Jumat, 14 Februari 2014

[Z895.Ebook] Ebook Download Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi

Ebook Download Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi

By reviewing this book Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi, you will obtain the very best point to acquire. The brand-new point that you do not have to spend over cash to get to is by doing it on your own. So, what should you do now? See the link page and also download guide Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi You could get this Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi by on-line. It's so very easy, isn't it? Nowadays, innovation actually supports you activities, this on the internet e-book Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi, is also.

Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi

Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi



Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi

Ebook Download Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi

Book lovers, when you need a new book to read, discover the book Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi right here. Never ever worry not to find exactly what you need. Is the Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi your needed book currently? That's true; you are really a great reader. This is an excellent book Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi that originates from fantastic writer to share with you. Guide Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi provides the very best experience and also lesson to take, not just take, however also find out.

Even the rate of a book Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi is so budget-friendly; lots of people are actually stingy to establish aside their money to purchase the e-books. The other factors are that they really feel bad as well as have no time at all to go to the book shop to look guide Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi to check out. Well, this is modern period; numerous e-books could be got quickly. As this Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi as well as much more books, they can be got in really quick ways. You will certainly not require to go outside to get this e-book Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi

By seeing this page, you have actually done the best gazing point. This is your begin to select guide Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi that you desire. There are bunches of referred books to check out. When you want to get this Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi as your book reading, you could click the link web page to download and install Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi In couple of time, you have possessed your referred publications as yours.

Due to this e-book Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi is sold by on-line, it will ease you not to print it. you can get the soft documents of this Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi to save money in your computer, device, and a lot more devices. It depends on your determination where as well as where you will read Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi One that you require to always remember is that reading publication Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value And Driving Growth (MIT Press), By Yossi Sheffi will never finish. You will certainly have ready to read other publication after completing a publication, as well as it's continually.

Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi

Why is Memphis home to hundreds of motor carrier terminals and distribution centers? Why does the tiny island-nation of Singapore handle a fifth of the world's maritime containers and half the world's annual supply of crude oil? Which jobs can replace lost manufacturing jobs in advanced economies?

Some of the answers to these questions are rooted in the phenomenon of logistics clusters--geographically concentrated sets of logistics-related business activities. In this book, supply chain management expert Yossi Sheffi explains why Memphis, Singapore, Chicago, Rotterdam, Los Angeles, and scores of other locations have been successful in developing such clusters while others have not.

Sheffi outlines the characteristic "positive feedback loop" of logistics clusters development and what differentiates them from other industrial clusters; how logistics clusters "add value" by generating other industrial activities; why firms should locate their distribution and value-added activities in logistics clusters; and the proper role of government support, in the form of investment, regulation, and trade policy.

Sheffi also argues for the most important advantage offered by logistics clusters in today's recession-plagued economy: jobs, many of them open to low-skilled workers, that are concentrated locally and not "offshorable." These logistics clusters offer what is rare in today's economy: authentic success stories. For this reason, numerous regional and central governments as well as scores of real estate developers are investing in the development of such clusters.

View a trailer for the book at: http://techtv.mit.edu/videos/22284-logistics-clusters-yossi-sheffi

  • Sales Rank: #485393 in Books
  • Published on: 2014-08-29
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .75" w x 6.00" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 368 pages

Review

Yossi Sheffi's recognition of a select group of cities as logistics hubs, each with its own particularities, provides beneficial insight into new developments, business opportunities and services. His book stresses the dynamics and the different roles these trade hubs take on to serve the world; his detailed portrayal of each of the logistics hubs around the world and how he brings each case up to date is magnificent.

(Alberto Alem�n Zubieta, Administrator/CEO, Panama Canal Authority)

As much as anyone I know, Yossi Sheffi has advanced the cause of logistics as an academic discipline. I often call on him for his unique insight on how logistics intersects the worlds of technology, public policy, global trade, and other macro issues. In his book, he gives us an account of the broader impact as opportunities emerge and business models change because of the timing advantages that come from close access to air transport and overnight connections to most any place in the world.

(D. Scott Davis, CEO, UPS)

Yossi Sheffi succinctly summarizes the major current developments in worldwide logistics in this well-written book.

