War Footing: A 5-Point Prep Plan for Supply Chain Leaders

War Footing: A 5-Point Prep Plan for Supply Chain Leaders

This week,?David Leonhardt?of?The New York Times?wrote an op-ed flagging the potential for a “New Axis” forming around Russia, China, and Iran, all of whom “stand to benefit when the United States has to cope with multiple international crises at the same time.” It’s not idle banter and?Nancy Pelosi’s?Taiwan trip is just the latest in a string of?high-tension moments?that feel?like we’re as close to a serious war as?we’ve been in decades.??

What should supply chain leaders do to prepare? Consider this set of principles and see if you would be ready:?

1.?The?Customer?Is No Longer King

Shortages since COVID started are?well-known?across industries and customers are getting used to stockouts. For supply chain traditionalists this is sacrilege, but in tight times (i.e., rationing during a war) the imperative shifts from pleasing the customer to optimizing the value of scarce resources.?

Expect more demand than you can meet and plan for allocation rules that may be imposed from above (i.e., government or military). Imagine having Tesla’s?demand backlog?and ask how you’d take and manage orders – Elon Musk may be irritating, but customers have consistently demonstrated a willingness to play by his rules.

2.?Repair, Refurbish, Reuse?Everything

I spoke to the President of a small medical equipment manufacturer this week who described a part he’d been sourcing for years at $10/unit. The current price is $197. His team is struggling with cancellations, grey market price gauging and massive production shortfalls. And yet, business is great because they can still service, repair, and upgrade existing equipment.?

If you can’t sell new production, maybe you can fix what’s already out there. This won’t apply everywhere but?repair/refurb?offers a win-win for your customers and your company profits while also reducing environmental impacts. Audit your service capabilities and see how far you could stretch your customers’ and your own operations in a supply crisis.

3.?Create?Options?for Fulfillment

This can be done?badly, like the way airlines oversell seats on flights they then cancel – or?nicely, like the way Apple encourages customers to pre-order new devices that are expected to be big hits (while forecasting expected availability by channel in real-time). Customers may be willing to buy the right to move to the front of the line when supplies are short, so why not create options to let them do so.?

There is plenty of precedent for this including membership fees (Costco, Amazon Prime), loyalty cards (CVS, Kroger) and tiering programs (Delta Airlines, Marriott). Watch out though, because?government-mandated rationing?may trump your plans if things get really dicey. Either way, supply chain’s ability to prioritize orders with intentionality depends on a fulfillment logic that prices the option value of preferred customer status. It can also be a tool to help preempt gray/black markets for your products.

4.?Build?Solutions, Not Products

Customers don’t really want products, they want solutions for jobs they need done. Making and shipping another unit might be impossible if you’re short of?semiconductors,?plastic resin, or?avocados. That doesn’t mean you can’t still solve the customer’s problem.?

Alternative materials are emerging for?some plastics.?Manual controls can sometimes replace electronic components, and different ingredients are in development for many food items (e.g., gluten-free wheat substitutes). Think about the attributes in your?bills-of-materials?(BOM) and source for solutions rather than parts or ingredients.

5.?Sandbag?Your Way to Stability

The former?CEO of Tenneco?said to me once that the best advice he’d ever gotten was to “under promise, but over deliver.” This familiar nugget of wisdom is essential for supply chain leaders in times of crisis because 30+ years of demand-driven excellence has lulled the world into a false sense of security about supplies of everything from?ice cream?to?insulin.?

Stockpiling?is wasteful when times are good, but smart when things get bumpy.?Even more important though is to manage expectations to keep customers and colleagues alert to the risks you face.

Be Prepared…

Business continuity planning should include even the most horrific scenarios. For supply chain leaders this means thinking practically about how you’d keep going if the United States and European Union?were drawn into a full-scale war with Leonhardt’s “New Axis.”?

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Nice piece, Kevin, thanks!

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