Triniti Now Member Of Supply Chain Council
03/09/2004
Triniti Corp., a provider of business process consulting, services and engineered solutions for the technology manufacturing and semiconductor industries, has joined the Supply-Chain Council (SCC), an independent, not-for-profit, global corporation with membership open to all companies and organizations interested in applying and advancing the state-of-the-art in supply-chain management systems and practices.
"The Supply-Chain Council is pleased to welcome Triniti Corp. as a new member," said Bill Hakanson, Executive Director, Supply-Chain Council. "The organization will benefit from their participation and the experience they bring in real world supply chain implementations."
The Supply-Chain Council is interested in providing the widest possible dissemination of the SCOR-model. The wide-spread use of the Model results in better customer-supplier relationships, software systems that can better support members through the use of common measurements and terms, and the ability to rapidly recognize and adopt best practice no matter where it originates, Triniti says.
"Global Companies are looking to drive competitive supply chain performance," said Triniti Marketing Director Darren Stordahl. "Working with the Supply Chain Council to apply and extend the Supply-Chain Operations Reference-model (SCOR) will directly benefit our customers by improving their ability to monitor key business metrics throughout an implementation. This helps to keep the focus in the right place; improving business performance."
By providing products, services and solutions, Triniti “helps global companies improve productivity and optimize supply chain performance,” Triniti notes. “Triniti solutions tie together disparate business data and systems, giving customers a consolidated, real-time view of enterprise-wide activity.
“Triniti uses a disciplined approach to project management that helps the team accommodate evolving business considerations during the configuration and integration of enterprise resource planning (ERP); advanced planning and scheduling (APS); and packaged or legacy manufacturing execution systems (MES). This unique approach provides cost-effective implementations that meet the specific needs of high tech manufacturing and semiconductor companies,” the company concludes.