Skip to main content

ISCEA: Demand Management in a Demand Driven Supply Chain

Learn how a Make-and-Sell organization can become Demand-Driven through sensing demand signals, analyzing consumer demand data in real time, improving short-term forecast accuracy, and articulating an effective supply network response. By the end of the course, you will also become well versed in demand shaping and automated replenishment programs that reduce shortages and increase profitability.

Part of the ISCEA CFDP - Certified Forecaster and Demand Planner - Internationally Recognized Certificate.

Demand Management in a Demand Driven Supply Chain
4 weeks
2–8 hours per week
Self-paced
Progress at your own speed
Free
Optional upgrade available

There is one session available:

After a course session ends, it will be archivedOpens in a new tab.
Starts Apr 18
Ends Sep 1

About this course

Skip About this course

In today’s environment where customers, needs, markets and product portfolios change rapidly; planning the future based on historical data alone is simply not good enough. Demand-driven supply chain management is less likely to be negatively affected by procurement and supply disruptions, demand variability and volatility, short product lifecycle, and frequent new product releases.

Learn how demand-driven supply chains are capable to identify customer needs and use point of sale data; sensing actual demand to provide an adequate response through demand-driven supply chain processes and providing customers with high service levels without holding high inventory levels and incurring in high fulfillment costs.

By the end of this course, that is part of the edX Professional Certificate program to become a Certified Forecaster and Demand Planner (CFDP), you will be able to apply demand-driven supply chain techniques and approaches That include: Demand sensing, demand signal management, data analysis, demand shaping, automated inventory replenishment programs, and Demand Driven Materials Requirement Planning - DDMRP.

CFDP certified professionals are globally preferred by recruiters for decision making positions because they can improve demand planning business processes, implementing collaborative practices that include both providers and retailers to integrate the global supply chain.

At a glance

  • Language: English
  • Video Transcript: English
  • Associated skills:Demand Sensing, Product Lifecycle, Business Process, Decision Making, Supply Chain Management, Procurement, Point Of Sale, Supply Chain, Planning, New Product Development, Demand Planning, Demand Management

What you'll learn

Skip What you'll learn
  • How a Make-and-Sell organization can become Demand-Driven
  • How Demand Sensing and Data Analysis can improve Supply Chain Response.
  • How to improve forecasting with downstream data and demand sensing
  • How to improve supply chain responsiveness with automated replenishment programs
  • How reorder point replenishment policies compare to DDMRP (Demand Driven Materials Requirement Planning) inventory buffers

Section 3.1. Demand driven supply chain framework

3.1.1. Demand-driven supply chain fundamentals

3.1.2. Reasons to become demand-driven

3.1.3. Make-and-sell vs Demand-driven organizations

Section 3.2. Demand sensing

3.2.1. Demand sensing fundamentals

3.2.2. Demand signals

3.2.3. Demand sensing examples

Section 3.3. Improving forecasting with POS data and demand sensing

3.3.1. Demand sensing data

3.3.2. Demand signal repositories

3.3.3. Impact of demand sensing in planning

Section 3.4. Principles of data analysis

3.4.1. Building a competitive advantage through analytics

3.4.2. Overview of data analysis methods

3.4.3. Data analysis drivers and benefits

3.4.4. Developing a data culture

Section 3.5. Supply chain response

3.5.1. Supply chain responsiveness

3.5.2. Demand shaping

3.5.3. Automated replenishment programs

Section 3.6. Introduction to Demand Driven Materials Requirement Planning– DDMRP

3.6.1. MRP evolution

3.6.2. Demand-Driven MRP

3.6.3. ROP replenishment policies vs DDMRP

Frequently Asked Questions

Skip Frequently Asked Questions

How will this course get me closer to become an ISCEA Certified Forecaster and Demand Planner - CFDP?

  • This course is one of 3 courses required to become a CFDP. The completion of the following courses is required to take the CFDP Certification Exam:
    • CFDP01: Improving Supply Chain Performance through Demand Planning
    • CFDP02: Forecasting Techniques for Slow and Rapidly Changing Demand
    • CFDP03: Demand Management in a Demand Driven Supply Chain
  • After completing the three courses you have to pass the Certification Exam to earn the CFDP designation:
    • CFDP-EXAM: Certified Forecaster and Demand Planner - CFDP - Certification Exam

This course is part of Certified Forecaster and Demand Planner (CFDP) Professional Certificate Program

Learn more 
Expert instruction
4 skill-building courses
3 months
2 - 8 hours per week

Interested in this course for your business or team?

Train your employees in the most in-demand topics, with edX For Business.