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] by Joe Castaldo @mcleans.ca - The untold tale of Target Canada’s difficult birth, tough life and brutal death
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<h1 style="text-align: center;">how target failed in Canada</h1> <h2>[WHAT]</h2> <ol> <li>] by Joe Castaldo @mcleans.ca - The untold tale of Target Canada’s difficult birth, tough life and brutal death </li> </ol> <h2>[WHY]</h2> <ol> <li>] </li> </ol> <h2>[WHERE]</h2> <ol> <li><strong>] READ THE FULL ARTICLE</strong></li> <ol> <li>] <a href="http://www.canadianbusiness.com/the-last-days-of-target-canada/" target="_blank">http://www.canadianbusiness.com/the-last-days-of-target-canada/</a> </li> </ol></ol> <h2>[WHEN]</h2> <ol> <li>] 2016-01-22</li> </ol> <h2>[EXAMPLE]</h2> <ol> <li>] <em style="font-family: Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 12px;">It didn’t take long for Target to figure out the underlying cause of the breakdown: The data contained within the company’s supply chain software, which governs the movement of inventory, was riddled with flaws. At the very start, an untold number of mistakes were made, and the company spent months trying to recover from them. In order to stock products, the company had to enter information about each item into SAP. There could be dozens of fields for a single product. For a single product, such as a blender, there might be fields for the manufacturer, the model, the UPC, the dimensions, the weight, how many can fit into a case for shipping and so on. Typically, this information is retrieved from vendors before Target employees put it into SAP. The system requires correct data to function properly and ensure products move as anticipated.</em></li> <li><em style="font-family: Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif; font-size: 12px;">] A team assigned to investigate the problem discovered an astounding number of errors. Product dimensions would be in inches, not centimetres or entered in the wrong order: width by height by length, instead of, say, length by width by height. Sometimes the wrong currency was used. Item descriptions were vague. Important information was missing. There were myriad typos. “You name it, it was wrong,” says a former employee. “It was a disaster.”</em></li> </ol> <h2>[HOW-TO]</h2> <ol> <li>]</li> </ol> <h2>[REFERENCE]</h2> <ol> <li>] SRC = HN, <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10956638" target="_blank">comments</a></li> </ol> <h1 style="text-align: center;"> </h1>