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Itt Supply Chain Evaluating Itt Industries' Supply Essay

ITT Supply Chain Evaluating ITT Industries' Supply Chain

ITT Industries (NYSE:ITT) generated $2.1B in revenues during their latest full calendar year of results with a Net Income of -$130M. For the latest calendar quarter ending September 30, 2012 the company generated $555M in revenues and earned a Net Income of $73M. This transition in financial performance is attributable to several factors incouding better coordination, collaboration and integration of suppliers into their manufacturing operations, more efficient use of existing manufacturing assets, and greater use of analytics and IT systems to streamline complex processes (ITT Investor Relations, 2012).

ITT's diversified operations include engineer-to-order, configure-to-order and build-to-order production strategies that have a multiplicative effect on the complexity and extent of collaboration with suppliers (Boon-itt, Himangshu, 2006). Using these product customization strategies the company competes successfully in energy, infrastructure,...

Supply chain locations and their corresponding operations are tightly integrated across the four divisions of Control Technologies, Interconnect Solutions (ICS), Industrial Process and Motion Technologies (ITT Investor Relations, 2012). Despite the wide variation in their business models, the manufacturing processes for the aerospace, electronics, energy and mining, industrial markets, mining and transportation are all orchestrated through a common demand management platform. The ITT demand management platform is predicated on the Demand Driven Supply Network (DDSN) that continues to be instrumental in the transformational of complex manufacturing enterprises (Barrett, 2007). A core aspect of the DDSN model is the optimal use of supply chain locations and their use for minimizing production delays while optimizing quality levels of delivered products.
As the ITT global supply chain has matured over the last two decades, the company has progressed from a centralized approach to…

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References

Barrett, J. (2007). Demand-driven is an operational strategy. Industrial Management, 49(6), 14-19,5.

Boon-itt, S., & Himangshu, P. (2006). A study of supply chain integration in thai automotive industry: A theoretical framework and measurement. Management Research News, 29(4), 194-205.

Gardner, G. (1998). Conglomerate exodus. Ward's Auto World, 34(5), 79-81.

Hofman, D. (2004). The Hierarchy of Supply Chain Metrics. Supply Chain Management Review, 8(6), 28-37.
ITT Investor Relations (2012). Investor Relations. Retrieved December 21, 2012 from ITT Investor Relations and Filings with the SEC Web site: http://www.itt.com/investors/
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