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There are 5 modules in this course
The global supply chain is a $50 trillion industry and is the foundation of our global economy. While information technology has improved the flow of goods globally over the last few decades, as the COVID-19 crisis revealed there is still critical work to do. Today’s supply chains are complex, with parties conducting their transactions through a Byzantine network of computer systems with disparate applications like e-mail, phone, and fax. There are invoices, letters of credit, bank guarantees, bills of lading, tax forms, receipts, and other paperwork moving through this complex labyrinth. Payments are made through a hodgepodge of intermediaries, and consumers and supply chain players alike struggle to get accurate information.
Enter blockchain—the Internet of Value. For the first time in human history, individuals and organizations can manage and trade their assets digitally peer to peer. These assets can be digital like money, identity, and private information; or they can be physical assets represented by digital tokens. Parties to a transaction achieve trust not necessarily through an intermediary, but through cryptography and clever code. In this course, you will learn how blockchain can improve global supply chains by streamlining processes, reducing costs and fraud, improving supply-chain visibility, authenticating assets and their origins, and ultimately fuelling product innovation.
Development of this course was made possible thanks to the generous support of FedEx. Dale Chrystie, Business Fellow & Blockchain Strategist at FedEx, appears in several of the course videos, bringing a real-world industry perspective to the course. The scripts for these videos have been written and/or reviewed by the Blockchain Research Institute and approved by INSEAD to ensure that this content is pedagogically sound, unbiased, and academically rigorous.
Global trade has grown in complexity and magnitude over millennia, but its processes remain relatively unchanged. This module explores how blockchain can help modernize global trade and link together other capabilities for the twenty-first century. In this module, you will learn how various participants in the global trade network stand to derive unique value from blockchain technology—including banks and financiers, corporations, freight forwarders and carriers, customs and port authorities, regulatory bodies, and insurance providers. You will explore the ways that blockchain serves to link together organizations, industries, and technologies, and fosters an approach to collaboration that will drive new efficiencies.
Global Trade: Timeless Concept, Tired Processes•9 minutes
The Global Trade Network: Part 1•7 minutes
The Global Trade Network: Part 2•8 minutes
Journey to a Future State / Recap of Module 1•3 minutes
4 readings•Total 40 minutes
Accessing Readings from the BRI Research Library•10 minutes
Blockchain in Global Trade•10 minutes
The Global Trade Network•10 minutes
Blockchain in Global Trade•10 minutes
4 assignments•Total 60 minutes
Blockchain in Global Trade•10 minutes
The Global Trade Network: Part 1•10 minutes
The Global Trade Network: Part 2•10 minutes
Blockchain in Global Trade•30 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 10 minutes
Your Goals for This Course•10 minutes
Reducing Supply Chain Complexity
Module 2•3 hours to complete
Module details
Most supply chains today still rely heavily on opaque, time-consuming, and costly processes. Documentation is largely paper-based and handled manually. Approvals from multiple parties at each checkpoint often cause delays and are susceptible to fraud on cross-border orders. Catching mistakes in compliance and quality control is difficult. In this module, you will learn how blockchain can help mitigate the complexity of global supply chains by building trustable digital relationships among partners, goods, and customers.
What's included
9 videos5 readings5 assignments
Show info about module content
9 videos•Total 46 minutes
Module 2 Overview•3 minutes
The Digital Representation of Physical Assets•5 minutes
Safeguarding the Physical-Digital Interface•5 minutes
The Benefits of Blockchain-Enabled Supply Chains•5 minutes
Customs, Borders, and Blockchain: Problems to be Solved•8 minutes
How Customs and Border Agencies Can Use Blockchain•6 minutes
Next Generation Border Clearance Through Disruptive Technologies•5 minutes
Challenges to Implementing Blockchain Solutions•7 minutes
Recap of Module 2•3 minutes
5 readings•Total 50 minutes
The Digital Representation of Physical Assets•10 minutes
Safeguarding the Physical-Digital Interface•10 minutes
Customs, Borders, and Blockchain•10 minutes
Challenges to Implementing Blockchain Solutions•10 minutes
Reducing Supply Chain Complexity•10 minutes
5 assignments•Total 70 minutes
The Digital Representation of Physical Assets•10 minutes
The Move Towards Digitization•10 minutes
Customs, Borders, and Blockchain•10 minutes
Challenges to Implementing Blockchain Solutions•10 minutes
Reducing Supply Chain Complexity•30 minutes
Blockchain, IoT, and Sensor-Based Logistics
Module 3•2 hours to complete
Module details
The Internet of Things (IoT) revolves around connectivity, identification, sensing, remote monitoring, and actuation of physical objects. In the context of global supply chains, the application of IoT to sensor-based logistics enables cargo data—such as location, temperature, humidity, pressure, shock, and light exposure—to be captured and transmitted to multiple parties, allowing them to improve overall visibility and respond to unexpected deviations. In this module, you will learn how blockchain can help achieve autonomous and contract-based communication between physical things, providing an auditable record for products in transit.
