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{{wiktionary|sourcing}}
{{wiktionary|sourcing}}

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In '''business''', the term word '''sourcing''' refers to a number of procurement practices, aimed at finding, evaluating and engaging suppliers of goods and services:
In '''business''', the term word '''sourcing''' refers to a number of procurement practices, aimed at finding, evaluating and engaging suppliers of goods and services:

Revision as of 23:20, 18 April 2013

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In business, the term word sourcing refers to a number of procurement practices, aimed at finding, evaluating and engaging suppliers of goods and services:

  • Outsourcing, the process of contracting a business function to someone else
  • Insourcing, a process of contracting a business function to someone else to be completed in-house
  • Global sourcing, a procurement strategy aimed at exploiting global efficiencies in production
  • Strategic sourcing, a component of supply chain management, for improving and re-evaluating purchasing activities
  • Sourcing (personnel), the identification of job candidates through proactive recruiting technique
  • Co-sourcing, a type of auditing service
  • Low-cost country sourcing, a procurement strategy for acquiring materials from countries with lower labour and production costs in order to cut operating expenses
  • Corporate sourcing, a supply chain, purchasing/procurement, and inventory function
  • Second-tier sourcing, a practice of rewarding suppliers for attempting to achieve minority-owned business spending goals of their customer
  • Netsourcing, a practice of utilizing an established group of businesses, individuals, or hardware & software applications to streamline or initiate procurement practices by tapping in to and working through a third party provider
  • Inverted Sourcing, a price volatility reduction strategy usually conducted by procurement or supply-chain person by which the value of an organization's waste-stream is maximized by actively seeking out the highest price possible from a range of potential buyers exploiting price trends and other market factors
  • Remote Insourcing, a practice of contracting a third party vendor to complete a business function by creating collaborative units between in-house and third party staff
  • Multisourcing, a strategy that treats a given function, such as IT, as a portfolio of activities, some of which should be outsourced and others of which should be performed by internal staff.
  • Crowdsourcing, using an undefined, generally large group of people or community in the form of an open call to perform a task

In journalism, it can also refer to:

In computing, it can refer to:

  • Open-sourcing, the act of releasing previously proprietary software under an open source/free software license
  • Power sourcing equipment, network devices that will provide power in a Power over Ethernet (PoE) setup

In electronics, it can refer to: