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The Best Supply Chain Management Programs
According to a recent study by the Supply Chain Management Review, the following sampling of schools has been ranked as having some of the best supply chain management programs in the United States of America.
Northwestern: In addition to their prestigious Executive MBA program via the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern also offers short, three to four day seminars on Supply Chain Management that provide students with resources on how to upgrade their operations via better efficiencies in the management and design of supply chains. The program offers a multidisciplinary approach, featuring speakers from both academia and various industries, in order to provide participants with the latest state of the art information as well as tools for supply chain management optimization.
Each session focuses on different logistics strategies for navigating complex systems and on integrating supply chain sections in to a coordinated system so as to reduce excessive spending and increase the levels of service.
Each student receives a copy of the book Supply Chain Management: Strategy, Planning, and Operation, and learns how to manage inventories, transportation, the flow of information, outsourcing, facilities, and strategic methods of partnership.
Harvard: Harvard is known for having one of the best business schools in the world. For students who are serious about rising to the top of the supply chain management field, a Doctorate in Business Administration in Technology and Operations Management will help them succeed. In addition to exploring the traditional fields of supply chain management and logistics, this Doctorate also gives students a firm grounding in operations strategies and management, as well as the management of new product development and technological innovation.
The Harvard Business School faculty comes from a wealth of different backgrounds – this enables students to get a firm grounding in related fields such as psychology, sociology, physics, engineering, economics, operations research, and materials science. In addition to the traditional discipline based approaches, the training offered to students at Harvard also provides field based experience. The many research themes involved in supply chain management research at the Doctoral level at Harvard include the potency of improvement and learning; how to create competitive advantage via capabilities; process control and understanding; as well as integration in high performance operating systems.
Recent studies by Doctoral students have included research in to product development and performance in cars, semiconductors, and high performance work stations; the Toyota Production System’s diffusion; the economic side of manufacturing in the apparel industry; and the impact of computer integrated systems on quality and flexibility performance.
Harvard’s program ensures that students will come to a firm understanding of how theory and research can illuminate significant problems in the realm of business.
Stanford: The Management Science & Engineering Department at Stanford University offers a variety of degrees to ambitious students interested in the field of Supply Chain Management. These include a Bachelor of Science, a Master of Science, and a Doctor of Philosophy.
Stanford’s Management Science & Engineering program prides itself on preparing students with the necessary tools to make informed decisions and help form policies, while also configuring business structures, designing engineering systems, and solving problems related to information technology.
Students at Stanford get significant training in analytical and conceptual foundations of the supply chain management field, as well as comprehensive coverage of the applications’ functional areas. What’s more, Stanford students have the unique opportunity to interact with many leading businesses in Silicon Valley, as well as state and federal government departments. Students become well versed in the latest developments in dynamic systems, optimization, economics, risk analysis, organizational science, and stochastic systems.
Stanford students go on to productive careers in business, universities, non profit organizations, and governmental agencies.
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