INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OPERATIONS & PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT
Abstract
Supply chain management (SCM) is conceived by academics and practitioners as
either an extension of logistics or an all-encompassing approach to business integration. From the
authors' point of view, SCM involves not only logistic activities but also other processes such as
quality management. This paper seeks to understand how quality can be managed using a supply
chain perspective and what the operative and strategic consequences are for both the individual
companies and the whole supply network. It reports a case study conducted on Marzotto, an
important Italian textile and apparel company, and its supply chain relationships. The study
compares the quality practices in the two different kinds of supply network of which Marzotto is
the focal firm. One is managed using a traditional customer-supplier approach and the other a
broader and more co-ordinated perspective. In the latter case, it was found that the whole supply
network could improve its ability to meet the expectations of the final consumer in terms of quality
through the joint definition and co-management of quality practices/procedures.