As we consider the role of IT in current
supply chain thinking, it is easy to get lost in prophesies of doom as in Rettig
[1] or fall into the trap of thinking that carefully considered IT
implementations can cure all of our woes.
One evolving aspect of supply chain
development is the concept of Visibility – it is impossible to begin casting
about for information on current thinking without encountering references to
visibility and how to maximize it.
Check out this verbiage:
Infosys unveils enhanced Supply Chain Visibility & Collaboration Product Suite
“New and enhanced product suite enables organizations to leverage closed loop analytics for unlocking efficiencies and strengthening their supply chain for collaborative decision making and actionable insights.” [2]
Sounds impressive, doesn’t it?
In short, the concept of Supply Chain
Visibility simply refers to methods that make it easier for participants in a
supply chain to see where everyone else is, ideally in real-time. For a
supplier this might mean being able to track a customer’s inventory and current
rate of consumption so that they are ready to produce and deliver when the
customer needs to be restocked, but not before. For a manufacturer,
“visibility” might mean real-time tracking of an anticipated delivery in order
to adjust the tooling of a specific production line “just in time” in order to
minimize disruption to work flow. The more various players in a given supply
chain know about the state of their counterparts upstream and downstream, the
more efficient their operations can become.
Supply chain visibility is a game changer,
and there are a lot of players in the arean looking at ways to monetize it or
integrate it into their existing set of processes. Here’s the thing: the entire
concept is impossible without ubiquitous IT.
Question:
It is becoming cheaper to gather real-time
information on the current state of any given component of a supply chain. What
low-overhead game-changing uses for that information are yet to be realized?
Where can you find “low hanging fruit” for your industry or application?
References:
[1] Rettig, C. (Fall 2007) “The Trouble with
Enterprise Software” MITSloan Management
Review Retrieved 2 October 2012 from http://www.lhstech.com/ISM/Articles/Rettig_Enterprise%20Software.pdf
[2] Infosys website accessed 2 October 2012: http://www.infosys.com/newsroom/press-releases/Pages/enhanced-SCV-collaboration-product.aspx
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