Analyst Insight: Recent supply chain issues and disruptions have shone a spotlight on deficiencies in supply chain design. Companies’ responses have mostly been operational; they were able to absorb some of the shocks and not others. This raises the question: Is this a one-time glitch, or is there something more profoundly problematic with our supply chain?
MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics Research has found that how supply chains are designed is responsible for most supply chain problems. Traditional supply chain design has focused on standardization and efficiency, which lead to economies of scale, centralized distribution and just-in-time, lean manufacturing. However, the rise of trends like globalization, outsourcing and e-commerce have placed significant strain on supply chains. In a world where we have both delocalized production and same-day delivery, our global supply chain model has been stretched too thin.
Despite this, companies are not rethinking their legacy models: We’re still using the same basic paradigms of efficiency and cost minimization when designing our supply chains.
The deficiencies we see in supply chains today are due to outdated methods and approaches to supply chain design. We need to use a more holistic approach to succeed in today’s business environment:
In the near term, a lot of companies are aware of the problems, but they don’t necessarily have the solution yet. Supply chains are at the center stage of corporate strategy and there is a lot of excitement and a lot of experimentation happening, particularly around new products and services enabled by new designs. And, thankfully, the requirements to incorporate risk and uncertainty are now much clearer. But this experimentation is not always supported by a data-driven approach, and companies have largely not readjusted their organizational structures to allow for these new design principles.
Outlook: The next few years will allow us to identify winning strategies. An intentional, analytics-driven approach will be key. Specifically: Striking a balance between customer-centricity and global operations, leveraging new business models and collaborative relationships to build in design flexibility , accounting for risk and uncertainty in a more structural manner, and setting up organizational structures to account for a link between supply chain design and other decision-making.
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