An International Society to Extend and Integrate Knowledge Pertaining to Production and Operations Management

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Special Issue of Production and Operations Management


Call for Papers

POM Research on Emerging Markets

Co-editors of special issue: Ananth Iyer, Hau Lee and Aleda Roth
Deadline: December 1, 2008
Over the past decade, there has been increasing interest in operations and supply chain management (O&SCM) issues pertaining to entry and practice in emerging market economies. The term emerging markets came to the limelight during the 90’s and is now widely used to describe countries that have reached a minimum level of GDP and are in the growth phases of their market and economic development cycles.. China and India have been among the most significant emerging markets in the Asia Pacific region and globally overall due to their sheer size and market growth potential, and others like Vietnam in the region are on the rise. However, emerging markets in Eastern Europe, South and Latin America, and most recently, Africa are also of importance to operations and global supply chain management.
Much of the extant academic literature falls in the strategic management and economic domains and cover the broader issues of globalization that have been enabled by the convergence of information and communication technologies, the drive for growth in new markets and resources, and the broad-based perceived need to lower costs. In contrast, O&SCM literature is scant, consisting of qualitative descriptions and anecdotal cases. Much more needs to be done in the way of applying robust research methods in O&SCM to build theory and guide practice. There is a dire need to develop theoretical explanations that underlie the challenges, the opportunities and the decisions regarding O&SCM in emerging markets.
The O&SCM topics pertaining to emerging markets are many. Two of the most prominent “meta” areas include ‘outsourcing’ and ‘offshoring’ to emerging markets. Here outsourcing covers the turning over the production of parts, components, systems, and services – and even full production of finished products or complete services -- to another firm; whereas offshoring (or offcounty) broadly refers to a company’s moving of its own production and services to another country and/or establishing business operations in the emerging market. Outsourcing and offshoring have been studied extensively in the context of industrialized nations. Yet there is a dire need for further exploration as outsourcing and/or offshoring intensify in emerging markets, where there are substantially more operational risks due to factors like market and financial volatility; cultural, legal, fiscal, and geographic distances; quality fade; supply disruptions; infrastructural challenges; lack of transparency and performance measurement problems; differences in worker norms and business relationships and contracts; and leverage and exposure to financial and operational resources, etc.
Our ultimate goal is to foster the development of a coherent, cumulative body of O&SCM knowledge in emerging markets. Toward this end, we invite manuscripts that rigorously apply analytical methods and empirical science that are of strategic importance to understanding manufacturing and service operations and supply chain management problems and that will stimulate future research. We seek high-quality research that contributes to analytic insights, algorithm development, theory-building and testing. Manuscripts will be judged solely on the relative merits of their contribution to the production and operations management literature, the depth and completeness of thought and ideas that are presented, the integration of the research with the O&SC and other related literature and theory, the quality of the research design and model, the support for the stated contributions, and the clarity and writing quality. Manuscripts that are inappropriate will be promptly returned. In short, we strive for papers that ask, “What’s interesting and important for O&SCM in emerging markets?” which serve to accelerate development of our field more broadly.

All submissions must adhere to the format, style and other established guidelines for regular POM submissions. Manuscripts must be submitted by December 1, 2008. Authors should note that in submitting a manuscript to be reviewed for this special issue, they may be invited to serve as potential reviewers for other manuscripts.

O&SCM topics that are of interest for this special issue on emerging markets include but are not limited to:

• Operational risks including supply disruptions, performance measurement, hidden costs, complexity, and tradeoffs
• Models examining outsourcing and offshoring
• Contracts used in emerging economies
• Outsourcing and procurement management
• Collaboration approaches for design, development and manufacturing
• Service/product strategies for culturally diverse customers
• Quality management, certification, compliance strategies
• Logistics outsourcing and partnerships
• Service supply chains
• Alignment of competitive environments, capabilities and O&SCM strategies
• Governance structures and corporate social responsibility in offshoring and/or outsourcing
• Cultural and organizational issues in behavioral operations

Please submit an electronic copy to any one of the editors:

Iyer, Ananth V [aiyer@purdue.edu]
Lee, Hau [haulee@stanford.edu]
Roth, Aleda [aroth@clemson.edu]


Special Issue of Production and Operations Management (POM) on OPERATIONS IN FINANCIAL SERVICES

Guest Editors

Manos Hatzakis
Global Equities, Merrill Lynch & Co.
manos_hatzakis@ml.com

Suresh Nair
Department of Operations and Information Management, University of Connecticut
suresh.nair@business.uconn.edu

Michael Pinedo
Department of Information, Operations and Management Science,
Stern School of Management, New York University
mpinedo@stern.nyu.edu

Over the last two decades the financial services industry has undergone major transformations. Firms in financial services have started to realize that, in order to stay competitive and survive they have to pay serious attention to their operations. This applies to all facets of financial services, such as retail, commercial, investment, and trust banking, securities and commodities brokerage, investment advisory, consumer lending (e.g., mortgages and credit cards), and insurance. There is now a focus on productivity and profitability, total quality management and operational risk.

We seek high quality papers on the topics listed below using both analytical and empirical research approaches. The papers should demonstrate relevance to practice.

