metrics Best Practices
Continue…
involves the application of business rules, return inventory, assets, and
regulatory requirements. This final step directly extends to post-delivery
customer support and follow-up.
The SCOR model does not attempt to explain every business
process or activity. As in all business models, there is a specific
scope that the SCOR model addresses, including the following
segments:
1. Customer Interactions: The entire process of the customer
relationship, from order entry through paid invoice.
2. Product Transactions: All product, from the supplier’s supplier
to the customer’s customer, including equipment, supplies, bulk
products, etc.
3. Market Interactions: From the understanding of demand, to the
fulfillment of every order.
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