


Logistics & Kanban
• Logistics oversees the end-to-end flow of materials, from raw stock intake to finished goods distribution. It involves inventory control, warehouse management, shipping, receiving, and supplier coordination.
• Kanban is a lean scheduling system that signals production or replenishment needs using visual cues (cards, bins, or digital systems). It reduces overproduction and promotes just-in-time delivery, enhancing throughput and minimizing inventory waste. Kanban works well in repetitive manufacturing environments and supports continuous improvement (Kaizen).
• Logistics oversees the end-to-end flow of materials, from raw stock intake to finished goods distribution. It involves inventory control, warehouse management, shipping, receiving, and supplier coordination.
• Kanban is a lean scheduling system that signals production or replenishment needs using visual cues (cards, bins, or digital systems). It reduces overproduction and promotes just-in-time delivery, enhancing throughput and minimizing inventory waste. Kanban works well in repetitive manufacturing environments and supports continuous improvement (Kaizen).
• Logistics oversees the end-to-end flow of materials, from raw stock intake to finished goods distribution. It involves inventory control, warehouse management, shipping, receiving, and supplier coordination.
• Kanban is a lean scheduling system that signals production or replenishment needs using visual cues (cards, bins, or digital systems). It reduces overproduction and promotes just-in-time delivery, enhancing throughput and minimizing inventory waste. Kanban works well in repetitive manufacturing environments and supports continuous improvement (Kaizen).