Insight

5 Steps To Protect Your Business From Supply Chain Disruptions

What supply chain manager doesn’t dread getting the news that the goods are not going to show up at the dock on time? And for some, a shipment that’s merely late but does eventually show up is good news. During the Covid-19 pandemic, many shipments simply never showed up at all, leaving businesses scrambling to fill empty orders.

Case in point is the auto industry, crippled by the lack of computer chips due to supply chain issues, which resulted in decreased automobile production, increased used car prices, and numerous lost customers. News headlines reported things like “acute shortages of supplies” and “global supply chain disruptions” that led to “companies from Apple to Nintendo announcing shipping and manufacturing delays.” The truth is, our supply chains are critical infrastructure, and privately held mid-sized firms are often the most affected by disruptions to it.

While most of us may be slowly waking up and getting back to the real world, returning to the office or using up the last of our emergency government-issued benefits, business logisticians and senior business leaders were not allowed to be asleep at the wheel the past year. Ideally, your company had a strong contingency plan in place to ensure your operations could continue.

Currently a quick look at online job board Indeed indicates over 500 openings for overseas supply chain management positions. Where are you in terms of access to your overseas partners? Can you better manage your supply chain or materials and components so that your business is not significantly affected by future shortages?

Computer chip shortage

One big challenge every business selling more complex tech goods will now face is the looming computer chip shortage. Most computer chips are manufactured in Taiwan, and starting in late December 2020, a combination of political turmoil and rising Covid-19 case counts resulted in disruptions to the output of Taiwan chip manufacturers.

If you cannot source computer chips for your products, you will need to figure out alternative interim revenue streams and tighten operating expense controls. The good news is, you may be able to raise your prices with little or no competitor threat.

Disruptions to the food and restaurant industries

Food industry supply chains has experienced disruptions as well. Initial consumer shelf shortages in 2020 were the result of many consumers wrongly believing a food production crisis was imminent, and buying up everything they could. Over the past year, however, production—particularly production targeting restaurants—diminished due to reduced demand.

With states now reopening, people are flocking to restaurants again, and most suppliers did not anticipate how rapidly customers would return. This has led to restaurant supply chain disruptions, from chicken parts to restaurant workers. Wages for restaurant workers are rising due to worker “return” shortages, caused in some cases by employees collecting unemployment benefits that may be higher than their previous wages, or else due to delayed re-openings for daycares and schools, which have forced many parents to stay home and care for children instead of returning to work.

And as an example of how interconnected everything is in business today, the restaurant industry is also being harmed by the computer chip shortage. In addition, rising gasoline prices have resulted in increased transportation costs (refrigeration truck pricing has risen over 20% from February to May), leading to increased food prices.

It’s clear that resilient supply chains are critical to your business. While the health and stability of supply chains are out of your control, there are some things your business can do to protect itself against the fallout from supply chain disruption:

5 steps to protect against supply chain disruptions

1. Invest in the right technology

Within your secure and up-to-date digital network, you need integrated data from customers, sales, suppliers, and producers through “state of the art” inventory management systems connecting you to your suppliers, your production facilities, your warehouses, and your sales organization.

Invest in inventory management software that can provide real-time, detailed visibility into inventory control and supply chain management, including inventory levels, stock on order, and supplier on-time performance. Knowing the inventory levels at your vendors and raw materials at your suppliers will help you avoid volatility in your supply chain.

TAKEAWAY: Technology investments are relatively cheap when compared to the lost sales caused by a lack of inventory.

2. Diversify suppliers and manufacturing partners

Do not count on environmental, social, and political (ESP) stability. Follow your business instincts, not a simplistic, cost-focused software algorithm. Case in point is the political and economic issues between China and the United States, which have led many large manufacturers to use multiple suppliers—even at marginally higher costs—to avoid losing business and customers from potential supply chain disruptions.

TAKEAWAY: Hedge your bets—don’t rely on one supplier for a key component of your product.

3. Incorporate risk management into your supply chain management

Supply chain management is not just the sourcing of raw materials. It involves the end-to-end flow of goods and services, and includes all processes that transform raw materials into final products. It involves the active streamlining of a business’s supply-side activities to maximize customer value and gain a competitive advantage in the marketplace. Make sure you understand where you might have supply chain disruption that could affect product quality, pricing, and availability.

TAKEAWAY: Develop a supply chain risk matrix that allows the assessment of probabilities of supply chain disruption, and use it to mitigate and monitor risks.

4. Create a procure-to-pay purchasing system

Many functions in a business are not well integrated. Excel spreadsheets and manual processes are still common in many middle-market businesses. Procure-to-pay is a business process cycle spanning from procurement functions for goods and services needed, to receiving procedures (including verification), to accounts payable and accounting functions. Payables duties include vendor invoice matching to purchase orders and receiving reports, getting invoice approvals, paying approved invoices, recording transactions, and generating reports.

TAKEAWAY: Move from manual, paper-based purchasing to lower-cost, higher-control automated purchasing that links all relevant functions across your business.

5. Focus on the basics—cash is king

While thinking about supply chains, think about the supply chain involved with your cash flow. Do you conduct effective cash-flow forecasting? For example, how long can you last if there is a disruption and you cannot move your product? Is “just in time” inventory of materials and parts still a dependable theory? Do you have a line of credit or documents prepared to obtain a short-term loan if necessary to secure backup inventory? What is the cost of lost customers from not being able to sell your product due to shortages?

Good cash management is your ace in the hole, especially if your competitors lack this expertise. Successful businesses practice effective cash conversion cycle (CCC) management. CCC is a business measurement that expresses the time (measured in days) it takes for a company to convert its investments in inventory and other resources into cash flows from sales. Essentially, if your cash is tied up more days in inventory and raw materials than in days to collect on sales, then you could be “growing your company into the ground.” The more you grow, the more cash you will need from your bank.

TAKEAWAY: Focus on how long it takes to convert inventory to cash. Implement practices to accelerate cash collection from customers.

Coordination and cooperation are critical to avoid supply chain disruptions

Effective management of your supply chain provides several opportunities for your company to improve your profit margins and retain customers, but coordination and cooperation with all contributors to your supply chain is critical. Genuine engagement with those contributors is a win-win for manufactures and supply chain partners. Know this: your suppliers are ready (and in many cases eager) for change with you—this is a margin-increasing opportunity for them, too.

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