The 21st Century Supply Chain

3 Responses to “The supply chain is strategic – are we drinking our own kool aid?”

  1. Paul Gooch

    John, I share your concerns…it seems either the supply chain community doesn’t get it, or they have been unable to influence senior management thinking. 15 years ago I was saying to the leadership of a major chemical company that improving forecast accuracy wasn’t going to cut it…it certainly wouldn’t change the inherent variability. On the other hand, the more we could shorten the manufacturing cycle the less we would need a forecast. “We are not a retail operation” was the answer…”we don’t have POS information”. Wrong…we had an ERP system which gave us real-time order information, but we weren’t using it to develop basic leading and trailing indicators, or relational data-bases.
    There are very few prophets in their own time and their own land..
    Best regards
    Paul

  2. Ron Freiberg

    Let’s face it guys, most CEOs do not have a good idea of what the Supply Chain is let alone how improvement in the supply chain differentiates them vs. competition. Most, especially those with financial backgrounds, consider supply chain improvement at the best as a contributor to the bottom line and not as a competitive initiative. Just look at how projects are justified on the books; if it doesn’t support profitability improvement, it doesn’t get approved. If there were a calculation for market share improvement by X dollars hence boiling down to increased profitability due to improved speed, flexibility, flow and collaboration, there would be a higher appreciation for supply chain improvement. As it is, we as supply chain professionals need to push the training of our respective organizations.

    Ron

  3. Don Benson

    The kool-aid we are drinking (and that many vendors need to serve to survive) creates the belief that we can have a robust supply chain with the purchase and implementation of the new or a particular technology. We need to start considering the possibility that technology may be useful/required but is not sufficient.

    Organizations exist because of the people. Robust relationships and effective communication toward joint objectives cannot be accomplished via digital content.

    Don

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