(Frederick W. Smith, Chairman & CEO, FedEx Corporation)

Logistics has become an essential part of competition and the modern global economy. Logistics clusters, in which sets of logistics activities co-locate and concentrate in particular locations, have emerged across the globe. Such clustering unlocks large positive externalities and economic growth in logistics while stimulating related economic diversification in logistically intensive fields. Yossi Sheffi's book provides a fascinating description of the power of clusters in services and the evolution of logistics clusters globally. This interesting book shows how clusters are getting more important in the global economy, not less, defying predictions of the end of geography.

(Michael E. Porter, Bishop William Lawrence University Professor, Harvard Business School)

This book provides valuable insights for business leaders who are building their global and Asian supply chains. We are proud that renowned supply chain management expert Yossi Sheffi has highlighted Singapore as one of the successful logistics clusters alongside cities like Memphis, Chicago, Rotterdam, and Los Angeles. Based on solid research and practical examples, Sheffi's book offers a perceptive understanding of the roles governments, businesses, and academia can play to create an enabling environment for logistics clusters to thrive.

(Leo Yip, Chairman, Singapore Economic Development Board)

An insightful book, with real world cases from all over the globe, that show the benefits of logistics clusters. An interesting read for logistics professionals and certainly for us at Port of Rotterdam Authority, who focus on developing a vital port cluster both in Rotterdam and in some selected emerging clusters around the world.

(Hans N.J. Smits, President and CEO, Port of Rotterdam Authority)

Yossi Sheffi's lucid book reveals how logistics clusters enhance the productivity of global supply chains, promote trade, sustain economic growth, and create good jobs.

(Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum)

Yossi Sheffi has done a fabulous job of describing the role of the supply chain for our country and the rest of the world. The result is a new kind of development focused on logistics that is not only increasing the value and benefits of the supply chain, but lowering overall logistics costs, energy consumption and environmental emissions, while driving new capital investment and job-creating growth. Logistics Clusters is a must read for anyone interested in strengthening their competitive position in our national and global economies.

(Matthew K. Rose, Chairman & CEO, BNSF Railway Company)

From the Inside Flap
Yossi Sheffi is the Elisha Gray II Professor of Engineering Systems at MIT and Director of the MIT Center for Transportation and Logistics. He has worked with manufacturers and leading service providers around the world on supply chain issues and is an active entrepreneur, having founded and co-founded five successful companies since 1982. He is the author of The Resilient Enterprise: Overcoming Vulnerability for Competitive Advantage (MIT Press) and Urban Transportation Networks (Prentice hall).

From the Back Cover
As much as anyone I know, Yossi Sheffi has advanced the cause of logistics as an academic discipline. I often call on him for his unique insight on how logistics intersects the worlds of technology, public policy, global trade, and other macro issues. In his book, he gives us an account of the broader impact as opportunities emerge and business models change because of the timing advantages that come from close access to air transport and overnight connections to most any place in the world."
--D. Scott Davis, CEO, United Parcel Service

�"Yossi Sheffi succinctly summarizes the major current developments in worldwide logistics in this well-written book."
--Frederick W. Smith, Chairman & CEO, FedEx Corporation

"Logistics has become an essential part of competition and the modern global economy. Logistics clusters, in which sets of logistics activities co-locate and concentrate in particular locations, have emerged across the globe. Such clustering unlocks large positive externalities and economic growth in logistics while stimulating related economic diversification in logistically intensive fields. Yossi Sheffi's book provides a fascinating description of the power of clusters in services and the evolution of logistics clusters globally. This interesting book shows how clusters are getting more important in the global economy, not less, defying predictions of the end of geography."
--Michael E. Porter, Bishop William Lawrence University Professor, Harvard Business School

"This book provides valuable insights for business leaders who are building their global and Asian supply chains. We are proud that renowned supply chain management expert Yossi Sheffi has highlighted Singapore as one of the successful logistics clusters alongside cities like Memphis, Chicago, Rotterdam, and Los Angeles. Based on solid research and practical examples, Sheffi's book offers a perceptive understanding of the roles governments, businesses, and academia can play to create an enabling environment for logistics clusters to thrive."
--Leo Yip, Chairman, Singapore Economic Development Board