What's included
8 videos4 readings4 assignments
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 36 minutes
Module 3 Overview•4 minutes
What is the IoT?•7 minutes
Typical Architecture of an IoT Deployment•5 minutes
Blockchain and the IoT•5 minutes
Case Study: Modum's Solution for Cold-Chain Logistics•5 minutes
Case Study: SenseAware ID•4 minutes
Recommendations for Blockchain + IoT•4 minutes
Module 3 Recap•3 minutes
4 readings•Total 40 minutes
The Internet of Things (IoT)•10 minutes
Blockchain and the IoT•10 minutes
Sensor-Based Logistics•10 minutes
Blockchain, IoT, and Sensor-Based Logistics•10 minutes
4 assignments•Total 60 minutes
The Internet of Things (IoT)•10 minutes
Blockchain and the IoT•10 minutes
Sensor-Based Logistics•10 minutes
Blockchain, IoT, and Sensor-Based Logistics•30 minutes
Provenance and Traceability
Module 4•2 hours to complete
Module details
Provenance and traceability are vexing challenges for a wide range of companies and their supply chains. A supply chain represents all links between parties involved in creating and distributing goods, starting with suppliers of unprocessed raw materials and ending with the delivery of a finished product to the consumer. The application of blockchain for provenance in supply chains aims at providing deep-tier visibility into the origins of a product. In this module, you will learn how blockchain has the potential to provide unprecedented supply-chain visibility in near real time, serving to combat counterfeit goods, enable ethically-sourced materials, track food safety from farm to fork, and increase buyer trust.
The Authenticity of Assets / Module 4 Overview•3 minutes
Is Our Food Safe?•6 minutes
Blockchain Promise and Potential•8 minutes
Case Study: Walmart's Pork and Mango Pilot•6 minutes
Cobalt and the Future of Battery Supply Chains•6 minutes
The Diamond Supply Chain and the Problem of Conflict Stones•8 minutes
Module 4 Recap•3 minutes
4 readings•Total 40 minutes
The Authenticity of Assets•10 minutes
Food Safety and Traceability•10 minutes
Cobalt and the Future of Battery Supply Chains•10 minutes
The Diamond Supply Chain and the Problem of Conflict Stones•10 minutes
3 assignments•Total 50 minutes
Food Safety and Traceability•10 minutes
Ethically-Sourced Materials•10 minutes
Provenance and Traceability•30 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 10 minutes
New Discussion Prompt•10 minutes
Reshaping Global Commerce
Module 5•3 hours to complete
Module details
Globalization and volatility in demand require an increasing degree of flexibility in the production of goods and equipment. Blockchain has the potential to redefine economic structures and value flows that underpin supply-chain decision-making. This module explores three opportunities for blockchain in reshaping—or perhaps reversing—-global trade. First, you will learn how blockchain enables new models for distributed manufacturing, facilitating interactions between buyers and manufacturers to streamline production processes. Second, you will explore blockchain’s role in securing end-to-end additive manufacturing (AM) processes, with smart contracts serving as a security layer underpinning AM transactions. Third, you will learn how blockchain facilitates asset life-cycle management, providing a shared and immutable product memory and trail of actionable data over an asset’s life cycle between multiple parties. The module concludes with a discussion of the enabling considerations for blockchain in global trade, including business considerations (e.g. governance, standards, regulations) and technology considerations (e.g. scalability, interoperability, and integration with legacy systems).
What's included
10 videos3 readings5 assignments
Show info about module content
10 videos•Total 58 minutes
Module 5 Overview•4 minutes
Distributed Manufacturing•7 minutes
Additive Manufacturing•5 minutes
Case Study: COVID-19 Ventilators•8 minutes
Asset Life-Cycle Management•6 minutes
Case Study: Reducing Drug Waste in the Pharmaceutical Supply Chain•6 minutes
Business Considerations•7 minutes
Technology Considerations•6 minutes
Module 5 Recap•4 minutes
Course Close•4 minutes
3 readings•Total 30 minutes
Distributed Manufacturing and Digital Distribution•10 minutes
Asset Life-Cycle Management•10 minutes
Enabling Considerations for Blockchain in Global Commerce•10 minutes
5 assignments•Total 70 minutes
Distributed Manufacturing•10 minutes
Additive Manufacturing and COVID-19 Ventilators•10 minutes
Asset Life-Cycle Management•10 minutes
Enabling Considerations for Blockchain in Global Commerce•10 minutes
Reshaping Global Commerce•30 minutes
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