Infosys' experts identify opportunities in the supply chain to reduce the carbon footprint of a consumer product and realize cost savings. They discuss how transportation and logistics provide opportunities to pursue sustainability initiatives and deliver measurable business results.
Sdcexec.com published a story on the challenges of implementing a world-class supply chain in India. In the article, Infosys' Manufacturing and Supply Chain Management expert is...
optimistic about supply chain initiatives in India. According to our expert, increasing consumerization of the middle class is creating demand for higher levels of supply chain capability and driving investment into critical areas.
The logistics business involves managing innumerable moving assets. Infosys partners with logistics companies to ensure it functions like clockwork. RFID Update published a report on...
how we are implementing a global RFID solution for CHEP, a leading provider of pallet and pooling services. The RFID-enabled Returnable Transport Item Tracking solution enables CHEP to manage more than 280 million pallets and containers in a global network of service centers.
Retail, Consumer Products and Logistics companies are evaluating business processes, discovering synergies with partners and moving towards a shared services/outsourced model. They are effecting a business transformation...
through new business models, technology and aggressive use of shared services. Infosys' Sandeep Dadlani and Dinesh Bajaj tell you how CIOs are addressing challenges and navigating the downturn.
Global shipping and logistics firms must partner with a trusted outsourcing partner who has the right mix of expertise in processes, technology and people. They must look for outsourcing solutions that go beyond cost arbitrage...
and which are targeted to alleviate industry-specific pains, Infosys' expert writes in Parcel magazine.
N.R. Narayana Murthy, Chairman & Chief Mentor, Infosys, delivered the keynote speech at the inauguration of the Dell Distinguished Lecture Series at the University of Texas, Austin.
In September, a New York Times article described how companies like Infosys are having many American graduates fly in for six months of training in Bangalore followed by assignment options anywhere in the world, including...
America. Further, AMR Research wrote about Indian companies setting up numerous near-shore delivery centers in US time-zones. There you have it - India is outsourcing outsourcing.
So wrote Mark Twain after learning that a reporter was sent to investigate whether he had died. This quote came to mind upon reading the latest in a recent spate of articles predicting the decline of India as the leading global sourcing destination.
Infosys' former Co-Chairman Nandan Nilekani believes that globally companies are going through a new challenge. "This challenge, in some sense, is similar to what companies went through a hundred years ago. It is a combination...
of demographics, emerging economies, globalization, technology, flat world and regulation. There is a fundamental change in the way companies are run today."