In the context of the 21st century with the trend of digitization and sustainable development, businesses around the world focus on developing the value chain of products and services, in which the core is building and developing the chain supply in a sustainable way with improved quality and continuous innovation.
Considered as an important
component of supply chain management, supply chain quality management includes
activities to control and ensure product quality of the supply chain based on
activities of association, information sharing, strengthen communication with
suppliers and customers in order to improve the competitiveness of enterprises.
Combining theoretical research and field investigation, a team of experts from
the Center for Business Administration Research, UEB - University of Economics
and Business has synthesized the fundamental theory on quality management and
supply chain management with experience in building and implementing supply chain
quality management models in industrialized countries in order to propose
models/analytical frameworks to be applied in Vietnamese enterprises, towards
the goal of increasing the competitive advantage and sustainable development of
enterprises when participating in the global supply chain.
A supply chain is a system
of organizations, people, processes, information and resources involved in the
transfer of a product or service from a supplier or manufacturer to a customer.
Supply chain operations are concerned with transforming resources, raw
materials, and semi-finished products starting into a finished product for
delivery to the end customer (user). From the customer's perspective, the
supply chain includes all stages directly or indirectly related to satisfying
customer requirements. The supply chain includes not only manufacturers and
suppliers, but also carriers, warehouses, retailers, and the customers
themselves.
The main objective of the
supply chain is to maximize the value delivered to the customer. In more
detail, a supply chain is a network of global organizations that work together
to improve the flows of materials, information, and finance between suppliers
and customers at the lowest cost and fastest speed; The goal of the supply
chain is customer satisfaction. Supply chain activities at the strategic level
include 5 main activities including: (i) Purchasing activities; (ii) Production
and manufacturing activities that create products and services; (iii)
Transportation of semi-finished products/products within and outside the supply
chain; (iv) Storage of semi-finished products and raw materials before they are
shipped or processed; and (v) Product sales and consumption activities, The
nature of the supply chain is to link and integrate 4 businesses: suppliers,
manufacturers, distributors and retailers to ensure the processes essential
business process.
On the basis of developing
a method and an analytical framework for supply chain quality management in
Vietnamese enterprises, the authors present the results to add empirical
evidence on the extremely important role of corporate governance. This result
implies for managers that the application of supply chain-oriented practices
(including: Support from management, Building credibility with suppliers, Trust
in suppliers, and Supplier Alignment) is an important prerequisite for
fostering supplier collaboration and adopting other supply chain quality
management practices. In particular, the results of empirical research have
provided important implications for managers that in the context of limited
resources, businesses need to focus on a certain group of cooperation practices
with suppliers who has a direct impact on the results the business is aiming
for. This is a valuable lesson for businesses in developing countries to
optimize their resources and keep pace with the development speed of
industrialized countries in the world.
A remarkable new point from
the above study is to provide academics as well as business administrators with
a consistent scale system with high reliability, allowing to evaluate the
effectiveness of cooperation with suppliers in supply chain quality management.
The difference of this study from previous works is demonstrated through the
simultaneous analysis of a large number of supplier collaboration practices to
provide a comprehensive view of the impact of collaboration with suppliers on
business performance. In addition, the evaluation of different aspects of
performance indicates the relationship between each outcome dimension and
supplier collaboration practices. Based on clarifying the effectiveness of
individual practices, each business can develop a list of supply-side
partnership management practices with different priorities to realize the
strategic goals of the business.
In addition, on the basis
of assessing the impact of total quality management (TQM) and Just-in-Time
manufacturing (JIT) on supply chain flexibility, the study confirms the link
between implementation of TQM and JIT. These are considered tools to promote
flexibility. While TQM focuses on continuous improvement and process management
to deliver sustainable high quality products that meet or exceed customer
expectations; JIT seeks to eliminate waste and keep inventory to a minimum.
Adopting JIT makes businesses use less space and time, making testing and error
detection easier, thus improving quality performance. The study also showed a
positive correlation between JIT practices, TQM practices, and agile
performance. From there, manufacturing enterprises should apply quality
management as well as JIT at all three levels: internal, downstream and
upstream to enhance flexibility.
In addition, the study
tested the moderating effect of TQM practice on the relationship between JIT
practice and agile performance. Internally, a higher level of process control
enforcement would result in a reduction in setup time having a stronger impact
on agile performance. The reduction in setup time results in smaller space and
less material flow, so process management must be tailored to accommodate JIT
deployments. For the downstream supply chain, customer participation has a
moderating effect on the relationship between JIT linkage with customers and
agile performance. As customer engagement improves understanding of the market,
providing customers with interest and feedback, businesses have the ability to
link customers in the operational system, providing on-time delivery.
As such, managers at
manufacturing enterprises who are implementing JIT practices are advised to
implement TQM practices so that JIT support can lead to more agile performance.
In the case of businesses that have not yet adopted JIT and TQM but want to
increase flexibility, it is advisable to focus on TQM practices at the outset.
Book information:
Title
of the book: Quản trị chất lượng chuỗi cung ứng cơ sở lý luận và một số kinh nghiệm thực tế tại Việt Nam
Publication
year:
2021
Publisher:
Vietnam National University Press, Hanoi
Number
of pages:
144
Book
size:
16×24 cm
ISBN:
978-604-324-304-8
>> Click here to see the title in Vietnamese
Author
information:
| Assoc.Prof.Dr. Phan Chi Anh:
Born in 1970 in Hanoi. Currently working at
University of Economics and Business - Vietnam National University, Hanoi, has
25 years of experience in practice, research, consulting, training in
management and quality improvement in enterprises.
Training process: Graduated from Automation
Industry, Hanoi University of Science and Technology, 1993; Graduated with
Master's degree in Production Systems Engineering, Asian Institute of
Technology (AIT), Thailand, 1998; Graduated with a PhD in Business
Administration, Yokohama National University, Japan, 2008.
Teaching and research areas: Operations
Management, Quality Management, Supply Chain Management, Enterprise
Productivity Improvement.
Published scientific works: The author has
more than 50 research publications, including 23 works in prestigious
international journals such as: International Journal of Production Economics,
Supply Chain Management: An International Journal, International Journal of
Productivity and Quality Management… |
| Dr. Nguyen Thu Ha:
Born in 1982 in Hanoi. Currently working at
the University of Economics and Business - Vietnam National University, Hanoi,
has 13 years of experience in teaching, research and consulting on marketing,
new product development practice, supply chain quality management in
enterprises.
Training process: Graduated in International
Trade, Institute of International Trade, France, 2006; Graduated with Master of
International Business Administration, Institute of Business Administration
(IAE), Valenciennes, France, 2007; Graduated with a Doctor of Business
Administration, University of Economics and Business, Vietnam National
University, Hanoi, 2016.
Teaching and research areas: Marketing
Management, Service Marketing, Service Quality, New Product Development, Supply
Chain Quality Management, Enterprise Productivity Improvement.
Published scientific works: The author has
more than 40 research publications, including 10 works in prestigious
international journals such as: Supply Chain Management: An International
Journal, International Journal of Productivity and Quality Management,
International Journal for Quality Research, Management & Marketing:
Challenges for the Knowledge Society… |