2004 Releases
September 01, 2004
Servigistics Named to Supply and Demand Chain Executive 100
Service Parts Management Leader Named To Elite List of 100 Leading Firms for Third Consecutive Year
“Clearly, much has changed since our original list appeared early in 2001,” said Andrew K. Reese, editor of Supply & Demand Chain Executive. “With all the ups and downs of the past few years, we've seen any number of solution providers close their doors, get acquired or shift their focus in order to survive. But we've also seen a significant number of providers continue to build up their customer base, build out their offerings and solidify their reputations for offering effective solutions.”
Reese added that it is these "supply and demand chain survivors" — those that were not booted off the island by market forces — that the magazine wanted to highlight with this year's Supply & Demand Chain Executive 100.
“At Servigistics, our most important corporate goal is to deliver measurable value and consistently deliver beyond client expectations so they can consistently deliver beyond their customer expectations,” said Eric Hinkle, Servigistics CEO. “To receive this award as a result of voluntary nominations from our global clients is truly flattering and further motivates us continue to go beyond our clients’ expectations.”
Servigistics was selected out of more than 2,000 nominations from five continents supporting every conceivable supply-chain activity — from enterprise-wide planning systems to global third-party logistics providers to highly specialized transportation services.Selection was based entirely on voluntarily entries submitted by Global Logistics & Supply Chain Strategies’ readers and users of its sister web site, SupplyChainBrain.com. Only nominations from the official web-enabled form, requiring nominators to identify themselves, their position and company and complete contact information to verify responses were accepted. Participants were able to elect anonymity in the report itself, but had to verify their identity and their legitimate role in the industry to be counted. Nominations from participants selecting their own companies or closely allied entities were disqualified, as were multiple nominations from the same client.










