Our supply chains are suddenly under great scrutiny given the frailties surfaced by Covid. Calls for a greater proportion of domestic procurement are now more common than ever, but is domestic availability the only answer?
Most supply chains are actually run by procurement and logistics people. While there is senior management oversight, the actual purchase choices are routinely made in lower levels of most organisations. To affect change, this is where we need to start, in the bowels of the organisation.
The KPIs of procurement personnel are generally around invoice cost, as it is easy to track. In future, the decision should be more about security of supply, and total procurement cost, which are much harder to measure, and availability which is relatively easy to measure, but in my experience is often ignored.
The huge caveat of course is that the CEO must give ‘permission’ for the procurement people to go off the reservation, and make the necessary changes, and risk buying other than from ‘IBM’.
We also need deep supply chain mapping that captures the dynamics of the chain, and all the transaction costs that apply, as well as the visible financial costs.
The KPI’s of procurement must change if we are to build the resilience of our supply chains.
- Collaborative DIFOT analyses through the chain
- Switch KPI focus from cost savings, usually measured against the invoice cost, to give greater weight to availability.
- Tracking of the drivers of cost, quality and delivery throughout the supply chain.
- Quantifying transaction and opportunity costs, (particularly of management time) at all points through the chain.
- Measures of resilience such as alternative, qualified, and immediately capable suppliers, utilising differing logistics
Together these measures will give you a measure of the resilience of your supply chain, or its ability to recover competitive performance after a failure. The greater the number of nodes in a chain, the greater the risks, which become amplified as you move further way from direct control.
Local suppliers will have to be prepared for the scrutiny of their sourcing. Company A, procuring from Company B, where there are sub-assemblies necessary will want to stress check the suppliers to company B as part of their procurement processes. This will take supply chain transparency to a whole new level. To this point the concerns have been mostly about cost and the time in the chain. In future, it will go much deeper, digging into a range of items that deliver resilience and reliable quality.
The speed of recovery of your supply chain after the inevitable disruption will be key to competitive performance.