Outsourcing White Papers
Aligned Resource Optimization: How to Optimally Allocate Resources in Alignment With Enterprise-Level Objectives
Overview The manufacturing line has been underperforming on one shift due to periodic shortages of staff and materials, and bottlenecks in product inspection. Should the company invest in a just-in-time inventory system, add third-shift staff, reduce the sample size of post-production testing, cut one shift but add a new production line or outsource the more time-consuming processes? In each case, the answer would be, "It depends." The best way to allocate resources depends on the nature of the resources and constraints at hand and the organization's mission.
| Publisher | SAS Institute | File Format | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Date Published | March 2008 | ||
| Format | White Papers | ||
| Topics | |||
True Convergence Demands a Communication Service Provider that Embraces a Customer-Centric Approach
Ensure your service provider's convergence strategy meshes with your enterprise network needs. Respected consulting firm Stratecast, a division of Frost & Sullivan, outlines the six customer-centric attributes that should be at...
Why Print Management Matters
Print Management provides a breakthrough answer to today's top business challenge: reducing overhead without harming productivity. Jim Salzer of DocuAudit Intl. shows how Print Management allows you to control documentation...
Managed Print Services and Beyond: How You Can Cut Costs and Go Green While Increasing Employee Productivity
Did you know that print costs typically consume 3% of total revenue for businesses today? For many organizations, this is nearly equivalent to the amount spent on research and development...
Succession Planning: Five Costly Errors to Avoid
This white paper shows you how to avoid five of the most common --- and costly -- errors when embarking on a succession planning initiative. You'll learn: How a lack of...
Web Conferencing for Better Collaboration and Reduced Travel
"Tell me and I'll forget. Show me and I might remember. Involve me and I'll understand." Hear Robert P. Mahowald, IDC research



