5 ways the COVID-19 pandemic has changed the supply chain
Car manufacturers are among those stocking up on parts due to supply chain issues. Image: Reuters/Babu
- The worldwide supply chain continues to be affected by challenges relating to the COVID-19 pandemic, including delays and disruption.
- Many chief executives now identify supply chain turmoil as the greatest threat to their companies' growth and their countries' economies.
- Organizations need to reimagine and manage their supply chain differently to ensure business continuity and growth for the future.
Two years into the pandemic, the global supply chain continues to sputter and break down. Each day comes news of choked ports, out-of-place shipping containers, record freight rates, and other problems that cause disruption and defy easy answer.
Unless you’re the one waging the daily battle to move cargo for your organization, you should step back and look at the larger picture. Because when ports eventually clear and rates come down, the way we manage and think about the supply chain is going to be very different.
Here are five ways the supply chain has changed thanks to COVID-19.
1. Supply chain now a key focus of the C-suite
The supply chain finally has the C-suite’s attention, and chief supply chain officers are its new stars. In October, corporate CEOs in a McKinsey survey for the first time identified supply chain turmoil as the greatest threat to growth for both their companies and their countries’ economies – greater than the pandemic, labour shortages, geopolitical instability, war and domestic conflict.
Bank of America also noted mentions of “supply chain” in Q3 earnings calls by Fortune 500 companies had risen an astonishing 412% from Q3 2020 and 123% from Q2 2021 earnings calls, when boardroom focus on the issue was already red hot. Some 59% of companies say they have adopted new supply-chain risk management practices over the past year, including diversifying to reduce over reliance on China.
2. Business continuity more important than costs
Before the pandemic, cost reduction and productivity enhancement were driving supply chain process improvements, digitization and investment. Those drivers remain important, but the unprecedented chaos caused by COVID threatened the competitive position – even the survival – of many businesses that found they could no longer meet customer expectations.
The existential crisis brought on by the pandemic has forced companies to shift the focus of innovation and restructuring efforts to ensuring business continuity by building resiliency and flexibility. McKinsey highlighted the vulnerability of manufacturers by showing how few had any visibility into their supplier networks beyond Tier 1 suppliers.
Clorox is one of many companies taking action. It is investing $500 million in upgrading its digital capabilities, citing the need for real-time visibility and better demand planning.
“Supply chain and operations teams must develop new capabilities―and quickly. Playing to a more balanced scorecard will require a lot of changes: reducing the carbon footprint, building greater resilience in the supply chain, creating more transparency, and ensuring accountability,” says Bain & Co in a new report.
3. Buyer-supplier relations have been altered
In certain industries, the failure of critical links in the supply chain has led to new alliances and co-development ventures between original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and suppliers. Alarmed by the shortage of semiconductors, for instance, Ford and General Motors formed strategic agreements with chipmakers.
More broadly, there is a recognition that resiliency is impossible unless buyers, suppliers and other parties along a value chain are willing to share data and collaborate. Reuters report Where’s My Stuff? suggests businesses could share sensitive data with partners by creating “cleanrooms”, where joint teams can perform analysis without fear that competitive information will be leaked. Blockchain technology, which enables secure, access-controlled data exchange, could prove valuable for data sharing.
“With the benefits of increasing collaboration through data sharing and visibility into deeper tiers becoming more obvious, addressing mistrust becomes a key objective and will require concerted and directed efforts. … (O)rganizations will need to move closer to their suppliers and build relationships and trust, but they can also use smart approaches to data sharing to make progress,” the report says.
4. Supply chain workarounds are now standard
Bold companies are not waiting for supply lines to untangle themselves – retailers short on storage space are buying warehouses, shippers that can’t find containers are making their own, and companies unable to book with ocean carriers are chartering vessels, while those unhappy with their online sales are buying e-commerce fulfilment operators.
Amazon and shipping giants Maersk and CMA CGM are moving into air freight. Maersk and CMA CGM, in fact, appear to be on a collision course with Amazon and Alibaba in logistics, forwarding and delivery.
Nimble shippers and manufacturers know they have to keep adjusting. They are using alternative ports, reformulating products, shifting to air freight, boosting in-house trucking, taking advantage of off-peak port hours, and diverting resources from low-margin products to moneymakers.
In its healthcare unit, GE is redesigning products, using dual sources and expanding factory capacity as it struggles to cope with semiconductor shortages and other supply chain challenges that have affected the medical technology industry.
GE and Stanley Tools are among companies that have sought to secure goods by shifting production, using forward contracting, turning to contract manufacturers, fast-tracking plant expansion, building new manufacturing hubs, using dual-source manufacturing and nearshoring, or making hard-to-get parts with 3D printing.
5. The inventory playbook has been ripped up
Companies know that disappointed customers might not return. That’s why some consumer products brands are desperate to conceal stockouts and low inventory, with some even reconfiguring in-store displays and using decoys to hide shortages.
More fundamentally, others are questioning the supply chain models they have worked so hard to make hyper-efficient. Automakers that spent decades perfecting just-in-time (JIT) systems have started to break with JIT practices because they don’t work when there are critical component shortages. Toyota, Volkswagen, Tesla and others are stockpiling batteries, chips and other key parts and racing to lock up future deliveries.
“The just-in-time model is designed for supply-chain efficiencies and economies of scale,” Nissan CEO Ashwani Gupta, Nissan chief operating officer, said recently. “The repercussions of an unprecedented crisis like COVID highlight the fragility of our supply-chain model.”
To make sure that they have enough to sell, retailers Nordstrom, PVH and Gap have tried “pack-and-hold” strategies – over-ordering to prevent stockouts with the gamble that they can stash away unsold inventory and sell it as new next year, rather than having to deeply discount.
What is the World Economic Forum doing to help the manufacturing industry rebound from COVID-19?
In other industries built on lean inventories, there is a debate about whether we are seeing a permanent strategy change towards larger inventory and more safety stock, or a temporary one that is necessary because of higher sales.
The Reuters report suggests that more companies are prepared to implement aggressive continuous replenishment programmes and automate more of their ordering to avoid getting caught flatfooted without sufficient stocks down the road.
What’s clear is that nearly two years after the world first learned of COVID, the supply chain is still experiencing an unfortunate series of firsts – a historic level of carrier unreliability, record high freight rates, all-time low warehouse vacancies and more.
It will pass. When it does, look for a more intelligent supply chain.
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