The recent announcement of Hanjin Shipping filing for bankruptcy protection, and the ensuing chaos resulting in 10’s of billions of dollars of cargo stranded at sea, is the latest reminder of the inherent risk in global supply chain management.
Supply chain risk rears its head directly as in the case with Hanjin, but also indirectly - where issues like the 2016 US Presidential Election, large-scale cyber-attacks, hurricane Matthew, and the on-again/off-again Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement WILL all impact global supply chains in some way.
Over the past 5 years, supply chain risk management has moved onto the radar of the C-level, especially in industry segments like retail, cpg & technology where supply chain execution is now a primary enabler (or disabler) of profitable sales growth.
Deloitte did a comprehensive supply chain risk study back in 2012, and though a few years old, this study sheds light on the issues business face with respect to risk management.
It also lends credence to the notion that risk management should be elevated toward the top of the list of strategic issues companies must confront.
As global supply chains become more elongated, and customer fulfilment requirements become shorter - being able to quickly adapt and overcome risk is of critical importance to supply chain execs.
Leaders Mitigate Supply Chain Risk to Achieve Supply Chain Resiliency:
We did a webinar earlier this year with our friend Adrian Gonzalez (@TalkinLogistics) on the topic of risk management and supply chain resiliency (watch the video above).
Paraphrasing one of our favorite quotes from Adrian - for supply chain professionals, instead of putting down VP of Supply Chain on your business card, you can probably put down VP of Risk Management.
As much as anything else, leaders in supply chain today are leaders in how they manage & mitigate risk to bolster the resiliency of their supply chain.
Though there are many best practices leading companies have employed to make their supply chain more resilient, it really comes down to one thing…
Supply Chain Leaders have a Proactive vs. Reactive Risk Mindset
Following a supply chain disruption, companies typically put together some sort of cross-functional team to figure out what went wrong, develop recommendations to avoid the disruption in the future, and print up reports that eventually go up on the shelf until the next time the disruption occurs.
Perhaps additional steps are taken upstream or downstream to gain visibility or enhance the speed at which supply chain disruption data is made available, but in most cases companies simply do not take a continual & proactive approach to risk. It’s a project instead of a process, and lacks true ownership.
The companies we’ve seen lead the way are the companies that make risk management a continual, strategic focus by allocating dollars, committing people, and investing in partnerships.
The data shows few companies out there have actually moved from risk to resiliency.
However, by proactively building risk management into your strategy, your business processes, and ultimately ingraining it into your culture - you can achieve a new level of resiliency in your supply chain.