(From HBR article by David Garfield Global Head of Industries and a member of the Board
of Directors of AlixPartners. He is based in Chicago… a few imp takeaways due
to page restrictions)
It implies some kind of equilibrium, the
notion that we can find and stay in a place where things are safe and balanced,
where the earth won’t suddenly shift beneath us and send our premises and plans
tumbling down. That’s what’s people think is happening with supply chains — and
it’s a mistake.
After the big Covid-19 whipsaw, the
most obvious forms of supply chain distress started to fade away…CEOs in particular seem to have relaxed:
We found that they were less likely than other executives to worry that
disruption would hit their supply chains in the coming months.
The relative peace and quiet that
executives are perceiving is actually ominous. Under the surface, supply chain
risk has become severe, systemic, and strategic. Addressing the risk cannot be
left to procurement and operations teams alone, however smart and skillful they
are. Boards and CEOs need to put supply chains back at the top of their
agendas. Here’s what the current landscape looks like — and how leaders can
address today’s supply chain challenges.
Three trends have made supply chains
fundamentally less stable than they had been for two decades pre-Covid. These aren’t simply short shocks (think
dock strikes, for example), but deep changes that imperil operations, sales,
margins, and ultimately enterprise value..
Many of geopolitical flash points are
near shipping choke points: the Suez Canal and Strait of Hormuz, the Straits of
Taiwan and Malacca. The lack of a U.S. foreign policy consensus, coupled with
the increasingly nationalistic policies of China, Russia, and India, means that
there is no structure in place to defuse or dismantle these conflicts.
World
trade has become less open. According to the World Bank, nearly 3,000 new trade restrictions
were imposed in 2023, a fivefold increase since 2015.
There are five ways that CEOs and
boards can exercise supply chain leadership while not bogging themselves down
in tactical issues…
.
CEOs and boards can push for and
monitor operational flexibility…
Organizational
flexibility can be a powerful defense against disruptions in supply,
operations, and distribution…
Technology can give senior leaders much
more visibility into — and more responsibility for — what’s happening in their
supply chains….
Technology is now advancing to the
point where it can transform supply chains, not just
optimize them. Generative AI is having step-change
impact on strategic elements of supply chain management, like identifying and
evaluating potential partners and backups. It is also becoming able to predict risk, not just
identify it (for example, by detecting early warnings of financial distress at
a supplier), and to propose risk-mitigation strategies based on scenarios.
These advanced capabilities go beyond optimization; they have the potential to
disrupt the economics of companies at every link in the supply chain, from
beginning to end.
CEOs
and boards cannot oversee operations from a distance, looking at dashboards and
dropping in from time to time to tour a plant. They need to dig deeper to understand where
vulnerabilities and opportunities are and discover what they can do to avoid
the first and seize the second, and ensure that their companies take full
advantage of newfound capabilities to visualize, analyze, and strengthen supply
chains. A leadership team that provides financial, operational, and
organizational flexibility and understands that today’s supply chains require
new thinking — not just tinkering — can reduce the odds that they’ll have to
respond to crisis in this era of disruption.