How does your company SCOR? March 10, 2008
Posted by Meg Suggs in Analytics and Business Intelligence.Tags: SCOR, scorecards, supply chains
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I recently joined a networking community for bloggers on a website called MyBlogLog, and stumbled upon this great blog called The Bee Hive. One of Ibrahim’s past posts, SCOR Metrics—Is It Enough?, goes through the history of SCOR and explains how it fits in with today’s scorecards.
It’s as easy as 1, 2, 3 March 4, 2008
Posted by Meg Suggs in Actionable Intelligence, Analytics and Business Intelligence, Inovis Solutions, Supply Chain Visibility.Tags: Actionable Intelligence, EDI, Erik Huddleston, green supply chain, logistics, Supply Chain Visibility
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This morning I was reading a piece entitled Adding Green to the Picture that actually features Inovis’ own blogger and Vice President of Product and Strategic Applications, Erik Huddleston. This article is about how achieving a green supply chain may be easier than you think.
What is your emotional intelligence? February 21, 2008
Posted by Jim Eberle in Analytics and Business Intelligence.Tags: Daniel Goleman, Emotional Leadership, Primal Leadership, Rich St. Denis
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My good friend (author and trainer) Rich St. Denis recently e-mailed me to let me know that he would be visiting ESPN in the near future to speak about Emotional Intelligence. Rich (richstdenis@earthlink.net) has created a number of courses about EI and has developed this into an art. About fifteen years ago, Rich and I sat down over multiple cups of coffee and talked about all sorts of things related to and about emotional intelligence to include the questions leaders should ask themselves. Rich and I understand that Emotional Intelligence is something that takes years to master and is a critical component to being a good leader.
No Singing in Singapore February 14, 2008
Posted by Joseph Boyle in Analytics and Business Intelligence.Tags: business collaboration, Oddly Enough News, Singapore Complaints Choir
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Image Credit: http://www.complaintschoir.org
I recently read an article about a choir in Singapore that was going to sing about a bunch of complaints that they had about how things were going in Singapore, but had to cancel at the last minute. The reason they had to cancel was that their demonstration license stipulated that in order to participate in the event, you had to be a citizen, and their conductor was foreign. You’re probably wondering what this has to do with e-commerce.