"An insightful book, with real-world cases from all over the globe, that show the benefits of logistics clusters. An interesting read for logistics professionals and certainly for us at Port of Rotterdam Authority, who focus on developing a vital port cluster both in Rotterdam and in some selected emerging clusters around the world."
--Hans N. J. Smits, President and CEO, Port of Rotterdam Authority "Yossi Sheffi's recognition of a select group of cities as logistics hubs, each with its own particularities, provides beneficial insight into new developments, business opportunities, and services. His book stresses the dynamics and the different roles these trade hubs take on to serve the world; his detailed portrayal of each of the logistics hubs around the world and how he brings each case up to date is magnificent."
--Alberto Alem�n Zubieta, Administrator/CEO, Panama Canal Authority business/management

Most helpful customer reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Excellent Background -
By Loyd Eskildson
The technology and economics of transportation often favor movement through central consolidation facilities rather than directly. Getting the greatest profit from a plane or truck involves combining dense and light cargo to maximize both space and weight capacities. Adept users can buy excess production (eg. a bumper fish catch) and then co-sponsor sales tot handle the extra volume. Merging the purchasing, sales, and logistics is the best way to coordinate their activities. Optical and x-ray scanners can examine products as they're taken into a warehouse (ideally located close to an airport or major trucking lanes). Centralized processing (eg. filleting fresh fish) can offer another advantage via high use of automated equipment, as well as reducing smells in a store and ones refrigerator, and product exposure to open air.

One of the roles of distribution centers and freight yards is to match load sizes across different conveyances.

PLAZA is the largest logistics park in Europe. Larger parks allow lower and more stable transportation costs and a greater range of options. PLAZA started early and overbuilt at the start, creating an entry deterrence for possible competitive sites. Its size has also brought maintenance shops, hotels, and restaurants to the site.

Florentine artists were concentrated into an area that improved the interest in developing and spreading new techniques (eg. new painting techniques that took distance perspectives into account, developing new colors, firing techniques). The need to fund art work brought banks and development of double-entry bookkeeping. Originally those made rich from trade generated the interest in art work.

Silicon Valley early on attracted VC funders, in turn attracting more new ventures. Both Florence and Silicon Valley generated a life-long interest in learning and improved ability to provide it. Other well-known clusters include Route 128 near Boston, Hollywood, Toyota City, furniture in High Point N.C., and Wall Street. Increased innovation and formation of new businesses, increased trust among participants from being close to and knowing each other, knowledge spillovers (eg. to/from suppliers, programmers) and improved JIT capability are other advantages.

Downsides - clusters may overly encourage group-think (Akron and bias tires vs. radials; the Big Three vs. foreign manufacturers. They're also vulnerable if production goes overseas. The fraction of trans-shipments (in and immediately back out) reflects a terminal's importance and efficiency.

Mercantilism calls for maximizing exports via subsidies and minimizing imports via tariffs. The Dutch government, as early as 1598, saw the undesirability of intra-Dutch competition for Asian trade and encouraged major players to form a single trading company (Dutch East India Company) which was then given a 21-year monopoly on trade with Asia. Singapore thrives on trans-shipments. The Malacca straight creates a natural meeting place between East Asian economies and South Asian and Western merchants. (The latter via the Suez Canal.) Singapore's equatorial location also brings almost no extreme weather because it lacks the Coriolis effect of the Earth's rotation. This trade has made Singapore more cosmopolitan than Rotterdam.

The propensity for world trade is associated with cultural tolerance - Iberian Jews not prohibited by creed from lending or borrowing helped establish Amsterdam as a major financial center; Flemish printers, fleeing Catholic restrictions on publishing, made Holland a major center for knowledge and book printing.

Memphis as become a good FedEx hub because its location optimizes distances and flight schedules to/from East and West coasts. It also enjoys relatively mild weather.

