Thursday, October 16, 2008

Role of Supply Chain In Riding Over Financial Crisis

The US economic crisis has taken all the economies, big or small, by storm. Or should we say a "Typhoon" with no signs of receding in near future? Financial liquidity has tightened & credit dried up, especially for the small businesses. In these troubled times, it is very important to be able to keep head above water. It is critical that not only you but your business partners, be it customers or suppliers, are able to survive the crisis.

Supply Chain Managers can play a very critical role to help the businesses ride over the "Economic Tsunami". Here are few suggestions, based on my own opinion and that of some of the experts:

1. Go lean on Inventory. Availability of Cash is the biggest need of the hour to sustain the business. Building inventory for strategic or speculative reasons, under these circumstances can be a disaster. Even if it means keeping your capacity or manpower idle that would erode margins, is a better option than keeping inventory for an uncertain demand that would block cash needed for meeting operating requirements of the business.

2. Don't push Inventory to Customers. It is like shooting in your own foot. There is a general tendency to push inventory to customers to achieve sales target numbers. It only converts your inventory into higher credit in market or outstanding from customers. The financial risk goes up if your customers are facing liquidity crunch and some of them go bankrupt or don't pay at all. By pushing inventory to your customers, you are not only increasing your own risk but may kill the customer with high debt.

3. Plan, Replan & Replan. In a scenario of uncertain demand, do not pre-commit resources & materials in advance. Build visibility into your demand chain and align your supply / production more frequently than you have been doing in past. Catch the demand signal early & do not hesitate to change the production schedules, even if it means more changeovers or setups on production lines.

4. Stop producing slow moving or not so fast moving items against the forecast. Rely more on the actual demand signals than on the forecast. Or best agree with your customers to produce/ assemble these items against their orders. It may lead to increase in response time but unlock the capital blocked in such items.

5. Service efficiently. It doesn't mean service at lowest cost or cutting corners. Redesign your network that can service smaller lots and at a higher frequency to your customers. If your network cannot support frequent & smaller deliveries, use a reliable 3PL. Consolidate number of service providers & shipments. Evaluate alternate modes of transport e.g. Railways, multimodal shipments that are economical as well as reliable.

6. Form alliances. Taking a cue from the alliance reached between Jet Airways and Kingfisher Airlines, it is not a bad idea to share assets wherever synergy is feasible. Join hands with others, including like mind competitors, to find collaborative ways of saving costs in manufacturing, servicing and logistics. Remember, recession is a bigger threat compared to your competitor.

7. Follow lean processes. Tough time is also an opportunity to re-engineer your processes. Evaluate your processes, cut out wasteful activities and minimize wastage in the supply chain. Order processing time, inventory idle time, supply lead times are some of the few candidates that would need a very close look. Inventory inaccuracy or leakage in warehouse, transit damages, storage conditions would require stricter controls.

8. Pay your suppliers on time. Don't push your liquidity crunch to your suppliers by delaying their payments. The suppliers sustainability is as critical as your own business continuity. Incentivize your suppliers to reduce lot sizes & implement JIT, Vendor Managed Inventory / Replenishment. Consolidate suppliers & shipments for economy of scale. Renegotiate the contracts & shift to "value" suppliers, wherever possible.

9. Motivate people & upgrade their skills. The economic scenario can dampen the spirits of SCM people due to pressures from suppliers, customers & internal stakeholders. It is important to help them overcome difficult situations, upgrade their functional & leadership skills. Motivate them to take difficult decisions that benefit overall business.

10. Network with Supply Chain professionals from similar or different industries, learn how they are coping with difficult situations, share your learning and help each other in solving the problems.

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