The Present Scenario
In today’s fast paced world, it is important for Supply
chain managers to modernize their supply chain to meet the challenges of the 21st
century. Consider the manufacturing
world: Twenty-five years ago, most manufacturers owned their own factories and
controlled their own production. They had complete, detailed knowledge of the
capacity, schedules, and costs of manufacturing. Companies could adapt quickly
to changes in the marketplace and restore the supply/demand balance more
easily.
The below figure shows the once-linear relationship
companies had with their captive factories and sales offices. In the days
before e-commerce, consumer demand fluctuated relatively slowly. With complete
visibility into their own factories and sales offices, companies could easily
find the status of inventory, work in progress, and customer orders currently
in the supply chain.
The following diagram shows how today’s supply chains consist of
multi-faceted and globally distributed relationships that exist across
different time zones, cultures, and technologies. On the left is the brand
owner, perhaps a typical consumer electronics firm based on the west coast of
the USA. The green arrows show predictable and planned exchanges of information
such as forecasts, orders, and engineering changes. The red dotted lines show the
unpredictable challenges of today’s market, such as short supply and late deliveries.
Many manufacturing firms now have little visibility or control over their
supply chain partners. And that means less agility to respond to any changes in
supply or demand. With limited visibility into the operations and constraints
of third-party partners, it becomes more and more difficult to make decisions
or take action on urgent demand spikes or natural disasters.
What Companies Should
Look For in the 21st Century
Companies today need technology that provides quick decision
support for managers seeking to maintain an effective balance between demand
and supply.
In particular, Supply chain Managers should look for three
key strategic elements:
1. Agile response. This allows team
members to react in a timely manner and move toward event-driven planning.
2. Live collaboration. This creates
an online forum where human intelligence can help capture all the nuances of
business partner relationships.
3. Flexible “what-if” testing. This allows
decision-makers to weigh the consequences of various decisions more precisely,
with all the information they need at their fingertips.
In addition to this, firms, especially manufacturing
companies should consider incorporating critical features such as web based
access, live scorecard, spreadsheets, personal alerts and have an effective
response management system. The key here is to Innovate.
My Take on the idea
of Innovation and Technology in SCM
It is good to constantly innovate and use cutting edge
technologies in supply chain practices. In
complex global supply chains, the balance of innovation and sustainability is a
double edged sword. Being sustainable demands creativity in business
operations, but innovation also carries the risk of creating unsustainable
practices and products. Unproven technological innovation for the wrong reasons
can lead to disastrous results. A high profile example is Boeing's continuing
nightmare regarding the development and introduction of its 787 Dreamliner
aircraft.
Having mentioned that, I think it would be fair to state
that companies can distinguish between the steady and step change varieties and
understand what it takes to implement them in terms of the organizations
strategic objectives, but at the same time not redefine markets. Reconfigure
known methods and technologies to improve effectiveness, rather than invent new
ones.
The main question of concern to be contemplated here is:
How effectively will companies be willing to adopt technology
that would innovate and increase efficiency, but not be disruptive to their
existing practices?
References:
http://nbis.org/nbisresources/supply_chain_management/five_secrets_of_the_21st_century_sc.pdf
http://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/supply-chain-innovation-double-edged-sword
http://www.supplychain247.com/article/how_many_supply_chain_innovations_are_truly_revolutionary
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