Eastman Chemical Company: implementing TQM through internal market focus

2002 ◽  
pp. 237-245
Author(s):  
P AHMED
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Greenwood ◽  
Askin Guler Yigitoglu ◽  
Jordan Rader ◽  
Whitney Tharp ◽  
Willis Poore III ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Allison Elias ◽  
Tim Kraft ◽  
Gal Raz

This case is used in Darden’s Supply-Chain Operations elective. The field-based case gives supply-chain educators the ability to teach the newsvendor model with pricing under a capacity constraint using real-life decisions. By 2005, Eastman Chemical Company, based in Tennessee, had created a new specialty plastic, Tritan, which demonstrated heat resistance and durability properties that might allow Eastman to compete in the lucrative polycarbonate plastics market. Development of this product was a major breakthrough for both Eastman and the broader chemical industry. The Eastman specialty plastics team had to contend with numerous challenges, however, before producing Tritan at full scale. First, Eastman had to commercialize a completely new material that only had been produced in the lab; second, the team had to develop a supply chain to manufacture a new component (monomer) and a new product (polymer) simultaneously; and finally, it had to analyze market entrance options given capacity constraints. Thus, the specialty plastics team faced several dilemmas: who should the initial launch partners be, given Eastman’s limited manufacturing capacity, and how aggressively should Eastman price Tritan, given that price would drive demand in the launch markets and in new markets?


2004 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 93-107 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Yen ◽  
Ali Farhoomand ◽  
Pauline Ng

Craig Knight, Asia Pacific Digital Business and Customer Services Manager of Eastman Chemical Company, was given a mandate to sell Eastman's philosophy for an integrated electronic supply chain, otherwise known as the Integrated System Solution (ISS), to its business partners in the region, and to encourage adoption. Having invested in a state-of-the-art technical architecture that would support interconnectivity with all parties along the supply chain, Eastman was keen to realise the full benefits to be gained from an integrated e-supply chain on a global scale. Following numerous rounds of discussion with key business partners in the Asia Pacific region, some progress had been made. Nagase & Co., Ltd. of Japan had agreed to adopt ISS connections with Eastman, but had some reservations regarding the extent of integration. Although the benefits of integration were proven, suppliers, customers, distributors and other interested parties were faced with numerous limitations and considerations that would have significant implications on their established business processes and even the shaping of their corporate strategy. Adoption was not a simple choice. Craig understood these shortcomings and was making every effort to ease the adoption process by identifying the longer-term benefits to Nagase and other business partners of applying XML technology to their businesses.


1992 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph R. Zoeller ◽  
Victor H. Agreda ◽  
Steven L. Cook ◽  
Norma L. Lafferty ◽  
Stanley W. Polichnowski ◽  
...  

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