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Editor’s Note: Photo
available upon request.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Prashant Yadav, a University of Alabama
management science doctoral candidate, has received the
University of Arkansas’ Supply Chain Management Research
Center’s Doctoral Dissertation Proposal Award in supply chain
management.
“The purpose of the award is to encourage, recognize and
reward individuals involved in pursuit of a doctoral degree in
supply chain management,” said James Crowell, director of the
SCMRC.
Yadav’s dissertation focuses on collaborative forecasting
and supply chain contracts. His idea stemmed from his work in
March of 2001 with the Alabama Productivity Center and its
client, McGriff Industries. The Alabama Productivity Center is a
non profit organization focused on stimulating economic
development within the state of Alabama through University
research and educational resources. The McGriff Treading
Company, located in Cullman, manufactures and sells retreaded
truck tires.
McGriff Treading started a service called McGriff Tire
Management Solution, which provides a complete service to
trucking fleets covering retreading, maintenance, and repair of
tires for a fixed annual fee. To ensure that the fleet operator
actively participates in reducing tire costs, the contract
specifies that the two parties share any savings realized due to
the fleet operator’s participation.
By designing the contract carefully, McGriff Tire Management
Solution aligns the incentives of the retreader and the fleet
operator. The Alabama Productivity Center aided McGriff in
establishing the contract parameters and quantifying the value
proposition for the initial offerings of this service. Yadav
then contributed to an article about the McGriff project that
has been accepted for publication.
“This experience spurred my academic interest in the area
of two parties collaborating for one objective and the need to
have an incentive structure to do it,” said Yadav. With his
experience in hand, Yadav shifted focus to collaborative
forecasting between retailers and manufacturers/suppliers.
He began the research for his dissertation in the summer of
2001 with the help of Dr. Chuck Schmidt, professor of management
science. Supply chain management and incentive structures that
induce cooperation of the whole chain are a hot area right now,
said Schmidt.
“What’s unique to Prashant is his focus on
forecasting,” said Schmidt.
Yadav hypothesizes that return policies that allow retailers
to return unsold merchandise at the end of the season for full
or substantial refund can discourage collaborative forecasting.
“Retailers don’t have an incentive to forecast or
collaborate with suppliers unless there is some value to
them,” said Yadav. “My on-going research focuses on
contracts that offer the best options for both parties, such as
a partial return policy.”
This research prompted Yadav to apply for the University of
Arkansas’ SCMRC Doctoral Dissertation Proposal Award. The
SCMRC, located in the Sam M. Walton College of Business on the
main campus of the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, is a
research center and serves as a direct link between the private
sector and university resources. The number of applicants
typically ranges from 8-14 for this particular award, said
Crowell.
“The number of applicants is determined by the number of
people ready to participate at the time of the evaluation… we
have a distribution list of over 100 programs.”
The evaluation process consists of 8-10 reviewers, all
faculty from different universities. The evaluation criterion
includes: contribution to supply chain management; likelihood of
completing dissertation; theoretical basis for research; and
appropriateness of research design. “The reason this award
exists is to promote scholarship in the area of supply chain
management …there are not enough supply chain graduates,”
said Crowell.
Past recipients of the award include doctoral candidates from
The University of Tennessee and Ohio State.
Yadav was recognized for his accomplishment at the Annual
Council of Logistics Management Conference in Chicago. He
receives a $5,000 monetary grant paid directly to him in two
installments upon receipt of the final research proposal and
upon receipt of the completed, bound dissertation that has been
approved by his dissertation committee.
“Receiving this award represents the degree to which
leading supply chain management academics felt Prashant
Yadav’s dissertation will contribute to supply chain
management,” Crowell said.
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