Empty truck trips consume about 75% of the fuel of fully-loaded trips, and tire wear is worse. Bigger conveyances are more fuel and labor efficient. Fifty years ago truck trailers in the U.S. were 32 feet. Road trains in Australia reach a length of as much as 6 trailers. UPS now owns nothing smaller than a 757 (87,700 lb. capacity), while 747s carry up to 270,000 lbs. Barges are lashed together to form groups of 15 - 50. The first makeshift containers ship in 1956 held 58 containers, then 610 in 1960, 1,500 in 1969, 3,000 in 1972, 4,000 in 1981, 2006 the Emma Maersk could handle 14,000 20' container-units (TEU), and in 2011 it ordered 20 new 18,000 TEU ships from Korea's Daewoo. A trans-Pacific TEU on an 8,000 TEU ship costs about $200 less than on a 4,000 TEU ship. One gallon of fuel moves one ton of cargo 60 miels by truck (22 ton capacity), 202 miles by rail (100 tons/car), and 514 miles by barge (3.5 million tons).

Combined-load operations typically are scheduled more frequently then direct-operations. Large logistics clusters allow reducing the number of load/unload costs and delays. Large truckload carriers recently averaged 12 - 14% empty miles, with private fleets about twice that. A 747 freighter sitting idle can consume $1,500 - $2,000/hour in finance charges, plus parking space fees.

Co-location facilitates collaboration between major shippers - eg. S.C. Johnson and Energizer are now sharing trucks, allowing mixing dense and light loads.

Medtronic FedExes $120,000 spinal kits with all types of sizes of plates, rods, brackets, and screws to hospitals with elective surgeries. The hospitals then returns unused portions of the kit to Medtronic for inspection, replenishment, and re-cleaning. Repair and parts facilities locate near FedEx and UPS air hubs to provide fast service.

When UPS has overflow packages out of Singapore to Shenzhen, it sometimes uses airline freight space. Having multiple carriers co-located makes this easier.

Another opportunity - sharing workers via a contract logistics services provider. Excel operates 8 DCs in/around Alliance, Texas.

Logistics clusters allow postponement of product differentiation to a point closer to the time/place a product is sold - eg. prepackaging for promotions, adding sales tags and bar codes. Also improved JIT performance - eg. matching to varying production schedules, refurbishing returned goods (only 5% have true defects).

A ten ton truck axle creates over 1,000X as much pavement wear as a one ton car axle. The costs of the Chinese national expressway network are estimated at $240 billion, most are toll roads built and operated by private firms.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Very useful insights...
By Alexandre Winkler
This is not a book about either logistics or supply chain management. It is actually a book about a specific type of cluster as its title suggests. One note: my first contact with the concept of cluster was originated when I read Competitive Advantage by Michael Porter and such concept really kindled my interest.

The book is full of examples regarding the characteristics and advantages of logistics clusters. Many examples are concerned with the clusters of Saragoza, Rotterdam, Panama, and Singapore. I particularly enjoyed the up-to-date figures that are presented throughout the book which might be of some interest for further readers. In this connection, by the end of the book the section NOTES provides a number of references that support the author's arguments. As a matter of information, Yossi Sheffi carried out an in-depth study as for logistics features of the above clusters.

On a cost x benefit analysis, the book is a must and should be kept on the bookshelf of everyone into the logistics area. I therafore strongly recommend purchasing the above book.

6 of 8 people found the following review helpful.
Logistics Clusters is for Experts and Newcomers Alike
By Kevin F Smith
Yossi Sheffi's newest book, "Logistics Clusters", is simply the best supply chain and logistics book published in the last ten years. It provides concise and insightful observations on how and why the best supply chains in the world today operate the way they do. It is written in a way that allows everyone from experts to supply chain newcomers to understand the latest trends in supply chain. Mr. Sheffi simplifies and explains industry jargon in such a way as to make reading this book more of a pleasure than a chore. If supply chain professionals were allowed to read only one book to aid them in their career, this should be the one.

See all 11 customer reviews...

Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi PDF
Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi EPub
Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi Doc
Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi iBooks
Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi rtf
Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi Mobipocket
Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi Kindle

Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi PDF

Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi PDF

Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi PDF
Logistics Clusters: Delivering Value and Driving Growth (MIT Press), by Yossi Sheffi PDF

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar