Vendor: Difference between revisions
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A vendor, or a supplier, is a [[supply chain management]] term that means anyone who provides goods or services to a company or individuals. A vendor often manufactures [[inventory|inventoriable]] items, and sells those items to a [[customer]]. |
A vendor, or a supplier, is a [[supply chain management]] term that means anyone who provides goods or services to a company or individuals. A vendor often manufactures [[inventory|inventoriable]] items, and sells those items to a [[customer]]. |
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Typically vendors are tracked in eEFDFDFDFither a [[Accounting software|finance system]] or a [[warehouse management system]]. |
Typically vendors are tracked in eEFDFDFDFither a [[Accounting software|finance system]] or a [[warehouse management system]].FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF |
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Vendors are often managed with a vendor compliance checklist or vendor [[quality audit]]s. |
Vendors are often managed with a vendor compliance checklist or vendor [[quality audit]]s. |
Revision as of 02:27, 14 January 2014
A vendor, or a supplier, in a supply chain is an enterprise that contributes goods or services in a supply chain. Generally, a supply chain vendor manufactures inventory/stock items and sells them to the next link in the chain.
History
The term vendors originally represented property vendors.[1] However, today it means a supplier of any good or service. A vendor, or a supplier, is a supply chain management term that means anyone who provides goods or services to a company or individuals. A vendor often manufactures inventoriable items, and sells those items to a customer.
Typically vendors are tracked in eEFDFDFDFither a finance system or a warehouse management system.FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
Vendors are often managed with a vendor compliance checklist or vendor quality audits.
Purchase orders are usually used as a contractual agreement with vendors to buy goods or services.
Vendors may or may not function as distributors of goods. They may or may not function as manufacturers of goods. If vendors are also manufacturers, they may either build to stock or build to order.
'Vendor' is often a generic term, used for suppliers of industries from retail sales to manufacturers to city organizations. 'Vendor' generally applies only to the immediate vendor, or the organization that is paid for the goods, rather than to the original manufacturer or the organization performing the service if it is different from the immediate supplier.[2]