Aligning Incentives for Supply Chain Efficiency
Companies are increasingly worried
about improving operational performance not only within their firm, but also
across their entire supply chains. Many supply improvement efforts, however,
have failed to achieve anticipated benefits because they have failed to change
the behaviour of politically powerful stakeholders.
Most companies don't worry about the behaviour
of their supply chain partners. Instead, they expect the supply chain to work
efficiently without interference. Companies often looked out for their own
interests and ignored those of their network partners. Consequently, supply
chains performed poorly. Those results aren't shocking when you consider that
supply chains extend across several functions and many companies, each with its
own priorities and goals. Yet all those functions and firms must pull in the
same direction for a chain to deliver goods and services to consumers quickly
and cost-effectively.
A supply chain works well only if the
risks, costs, and rewards of doing business are distributed fairly across the
network. In fact, misaligned incentives are often the cause of excess
inventory, stock-outs, incorrect forecasts, inadequate sales efforts, and even
poor customer service. The fates of all supply chain partners are interlinked:
If the firms work together to serve consumers, they will all win.
However, they can do that only if
incentives are aligned. Companies must acknowledge that the problem of
incentive misalignment exists and then determine its root cause and align or
redesign incentives.
The following is a three stage process
for aligning supply chain incentives:
- Recognizing
Goal Incongruence:
a.
Frequently obvious to managers in the
supply chain.
b.
Can be expected during reengineering
efforts.
- Pinpointing
the cause of Goal Incongruence:
- Look
at economics of each decision from decision-maker’s and apply chain’s
perspective.
- Identify
decisions that would have been made differently if the decision-maker was
trying to maximize supply chain profit.
- Trace
these differences to moral hazard (tendency to take undue risks because
the costs are not borne by the party taking the risk), and pre-and
post-contract private information.
- Overcoming
Goal Incongruence:
- Identify
solutions to the problems
i.
Adopting revenue-sharing contracts,
ii.
Using technology to track previously
hidden information, or
iii.
Working with intermediaries to build
trust among network partners.
- Solutions
can be ranked according to how easy are to implement – contracting-based,
information-based, structure-based, and trust-based.
It's also important to periodically
reassess incentives, because even top-performing networks find that changes in
technology or business conditions alter the alignment of incentives.
References:
1. Harvard Business Review, Aligning Incentives for Supply Chain Efficiency, April 10, 2000
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