supply chain ism scm future leaders
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Supply Chain Management Careers
Richard Bagley MBA, CPSM, PMPDirector, SCO CommercializationIntermountain HealthcareEmail: [email protected]: 801.442.3672
Richard currently leads Intermountain Healthcare’s Supply Chain Business Development Office. He is responsible to lead commercialization efforts of the Supply Chain. He leads the supply chain efforts to be a model in the industry and share supply chain best practices. He has lead major award winning supply chain initiatives like our procurement transformation efforts. Prior to his current role, he led the sourcing and contracting teams at Intermountain.
Prior to joining Intermountain, Richard served as a program manager for Siemens, a senior software engineer for 3M Health Information Systems and a commissioned officer in the Army. He is a graduate from the University of Utah with a degree in computer science and also has a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Phoenix where he has taught information system courses part time.
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About Intermountain HealthcareA Large, Integrated Health System with a Tradition of Innovation
Hospitals
• 1975 Began• 22 Hospitals• 2,700 Beds • 1983 Started
• SelectHealth• 900,000 Members
Health Plans Medical Group• 1994 Started• 1,400 Employed
physicians• 4,000 Affiliated
physicians• 185+ Clinics
38,000 employees$2 B non-labor spendAA+ Standard & Poor’sAa1
Moody’s
Based in Salt Lake City, Utah
Helping people live the healthiest lives possible TM
Continuum Care
• TeleHealth• Homecare• Life Flight• Central lab• Central pharmacy
Intalere• 1986 Started• 2015 Ownership• Commercial platform• $8B Spend GPO
Intermountain Healthcare
Charge: “Be a Model Health System”
“We aspire to be a model healthcare supply chain for Intermountain and other
healthcare related organizations, through
collaboration and passionate pursuit of
industry best practices to enhance every dimension of
care”
Intermountain Supply Chain Aim
PLAN SOURCE MAKEDELIVER
https://www.swtc.edu/academics/programs/business/supply-chain-management
Typical Supply Chain Operating Model
Supplier CollaborationCustomer Collaboration
Intermountain Supply Chain Operating Model
SUPPLIERNETWORK
SCM PROCESS
CLINICAL CARE NETWORKProducers Patients
Plan
Source
Purchase
Deliver
Pay
Supply Chain Services
One Simple T-Shirt?
Think Again!
Small Group Exercise
Consider a recent T-shirt purchase • Where did you buy it?• Where did that company get it?• How far “upstream” in the life of a T-shirt can you go?• Be sure to include all companies that will “touch” the shirt
Organize into small groups and “map” a T-shirt supply chain
Crude Oil(Venezuela)
Polyester Fiber
Refined Petroleum
Yarn(Indonesia)
Fabric(Bangladesh)
Cotton(US)
Packaging
Ryan, J. C., & Durning, A. T. (1997). Stuff: The Secret Lives of Everyday Things., Planet Money
Cotton Fiber(Indonesia)
T-shirt Assembly
(Bangladesh)Printing
(US)
Cardboard box (US)
PolyesterBag (Mexico)
Distribution
YOU
Why Have a Supply Chain CareerMany Different
Jobs and Experiences
Very Connected Industry
Opportunities to travel the world
In High Demandand Great Career
advancement
Make a difference
PLAN SOURCE MAKE DELIVER
Careers in Supply Chain
Forecasting & Planning
Demand plannerSupply plannerMaterials plannerMaster scheduler
Customer Service
Sales order managementCustomer service manager
Purchasing Operations Logistics
Category ManagerSourcing managerAnalystBuyerContract ManagementSupplier Quality Engineer
Inventory plannerExpeditorProduction plannerPlant manager
AnalystLogistics engineerTransport schedulerExport/Import manager
Warehouse & Distribution
Warehouse managerMaintenance managerDistribution process manager
Where Do I Start?• Education
– Bachelors degree in supply chain– Masters degree for director and above (business or
supply chain)• Internships
– Get as many experiences in supply you can• Network (industry groups and conferences)
– Institute of Supply Management (ISM), SIG, AHRMM, etc
• Starting Jobs– Buyer, Planner, Analyst, Warehouse
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