Inventory serves a variety of functional categories which help
companies address mismatches between supply and demand, to improve operations
performance and ultimately maximize profitability by moving resources where
they’re needed (Hammond). Although inventory is frequently used to smooth
production one way along the supply chain from raw material to finished product,
the integration of a reverse supply chain (RSC) in inventory management can help
smooth bumps in the supply chain while minimizing waste.
Per the Harvard Business Review, there are several
reasons why companies implement reverse supply chain management. Some companies
are forced to do so though recent tax legislation, such as those companies
operating in the European Union. Others are taking the initiative to implement
RSCs because they see an opportunity to lower operating costs by reusing products
or parts of products, and some companies using RSC to make up part of a new
business that serves the larger company.
Those investing in RSCs and reverse
logistics systems have good reason to do so. RSCs provide an opportunity
for companies selling non-perishable goods to recapture value from a product by
taking back and reusing/ repurposing inventory from the customer—whether that’s
a “customer” in the supply chain or the end-user. Because of the rising costs
of some inputs, namely water and other natural resources, many industries are
looking for ways to minimize resource use while still creating an attractive,
salable product. The diagram below shows one of the ways this is done
through customer returns, something which has a huge potential for value
recapture as 6-7% of sales in the US per year, costing the industry $40Bn.[i]
What these success cases have in common is the fact that
they’ve created their RSCs in lockstep with forward supply chains by
integrating things like product design and, very importantly, logistics. More
specifically, to reuse/recapture value from used or returned inventories,
companies need to include eventual recycling and reconditioning of the product
in design and manufacturing decisions. Instead of designing a product to go
from cradle to grave (where the product is ultimately trashed), products go in
a closed loop—from cradle to cradle.
What variables are most important in determining the value
of a RSC to a given company? Are there
any particular industries where RSCs would make the most sense?
[i] Reseller
Sees Many Happy Returns. Tom Van Riper. Forbes Magazine December 2005. Retrieved
on September 14, 2014 at archive.today/20130102150110/http://www.forbes.com/2005/12/06/retailing-wal-mart-cx_tvr_1207reselling.html
.
[ii] Reverse Supply Chains for Commercial Returns,
Blackburn, Guide, Souza and Van Wassenhove, California Management Review, Vol.
46, No.2. Winter 2004. Retrieved on September 13, 2014 at http://www.personal.psu.edu/drg16/Reverse%20SC%20-%20Returns-CMR.pdf
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