The topics of interest include:
• Operations in Retail Banking, Check Processing (Check21), Cash and Liquidity Management, Applications of DEA, Payables discounting, Treasury operations
• Operations in the Credit Card Industry, Mailing, Remittance Processing, Collections
• Operations in the Insurance Industry, Claims Handling, Loss Forecasting and Reserving
• Operations in the Brokerage Industry, Trade Execution, Clearing and Allocations, Capture and Settlements, Controls
• Investment Banking Operations, Liquidity management, Cross-border securities processing, Reconciliations, E-trends
• Electronic Markets
• Operational Risk
• Productivity and Profitability in Financial Services
• Marketing/Operations interface in Financial Services
• Service Delivery Excellence, Technology and Quality

Papers will be refereed and conform to the standards of the journal. The target time for the issue to appear is late 2009.

Schedule:
• Manuscript submission deadline: June 1, 2008 (Revised)
• Due date first review round: September 1, 2008
• Due date first revision: February 1, 2009
• Final paper acceptance decision: June 1, 2009

Submissions can be sent by e-mail to any one of the three guest editors.

Dear Colleagues:

Production and Operations Management Society (POMS) had been outsourcing the printing (type setting, printing and mailing) of its journal Production and Operations Management (POM) to Cadmus. However, with digitalization, publishers with a large portfolio of journals have some inherent advantages in both production and marketing. This is one of the reasons for many professional societies like ours to outsource production and marketing of their journals from large commercial publishers. POMS Board has, therefore, been considering outsourcing marketing and production of our journal to an outside vendor with strong marketing infrastructure.

Over the last one year, several publishers expressed interest in production and marketing of POM and sent their proposals. A committee, headed by VP publications, reviewed these proposals and recommended to the Board that The Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS) will meet our requirements and is the most suitable alternative for outsourcing the production and marketing of our journal. The Executive Committee of POMS Board also supported VP publications’ recommendations. Based on these recommendations and analyzing both administrative and academic aspects of the proposal, POMS Board has approved to enter into an agreement with INFORMS.

Starting in 2008, INFORMS will be responsible for marketing and production of our Journal. INFORMS will do the type setting and use Cadmus, our current printer, for printing and mailing. INFORMS will be responsible for marketing our journal only to libraries and institutional subscribers. INFORMS will include our journal in its marketing campaigns along with its own journals.

Academic aspects of our journal will remain unchanged and POMS will have full control on editorial, fiduciary, and business matters. POM will remain a POMS journal, and will not become an INFORMS journal. POMS Executive Office will continue to manage the subscription of journal of individual members of POMS. Our account manager at Cadmus will remain the same, and the authors will send the request for reprints of their papers to the same address that they are using now. Authors will be submitting papers for review to POMS’ area editors as per the current practice. Authors of accepted papers will, however, receive page proofs from INFORMS

This agreement between two well reputed sister organizations is for mutual benefit. This collaboration is expected to provide economies of scale thus lowering costs and increasing revenues. POMS expect to widen its Journal’s reach in the international market because of the infrastructure available with INFORMS.

If you have any questions or comments, please send an email to me at poms@fiu.edu or to the journal editor-in-chief, Kalyan Singhal at ksinghal@ubalt.edu.

Sushil K. Gupta
Executive Director, POMS

Guest Editors: Wedad J. Elmaghraby and Christopher S. Tang

Deadline for submission: December 31, 2007:

Continue reading "Special Issue of Production and Operations Management on Operations Management in Business-to-Business Markets: Practice and Research" »

Call for Papers
Special Issue of Production and Operations Management on
Marketing and Operations Management Interfaces and Coordination

Guest Editors: Teck H. Ho and Christopher S. Tang

Continue reading "Call for Papers: Special Issue on "OM-Marketing Interface"" »

Guest editors
Fabrizio Salvador, Instituto de Empresa Business School, SPAIN
M. Johnny Rungtusanatham, University of Minnesota – Twin Cities, USA
Cipriano Forza, Università di Padova, ITALY

Continue reading "Call for Papers: Special Issue on "Mass Customization"" »

Production and Operations Management is now on Business Week’s list of 20 premier journals (please see below). Business Week uses publications in these 20 journals as one of the three factors for ranking of MBA programs in business schools. The list has 14 research journals and six ethics or practice journals.

Production and Operations Management now joins flagship journals in other disciplines. All other 13 research journals are regarded as flagship research journals in other disciplines by almost every business school: accounting (2 journals), administrative sciences (2), economics (1), finance (2), information systems (1), marketing (2), MS/OR (2), and strategic management (1). Until now operations management was the only discipline missing in the Business Week list.

THE BUSINESS WEEK LIST OF JOURNALS

RESEARCH JOURNALS
American Economic Review
Accounting Review
Journal of Accounting Research
Academy of Management Journal
Academy of Management Review
Journal of Finance
Journal of Financial Economics
Journal of Marketing
Journal of Marketing Research
Management Science
Operations Research
Information Systems Research
Production & Operations Management
Strategic Management Journal

PRACTICE AND ETHICS JOURNALS
The Harvard Business Review
California Management Review
Sloan Management Journal
Journal of Business Logistics
Personal Psychology
Journal of Business Ethics