Supply Chain Planning Gets a Post-Pandemic Makeover
March 1, 2020 (8AM)?
The chief demand planner for a $5B consumer division of a global electronics giant races to finish the March update to the company’s rolling 12-month forecast. As always, the choice is between +3% at the low end, and +6% on the high. Armed with ten years of category business experience and a leading-edge statistical planning tool at her fingertips, she clicks on “+4.”?
What could go wrong???
Just ask $6B spice maker?McCormick & Company?(3-year stock price down -2% vs. S&P 500 +31%), $29B biopharma giant?GSK?(stock down -15% over same period), $12B US home goods e-tailer?Wayfair?(down -91%). Despite herculean efforts to get ahead of the change unleashed by a global pandemic, each continues to miss the mark.?
The problem of course is not a lack of smarts. Each of these companies has sharp planners and great systems. The issue is adaptation relative to the rate of change itself.??
Thanks to $4T in U.S. fiscal stimulus, war in Ukraine, inflation that?broke all Federal Reserve forecast models, attitudinal shifts in the global workforce, de facto?U.S.-China cold war, newly imminent EU Green Deal carbon disclosure requirements, and now potential?global financial contagion?from a Silicon Valley Bank meltdown, the list of “known unknowns” keeps growing. No planner could ever predict these?black swan?events. But there’s emergent evidence of sustained advantage for those who make a better attempt.?
Fortunately, the available playbooks around risk and adaptation are broadly prevalent thanks to planning innovators like?Cisco,?Apple, and?Schneider Electric. The sophistication of the discipline aligns broadly to three successive waves:?
The problem, as we now see, is that risk is pervasive and amplifying. It’s no longer enough to align smart people around a statistically generated forecast.?
What’s exciting is that the planning profession may be on the cusp of a 4th?wave breakthrough, fundamentally more responsive, resilient, and responsible.?
Talkin’ ‘Bout My Regeneration?
The details are still emergent, but what we’re seeing from planning path breakers like Apple and?HP?is an embrace of change rather than any attempt to optimize around it. If IBP was about integration, the defining quality in Wave 4 is?regeneration: a systemic ability to renew insights, profit, and planet.?
领英推荐
Six digitally powered, human-centered capability vectors are under development among these planning innovators to make this new wave different:?
S&OP and IBP have added billions of dollars in shareholder value over their 20+ year span. In this next volatile era, the spoils of regenerative business planning (RBP) are likely to be equally immense. A natural first step would be to run pilots along on one of these six dimensions. Experiment to learn and make room for those exceptional planners most hungry to ride the wave.?
Written By:? Steve Hochman , Vice President Research,?Zero100
Radical Reinvention: Modernizing the Global Supply Chain
Radical Reinvention: Modernizing the Global Supply Chain?is a bi-weekly podcast featuring conversations with the Zero100 team and various industry experts about current supply chain challenges and solutions that accelerate the Zero100 mission: Zero Percent Carbon, 100% Digital supply chains.
On the show we'll hear from academics, activists, business leaders, lawyers, NGOs, policymakers, researchers, scientists – in addition to supply chain pioneers – to help us navigate the road to achieving our mission.
Listen on all major Podcast platforms:?Apple Podcasts,?Spotify