Supply Chain is, arguably, one of those things that you can’t live without. The sheer complexity of Supply Chain, the multiple pockets of risk, lurking around in its various corners and the endemic lack of overall visibility of its multiple channels is what makes it so hard to deal with. And yet, as our recent collective experience of COVID painfully highlighted, Supply Chain is a central ingredient of modern society and instrumental to our very survival.
In fact, Supply Chain has become such an important part of day-to-day life that from an economic vantage point that, it is considered a true source of Competitive Advantage for any corporation when under control. Gone are the days when serious companies considered Supply Chain a wild sub-department or a collection of disparate groups barely communicating to each other. Quite the opposite, now the name of the game in major companies is defining Supply Chain’s diverse functionalities into a coherent unit, hiring the best talents money can buy and providing its senior management with more influence in running the affairs of the respective organizations.
In such a landscape, what makes for a good Supply Chain solution? In other words, what type of product, be it developed internally or acquired from a 3rd party, can add enough value to an organization’s Supply Chain to ensure it gives the said company an edge over its closest competitors? This question is equally (if not more) critical also for any start-up that wishes to produce the next big thing to shake the existing foundations of Supply Chain, or as the old heads like to say it “disrupt the status quo”?
Before we go any farther and list a few deciding factors that make a new Supply Chain solution successful, a number of disclaimers are to be made:
First, short articles can never capture the depth and breadth of concepts and their rich and associated interconnections to pain a full picture of what is truly at stake. Complex solutions need time investment for verification.
Secondly, such lists are rarely exhaustive and can always be expanded as we delve more into the specific requirements or the challenges that we wish to take on.
Connectivity: Arguably, the most fundamental characteristic of a good Supply Chain solution is its impact on Supply Chain connectivity. Simply put, a Supply Chain that offers the best end-to-end connectivity wins the day. COnnectivity applies to seamless movement of goods and services as well as the respective finances and, perhaps more importantly, relevant information.
In fact, while end to end movement of goods, services and even finances are better understood it is the frictionless flow of data within various Supply Chain channels that provides the biggest challenges and greatest opportunities to explore when building new solutions.
As the world we live in becomes increasingly more complex and the nature of interactions between various players within Supply Chain gets more convoluted, existing systems (think the likes of SAP) struggle to provide the same clarity for how data flows within layers of Supply Chain, leading to many pockets of manual and erroneous activities that add more friction to exchange of useful data. The ability of a new solution to replace or eradicate such manual activities remains essential to its success of adoption within the ecosystem.
Technology: While it is apt that the 21st century is dubbed the century of data, it is the technology, as data’s biggest enabler, that is fundamental to any Supply Chain company’s future success.