Title: Supply chain simulation tools and techniques: a survey
Authors: Jack P.C. Kleijnen
Addresses: Department of Information Systems and Management, Center for Economic Research (CentER), Tilburg University, PO Box 90153, 5000 LE Tilburg, The Netherlands
Abstract: The main contribution of this paper is twofold: it surveys different types of simulation for supply chain management; it discusses several methodological issues. These different types of simulation are spreadsheet simulation, system dynamics, discrete-event simulation and business games. Which simulation type should be applied, depends on the type of managerial question to be answered by the model. The methodological issues concern validation and verification, sensitivity, optimisation, and robustness analyses. This sensitivity analysis yields a shortlist of the truly important factors in large simulation models with (say) a hundred factors. The robustness analysis optimises the important factors controllable by management, while accounting for the noise created by the important non-controllable, environmental factors. The various methodological issues are illustrated by a case study involving the simulation of a supply chain in the mobile communications industry in Sweden. In general, simulation is important because it may support the quantification of the benefits resulting from supply chain management.
Keywords: logistics; performance measurement; Taguchi methods; risk analysis; uncertainty analysis; screening; sequential bifurcation; supply chain management; SCM simulation; spreadsheet simulation; system dynamics; discrete event simulation; business games; sensitivity analysis; robustness analysis; Sweden; mobile communications.
DOI: 10.1504/IJSPM.2005.007116
International Journal of Simulation and Process Modelling, 2005 Vol.1 No.1/2, pp.82 - 89
Published online: 27 May 2005 *
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