This is part one of a series with Pilot44 Supply Chain Innovation Practice Partner & Thought Leader, Jeff Way, to help business leaders understand the four pillars of supply chain resiliency, the key enablers of each, and how this can prepare your business for the future.
Supply chain is essential. Anyone living through the macro forces that have changed our world since Covid-19 hit can attest to that. So it may seem obvious to state that, in order to stay competitive, a business must proactively evolve supply chain and leverage new technologies that increase speed, reduce costs, and create new value.
However sometimes, no matter how advanced a supply chain is, a macro force comes along with the power to shake up and test an entire system, putting even the most proactive innovators in a reactive spin. COVID-19 is that example. Although it swept in almost overnight, its impact on all dimensions of supply will last forever.
So that begs the question: if supply chain innovations are so important yet can be completely disrupted by an unknown and unpredictable force – what’s the point?
This brings me to my main point: resiliency. The key to supply chain innovation is not a specific technology, but understanding a framework to respond and recover from disruptive events. And then learning how to operationalize that throughout your business.
In order to operationalize resiliency, organizations must pay attention to four pillars, each with its own features and capabilities that drive resiliency through sensing, predicting, and responding to disruptions in the supply chain and coordinating risk mitigation.
Each of these pillars also has key enablers related to organizational talent, integration of process, and technology to help power resilience through data, which we’ll dive into in upcoming posts.
But first, let’s define what those four pillars are and the key features of each:
Resiliency is a central supply chain domain that’s now on every executive and operator’s mind. To say that COVID-19 has spurred increased focus and innovation in this area would be a huge understatement. In the last year:
During crises, global value chains become severely impacted along all dimensions. Built for efficiency, today’s supply chains cannot be easily switched to a state of effectiveness and responsiveness, especially in a time of stress where customer and product segmentations are changing so rapidly.
From massive spikes in consumer demand for hand sanitizer to manufacturers struggling with new workplace safety requirements, every step of the supply chain was forced to adjust operations mid-pandemic.
So the question that remains is: how do businesses transition to the new normal and prepare for the next crisis?
We’d like to start by redefining the new normal. In the past, companies have been very reactive when disasters hit. The new normal is by being proactive by way of implementing resiliency and predictive analytics throughout the supply chain.
Operationalizing resiliency means implementing a continuous cycle of risk sensing, detection, analysis, response, and restoration to help adapt supply chains during and after a crisis.
The benefits of implementing this cycle are enormous. And there’s now an entire ecosystem of technology and startups to help businesses do just this – which I’ll cover in a future post.
In our next post we’ll deep dive into the first pillar of resiliency, define its key enablers, and walk through some of the technology organizations can use to operationalize resiliency. We’ll also look at some examples of companies investing in technology that can sense risk events, predict impact and prepare for the next macro event.
Get in touch to learn more.