Recent Reports


2010-07-12: Wireless Communications and Telecom Equipment Report
3 leading Analysts; and top management from 13 Sector Firms examine this vital industry in this 64 page report from The Wall Street Transcript.
Order this Report
More Information

2010-03-22: Data Hosting & Data Storage Report
2 leading Analysts; and top management from 5 Sector Firms examine this vital industry in this 32 page report from The Wall Street Transcript.
More Information
Order this Report

2010-03-08: Business & Application Software Report
12 leading Analysts; and top management from 14 Sector Firms examine this vital industry in this 119 page report from The Wall Street Transcript.
More Information
Order this Report

2010-02-22: Semiconductors, Semiconductor Equipment & EDA Software Report
4 leading Analysts; and top management from 4 Sector Firms examine this vital industry in this 29 page report from The Wall Street Transcript.
More Information
Order this Report

2010-01-25: Internet Services Report
7 leading Analysts; and top management from 6 Sector Firms examine this vital industry in this 50 page report from The Wall Street Transcript.
More Information
Order this Report

2009-11-02: Telecommunications Services & Equipment Report
3 leading Analysts; and top management from 3 Sector Firms examine this vital industry in this 20 page report from The Wall Street Transcript.
More Information
Order this Report

2009-10-19: Online And Direct To Consumer Retailing Report
6 leading Analysts; and top management from 3 Sector Firms examine this vital industry in this 38 page report from The Wall Street Transcript.
More Information
Order this Report

09.21.09: Alternative Energy/Clean Energy/Power Generation/Utilities Report
1 roundtable, 7 analysts and 15 sector firms examine the energy and utilties segment in this 83 page report from The Wall Street Transcript.
More Information
Order this Report

Search TWST Online

TWST Newsletter

Give us your email address and receive the TWST Newsletter.


Company Interview Excerpt
AMAR SINGH – AMITIVE, INC.


Full article published: 10/20/2008


For Subscribers

Get this article online now!

Order just this article
TWST: May we start with a short history and overview of your company?
Mr. Singh: Amitive was founded in early 2002 by Mitsui, a large Japanese company with about 200 business units that offers supply chain outsourcing and services for manufacturing companies. The company was looking for a supply chain solution with which to manage customer communities. Mitsui built a solution in house and a few years later decided to spin it off as an independent company, now called Amitive. In August 2006, the Silicon Valley VCs, CMEA Ventures and Logispring, acquired Amitive and have since invested 16 million. I came onboard last year to run the company and over the last 12 months, we have been building the third generation of our product, which was released on October 1, 2008. In terms of what Amitive offers, we deliver a community-based supply chain management solution for brand owners that outsource manufacturing. What does that mean? Several companies have chosen to outsource their manufacturing. Good examples are companies like Apple, Nike and Levis. These great companies used to be manufacturers at one time and have now chosen to outsource that function. They source products from Asia Pacific or other parts of the world, but they are not actually managing the manufacturing process. Now, if you look at current supply chain offerings —whether from SAP, I2 or Oracle — they all have their roots in manufacturing-centric supply chains. Starting with the factory, they optimized constraints such as plant schedules, machine schedules, labor schedules, sequencing of production and so on. Then they added warehouses and subsequently, suppliers and customers. They essentially grew outward from a core of manufacturing. Whereas if you look at the companies we are targeting, brand owners that outsource manufacturing, their objective has shifted from asset utilization — which is a key objective of manufacturing — to product velocity. That means moving product to their supply chains as efficiently as possible and leaving asset utilization to the suppliers. Amitive is focusing on these brand owners. They need to address a different problem with a new set of supply chain capabilities. Today, most of these companies either use Excel or they have customized or modified versions of existing supply chain management software, which is still not solving the problem.

 

For more information call (212) 952 7433. The Wall Street Transcript does not endorse any of the comments made by interviewees, and does not make stock recommendations.