This logistic flow chart sample shows a board design for the beer distribution game.
It was designed on the base of the Wikimedia Commons file: Beer Distribution Game Board.JPG. [commons.wikimedia.org/ wiki/ File:Beer_ Distribution_ Game_ Board.JPG]
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license. [creativecommons.org/ licenses/ by-sa/ 3.0/ deed.en]
"The beer distribution game (also known as the beer game) is an experiential learning business simulation game created by a group of professors at MIT Sloan School of Management in early 1960s to demonstrate a number of key principles of supply chain management. The game is played by teams of at least four players, often in heated competition, and takes at least one hour to complete. A debriefing session of roughly equivalent length typically follows to review the results of each team and discuss the lessons involved.
The purpose of the game is to understand the distribution side dynamics of a multi-echelon supply chain used to distribute a single item, in this case, cases of beer." [Beer distribution game. Wikipedia]
The logistic flowchart example "Beer distribution game" was created using ConceptDraw PRO diagramming and vector drawing software extended with the Logistics Flow Charts solution from the Business Processes area of ConceptDraw Solution Park.
It was designed on the base of the Wikimedia Commons file: Beer Distribution Game Board.JPG. [commons.wikimedia.org/ wiki/ File:Beer_ Distribution_ Game_ Board.JPG]
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license. [creativecommons.org/ licenses/ by-sa/ 3.0/ deed.en]
"The beer distribution game (also known as the beer game) is an experiential learning business simulation game created by a group of professors at MIT Sloan School of Management in early 1960s to demonstrate a number of key principles of supply chain management. The game is played by teams of at least four players, often in heated competition, and takes at least one hour to complete. A debriefing session of roughly equivalent length typically follows to review the results of each team and discuss the lessons involved.
The purpose of the game is to understand the distribution side dynamics of a multi-echelon supply chain used to distribute a single item, in this case, cases of beer." [Beer distribution game. Wikipedia]
The logistic flowchart example "Beer distribution game" was created using ConceptDraw PRO diagramming and vector drawing software extended with the Logistics Flow Charts solution from the Business Processes area of ConceptDraw Solution Park.
Example of DFD for Online Store (Data Flow Diagram)
Data Flow Diagram (DFD) is a methodology of graphical structural analysis and information systems design, which describes the sources external in respect to the system, recipients of data, logical functions, data flows and data stores that are accessed. DFDs allow to identify relationships between various system's components and are effectively used in business analysis and information systems analysis. They are useful for system’s high-level details modeling, to show how the input data are transformed to output results via the sequence of functional transformations. For description of DFD diagrams are uses two notations — Yourdon and Gane-Sarson, which differ in syntax. Online Store DFD example illustrates the Data Flow Diagram for online store, the interactions between Customers, Visitors, Sellers, depicts User databases and the flows of Website Information. ConceptDraw DIAGRAM enhanced with Data Flow Diagrams solution lets you to draw clear and simple example of DFD for Online Store using special libraries of predesigned DFD symbols.