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by Ralf W. Seifert, Richard Markoff Published 10 March 2021 in Leadership • 5 min read
Supply chains have been under intense pressure over the course of the pandemic. What can we learn from the shocks they have experienced and the resilience they have displayed?
As the world grapples with the human and economic crisis unraveling before us, supply chains have found themselves squarely within the public eye and are experiencing unique challenges of their own. A closer look at the tests they faced and how they were addressed offers insight into how supply chains are building resilience into their systems.
First, the supply shocks
As COVID-19 was taking its toll on China, experts were focusing on ‘supply shocks’. These were disruptions to the availability of goods sourced from China; both finished goods for sale and products used in factories in developed markets. Companies scrambled to sort out what production was feasible, and what demand could be met.
At that moment, it made sense to think of supply chain resilience. We have previously talked about the lessons learned on resilience for global value chains under threat and the five supply chain resilience levers companies should put in place.
Some companies will already have integrated these learnings while others, in the interests of costs, and at the sacrifice of agility and resilience, have been relentlessly consolidating production and extending sourcing.
Second, the demand shocks
As the pandemic crisis deepened and nations began to institute lockdowns, supply chains experienced something completely new: systemic demand shocks, where people were stocking up on consumer staples in order to comply with restrictions on movements, in some cases buying months’ worth of goods in a single day.
The most talked-about example – toilet paper – is ironically, the go-to example of a perfectly forecastable product, since the end consumption is usually stable. There seemed to be an attendant fear that food supply chains would be unable to respond to a similarly unprecedented, massive spike in demand.
With a few exceptions, consumer staple supply chains answered the call. Store shelves were restocked and this provided a measure of reassurance to people in a distressing time. Behind the scenes, supply chain professionals accomplished this feat with Herculean effort, as the classic planning models were not built to accommodate such severe peaks in demand.
The replenishment models that dictate orders from retail chain distribution centers to stores can be notoriously manual and lacking in sophistication. They are best suited to continuous, relatively smooth demands. With pipelines being emptied out, there was a scramble to redirect inventories, identify priorities and override IT supply proposals.
On the production side, the successful replenishment is the result of maximizing production with all spare capacity in use. Since food supply chains are usually finely tuned for steady demands, the full pipeline has likely not yet been restored following the first and second waves of pandemic-led closures.
It bears acknowledging that the resilience issue is less relevant for food supply chains as they tend to be much more local than non-food supply chains.
Third, the aftershocks
Many of you will have heard of the bullwhip effect. It describes the way in which demand spikes tend to amplify as they move up the chain. A small increase in demand at the consumer level may lead to a large increase in production at a food manufacturer or their packaging suppliers. So, it is fair to ask: Will the bullwhip strike now?
There are reasons to think it will not. Among the key drivers of the bullwhip effect is a lack of visibility into the nature of the demand increase. One imagines that all actors in the supply chain are well aware of why demand has risen, and that it does not represent an organic evolution in the sales of the product.
However, there is one classic cause of the bullwhip effect that must be managed, and that is ‘shortage gaming’. This describes how, when there is a shortage of a product, the tendency is for downstream actors to inflate their supply needs artificially, in order to claim a greater share of a scare resource. This will require vigilance moving forward to be sure that visibility into true supply priorities is not lost as pipelines are refilled.
The supply chain has not seen the end of manual interventions in supply processes, however. Many replenishment systems use simple moving averages to calculate store-level requirements. With such an unprecedented demand spike polluting these moving averages, supply chain planners will have to modify supply quantities manually and scramble to adjust their planning systems.
Adding to the complexity is the ability to develop robust demand plans for the future. There are several variables that bring unique uncertainty. It is impossible to predict how consumers will behave moving forward, since the extent and duration of restricted movements is, at present, unknowable. Will demand return to a normal baseline, or will there be waves of large-scale buying? It is also challenging to know what impact two periods of extended restaurant closures had on the level of grocery purchases.
Fourth, the new normal
The economic impacts are being felt, and economists are predicting a deep recession of unknown length. Indeed, while some supply chains are working incredibly hard to keep up, others, such as VW in automotive, are being forced to slow down.
For supply chain planners, one pitfall to avoid as they move ahead is a dynamic called the inventory bounce. When demand reaches a new steady state that is lower than the previous steady state, there must be a cut in production to allow the pipeline of stock to lower to a new steady state level. At that point, production actually increases a bit to match the new demand.
In the last major recession ten years ago, the inventory bounce fooled some upstream supply chains into thinking that demand was rebounding. The bullwhip effect kicked in and the bounce became amplified. Havoc and distress prevailed.
Out of the shocks, an opportunity?
The shrinking of the supply chain footprint dynamic may accelerate as companies seek a different cost/resilience trade-off and look to localize production and sourcing.
Now has also been a moment for the supply chain to step up and contribute. LVMH, L’Oréal and Coty and others stepped up and repurposed production facilities intended for fragrances and hair gels to produce hand sanitizer. In addition to providing a valuable resource that may have helped save lives, this move also kept workers on and facilities operating despite difficult economic conditions for luxury items.
A unique moment
Supply chains have showcased singular resourcefulness and adaptability, though the challenges are far from over. But the outcome may be fundamental changes to the system as a whole and a host of managers and regulators for whom it is second nature to rethink global models and supply dependencies.
Professor of Operations Management at IMD
Ralf W Seifert is Professor of Operations Management at IMD and co-author of The Digital Supply Chain Challenge: Breaking Through. He directs IMD’s Leading the Future Supply Chain (LFSC) program, which addresses both traditional supply chain strategy and implementation issues as well as digitalization trends and the impact of new technologies.
Supply chain researcher, consultant, coach and lecturer
Richard Markoff is a supply chain researcher, consultant, coach, and lecturer. He has worked in supply chain for L’Oréal for 22 years, in Canada, the US and France, spanning the entire value chain from manufacturing to customer collaboration. He is also Co-Founder and Operating Partner of the Venture Capital firm Innovobot.
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