THURSDAY, March 28, 2024
nationthailand

How resiliency forms the strongest link in the digital supply chain

How resiliency forms the strongest link in the digital supply chain

Recent times have brought the importance of supply chain resiliency into even sharper focus. Organisations that had already built resilience into both their technology and operational networks have weathered the turbulent times through the Covid-19 pandemic better. For others, it has been a huge wake-up call.

As we now stand back and attempt to regroup, rebuild and regenerate, every business has a chance to reflect and decide how to become better prepared.
This is the point at which organisations in every vertical market should realise that resiliency needs to be built in at a granular executional level; it is a function that should apply to and connect with the architectural foundations of every process in the company. It is not some sort of dial or switch that you simply turn on or up at the start of a crisis, whether it is a global contagion or some other form of economic upheaval.

The shape of change
But before we consider the nature of resiliency, we need to decide what we really mean by “change” itself in order to understand the various forms that it manifests itself in.
At the force majeure level, there is sudden catastrophic change, the likes of which we have of course witnessed in 2020. Outside of pandemics, we should also include other “black swan” events that disrupt supply chains, such as a sunken container ship, a hurricane, or perhaps a widespread contamination incident.
While these massively disruptive and dreadful events typically cause chaos and the loss of life, they are comparatively infrequent and so (in any normal world) they don’t threaten the long term viability of a business with the same types of market forces and fluctuations that emanate from deeper-set market trends.
There are more ground level changes in demand patterns that nibble away at margins and service capabilities slowly. Less cataclysmic, these changes can ultimately have even more impact than a hurricane.
Even longer term, when securing essential strategic resources for the business itself is threatened, change happens in a form that can lead to business closure. Knowing how and why change itself occurs (and what shape it comes in) can help us to build a resilient supply chain capable of driving business operations today, with a constant eye on every variable factor that could impact business tomorrow.
Visibility, intelligence, digital connection
A resilient supply chain is based on three core capabilities: visibility, intelligence and a digitally connected ecosystem. To restate these cornerstones in more depth, we are talking about end-to-end real-time visibility; intelligence across root cause identification, exception detection and resolution management; and an exceptional ability to execute through a digitised ecosystem that provides a path to autonomous “sense and respond” activities.
Taking each of these elements in turn, let’s look at visibility. In a traditional business model, an enterprise bases its visibility only on what its suppliers are telling it. You don’t really know where your order is, or when it’s going to arrive. However, cloud-based supply chain networks offer the opportunity for all parties to view and interact with one single view of an order in real time. The net result is that the business, its suppliers, and its carriers operate using a single instance and version of data – a single source of truth.
This singularity is important. It cuts out uncertainty, delays and eradicates separation so that there is little or no contingency factor in daily operations. But visibility needs to run end-to-end for true clarity. The business needs to know the impact of its actions upstream (on its suppliers) and as far as possible downstream (into its sales channel and customer base).
Additionally, end-to-end visibility needs to happen in real-time, that is all the information relating to all supply chain transactions, movements, price fluctuations and so on needs to be available all of the time, in real time. Without real-time super high data quality, it is not possible to drive the supply chain by exception and take advantage of machine learning technologies.

Intelligence, to separate the noise

As the resilient supply chain company moves forward, it has the advantage of software algorithms that are able to detect events that can cause disruptive issues. It’s important to remember that there will always be an element of “operational noise” throughout both the physical and financial supply chain, so the organisation will need to qualify just how much noise it can live with in the normal course of business.
At this point we can then drill down into the root causes behind any single event. When there is a shortage of materials for a production plant, or perhaps a shortfall in the supply of finished materials for a retail store, we need to understand the why-factor behind these events. Knowing the difference between a shortage caused by a shift in market demands and scarcity resulting from a container ship being stuck in a port is fundamentally important.
The real intelligence here comes from being able to group together different events happening in various locations around an organisation’s total global supply chain. If the business can pinpoint the same root cause across multiple operational issues, then it can deliver resolution management more quickly.

The digital ecosystem
An intelligent resilient supply chain can process thousands of variables and data sources across a single cloud-based platform in order to help the business navigate forwards. Working at speeds far in advance of any human capabilities, a digital supply chain ecosystem helps all parties connect and collaborate over dates, times, shipping orders, financing and so on. When all partners open up the external-facing portions of their own systems accordingly, business decisions happen faster, with improved accuracy and less uncertainty. More problematic is the fact that it is an uncertainty that breeds contingency and cost.

Onward from automation 1.0
In the immediate future, more and more of the actions we take inside our most resilient digital supply chains will be carried out autonomously by intelligent agents and smart algorithms. Our physical and our accompanying financial supply chain networks will reflect the automation intelligence already being applied to manufacturing via Industry 4.0 practices.
If today we stand at automation stage 1.0, then business is set to apply more algorithmic intelligence in the future. When and where this intelligence is not just smart, but also resilient, is when it starts to make decisions not just based on short term prices, supply availability and market demand, but also on perceived business longevity. The core truth is, building a supply chain capable of resiliency to “normal” change will allow a business to adapt to massive upheavals if and when we have to adjust to some wildly different “new normal”.
As for Thailand, according to kidkah.com, a website under the Commerce Ministry, the logistics services sector’s GDP (transportation and warehouse) in the first half of 2020 accounted for Bt300.91 billion, ranking as the fourth of the highest valued-services industries.
The Department of Business Development indicates, as of August 2020, that Thailand has registered 20,077 of supply chains and logistics providers, but since the country’s logistics services’ GDP has been wrecked by the Covid-19 pandemic, the real GDP shrinks to a negative growth of -21.7 per cent when compared to the first half of the previous year.
However, postal / documents / goods delivery are continuously achieving a leap in growth in accordance with e-commerce and online shopping expansion, especially express delivery services and food deliveries.
One of the challenges Thai logistics providers have faced is how to leverage the use of expensive logistics technology and elevate their businesses to the next step. And of course, like the other countries, innovations and technologies will be deployed for logistics services, in both IT and communications improvement, to support working networks, real-time display, monitoring and tracking, punctuality, including data analysis to meet customers’ needs, for enhanced performance and continuous changes.

Fabio Tiviti is vice president for Asean, Infor.

nationthailand