Most companies realize it’s foolhardy to try and “do it all,” particularly in a globalized, digitized and highly informed world.
While the daily operations that make providing goods and services possible - from sourcing of raw materials to post-delivery date - were once understood as the “supply” or “value chain,” those terms are no longer relevant.
Like the end of linear shopping, the value chain today is probably better described as a “value web,” one where suppliers are structured and called upon in flexible, modular and amorphous ways to meet projected business demand.
For instance, many previous in-house activities are now performed by external providers from all over the world to provide speed, quality and cost advantages. In some cases, the lines of who does what have even been blurred (i.e., 3D printing may soon turn retailers into pseudo-manufacturers).
Meanwhile, processes that traditionally took place on-site - order management, medical and clinical trials, digital assets - are moving to the cloud. And with better access to real-time data and more fluid means of collaborating, upstream and downstream partners are working more closely than ever before.
As for customers - formerly the last link in the chain - they’re now playing a leading role in the creation of value web, thanks to their powerful and more informed digital footprints - or Code Halos™ as we call them - that convey deep insights on preferred products, services, as well as ways of interacting and transacting, across digital channels.
As such, forward-thinking companies are inhaling and analyzing every customer click, tweet, like and post to formulate global and virtualized supply strategies while developing personalized products and services. These companies have moved beyond traditional business intelligence that primarily illuminate historic performance.
They are moving from insights to foresights by embracing new predictive analytics tools built around the emerging SMAC Stack™ (social, mobile, analytics and cloud).
Here’s how your organization can do the same and quickly adapt to changing market forces:
Agility: The Killer App
An example of the growing need for value chain agility is the trend among manufacturers to shift their global sourcing strategies from a “low-cost country sourcing” perspective to one based on “best-cost country sourcing.” While many companies moved their manufacturing operations offshore to lower their labor costs, the revised thinking in some cases is to move supply closer to areas of high demand.
Lenovo, for instance, built a new manufacturing facility in North Carolina in 2013 to improve the efficiency and reliability of product delivery in the North American market. General Electric relocated some of its appliance manufacturing from China to Kentucky to be closer to demand. These strategic decisions pointless to a generalized retrenching on domestic soil and more a desire to flexibly change what gets done and where, as market conditions and customer demands evolve. (download: The Future of U.S. Manufacturing: A Change Manifesto)
For example, when the 2008 tsunami disrupted the Japanese supply of car parts, U.S. and European automakers boosted production to flood the market and give consumers immediate choices as an alternative to waiting. Or the tile manufacturer we worked with that boosted revenues by 20% after moving from retail to a direct-to-consumer model using our SMAC-based analysis of current vs. future demand.
In an age of uncertainty and constant change - particularly the changes wrought by unrelenting digitization - companies can no longer function via a linear set of interlocked processes.
The business leaders of tomorrow will quickly shift value chain strategies to optimize speed, quality and cost to take advantage of global market opportunities.
Such flexibility is possible when companies look at supply chains differently - as value webs - with an eye toward disaggregating functions and focusing less on “who” is doing the work “where” and more on the how the collective actions of all participants drive improved performance in line with ever-changing market requirements.
Source: Cognizant Perspectives