Call Us

+91-9177397029

Email Us

support@stalwartsoftware.com

Supply Chain Management


Practically every product that reaches an end user represents the cumulative effort of multiple organizations. These organizations are referred to collectively as the supply chain.

Supply chains have existed for a long time and most organizations have only paid attention to what was happening within their four walls. Few businesses understood less managed chain of activities that ultimately delivered products to the final customer resulted in a disjointed and often ineffective supply chains.

SCM can actively manage supply chain activities to maximize customer value and achieve a sustainable competitive advantage.

The modules involved are Movement and Storage of raw materials, Work-in-Process Inventory, and Finished goods from point of origin to point of consumption. The core components involved in SCM are Planning, Manufacturing and Distribution.

SCM helps monitor supply chain activities with the objective of creating net value, building a competitive infrastructure, leveraging worldwide logistics, synchronizing supply with demand and measuring performance globally.

Our product has cross-functional approach that includes managing the movement of raw materials into an organization, processing of materials into finished goods, and distribution of finished goods to the end consumer.

SCM allows various supply chain partners to coordinate their long-term plans, and to control the day-to-day flow of goods and material up and down the supply chain. Our application is an easy to use User-Interface with free flow Business flow design and gives tight control on the supply chain network operations as a whole.

SCM is Flexible, Cross-Functional, Fully Integrated and this gives us the Edge.

The global business scenario is no longer a matter of contending enterprises; rather it’s about competing supply chains. Today’s enterprise wants complete visibility into its end-to-end supply chain and seamless integration between internal systems and external parties. Even a minor disruption at any point can lead to the breakdown of the whole supply chain network. Obviously, that’s a difficult situation no enterprise wants to be in. Therefore, enterprises need to be able to predict and manage disruptions while effectively catering to significant customer demand. At the same time, they must cope with the ever-increasing pressure to lower cost and generate value for shareholders.