After reading “How technology can drive the next wave of
mass customization” by Mckinsey’s Anshuk Gandhi, I researched the possible
effects that advancement in robotics will have on supply chain management, what
industries are most and least susceptible to roboticization, and how robotics,
in combination with big data, can revolutionize different industries through
mass customization. Particularly shocking were the extent to which human labor
can be roboticized, the centrality of big data in forecasting in an age when
the customer can get exactly what he or she wants whenever he or she wants it,
and the implications of robotics on strategic sourcing trends.
The
industrial revolution fundamentally changed labor by increasing the
productivity of humans; machines let unskilled workers make artisan-quality
products at a fraction of the cost. The coming revolution is different; as
Alexandros Vardakostas, cofounder of the burger-flipping robot company Momentum
Machines, said in a recent interview, “[Our] device isn’t meant to make
employees more efficient. It’s meant to completely obviate them.”[i]
Besides fast food, what other industries will benefit from automation in the
coming years?
To
answer that, I found a study by two Oxford University researchers, Carl
Benedikt Frey and Michael A. Osborne. Their paper, “The Future of Employment:
How Susceptible Are Jobs to Computerisation?” estimates that 47% of the entire
U.S. workforce could be automated using technology well within reach.[ii]
They achieved this estimate by identifying three elements in which robots are
currently weak, fine perception and manipulation, creative intelligence and
social intelligence. Then, they assigned ratings to 70 occupations in terms of
these three elements. Not only could transportation, construction,
manufacturing jobs soon be roboticized, but so could office support, sales and
low-skilled services.[iii]
As companies successfully automate their workforce, their competitors will be
forced to automate too or become uncompetitive. This will quickly lead to the
automation of whole industries.
Customization
was the focus of the McKinsey article, but the paper doesn’t really explain one
important aspect of what makes customization possible: big data. Without big
data and without data analytics, it’s much more difficult to make producing custom
products profitable. Inaccurate forecasting almost always leads to lost
profits, and demand variability is notoriously high when you begin to add
hundreds of different options to a product. High variability implies a greater
chance of inaccuracy which thus means a greater chance for lost profits. With
big data AND a way to analyze that data using analytics thereby reducing
variability, technology has finally advanced to a point where mass
customization is doable and profitable.[iv]
For
companies, the implications are stark. Just as firms that failed to offshore in
the 1990s and 2000s found themselves at a competitive disadvantage, so will
companies that fail to “next-shore.” From a strategic sourcing perspective, the
robotics revolution makes offshoring much less attractive. First, with a vastly
reduced labor force, there’s no labor cost arbitrage. Secondly, roboticized
workplaces require a highly skilled labor force for monitoring, maintenance and
troubleshooting. Thus, factories will have to be built in places with access to
these workers. Lastly, companies will have to begin competing on the ability to
complete custom orders and deliver them in a timely fashion. To make this
possible, companies will have to depend more on big data to adequately predict
demand on a wide variety of products AND custom features. Failure to do so will
often mean failure of the firm as entire industries move in this more efficient
direction.
This
leaves me with a number of questions and concerns about the future of supply
chains as well as policy. How will companies ensure that they have access to
the data they need to deliver their products in an age where privacy becomes
more and more of a concern? Will areas with stricter privacy laws than the
United States, like the E.U., fall behind due to restrictions on how they can
use data? Furthermore, will the public continue to support business friendly
policies if companies employ fewer and fewer people (and more and more robots) even
as profits soar? Will people replaced by robots be able to find work to support
themselves comfortably? Or will there be a public backlash against
roboticization? In any event, the future is sure to be an interesting time.
[i] Love,
Dylan. “Here’s the Burger-Flipping Robot That Could Put Fast Food Workers Out
of a Job.” Business Insider. August
11, 2014. Retrieved from: http://www.businessinsider.com/momentum-machines-burger-robot-2014-8.
[ii] Frey,
C.B. & Osborne, M. A. “The Future of Employment: How Susceptible Are
Jobs to Computerisation?” Oxford Martin School, Progamme on the Effects of
Future Technology, University of Oxford. September 17, 2013. Retrieved from: http://www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk/downloads/academic/The_Future_of_Employment.pdf.
[iii] Ibid.
[iv]
Peters, Brad. “The Age of Big Data.” Forbes.
July 12, 2012. Retrieved from: http://www.forbes.com/sites/bradpeters/2012/07/12/the-age-of-big-data/.
If you are looking for a reputed logistics provider, you can get in touch with Jayem Logistics who is the top logistics service provider in India.
ReplyDeleteTop International Freight Forwarder in India|Top Warehousing Company