MMH    Topics     Columns

Pearson on Excellence: Dynamic Operations—The flexible future of supply chain management

Dynamic operations—supply chain networks that respond quickly and smoothly to changing business conditions—sounds like something every company should desire. Who wouldn’t want a supply chain whose processes, people, capital assets, technology, and data are always positioned to surmount the primary challenges of the day?


Latest Material Handling News

Dynamic operations—supply chain networks that respond quickly and smoothly to changing business conditions—sounds like something every company should desire. Who wouldn’t want a supply chain whose processes, people, capital assets, technology, and data are always positioned to surmount the primary challenges of the day?

The reality, however, is that few organizations are able to change as fast as the world around them; and a primary reason is inflexible supply chains. Due partly to their ceaseless quest for integration, many companies are currently burdened by arthritic supply chains—unable to flex without pain. And in this era of “permanent volatility”—that includes endless onslaughts of political, environmental, commercial, technological, and financial turmoil—rigid supply chains are increasingly untenable. The antidote is dynamic operations.

In this five-part series, we examine dynamic operations’ core components—capabilities that work together to give companies the speed and flexibility they need to accommodate supply chain disruptions and anomalies. The core benefits are twofold: minimizing the downsides of disruptive events and capturing the opportunities that those events often engender.

The dynamic operations concept
Think of dynamic operations as groups or nodes of supply chain networks that, in response to changing circumstances, reorient themselves without upending a company’s desired cost/service balance. When a disruptive situation arises (supply interruptions, financial chaos, market shifts, etc.), processes at any node on the supply chain can be modified quickly.

A loose analogy might be a guitar whose pegs allow the musician to design custom tunings that make a difficult song easier to play. With a guitar, the timbre of one or many strings can be changed. With dynamic operations, a company can do the same thing: effectively retuning its supply chain by leveraging the flexibility it has built in to every node.

Consider the actual case of a consumer goods manufacturer with 40 production facilities worldwide. The company’s markets and product lines were changing rapidly and company executives knew they needed to rationalize manufacturing. However, they also recognized that fewer plants could mean higher risk—compromised response and lead times and potentially higher per-plant operating expenses.

The solution was to create a more dynamic supply chain: fewer facilities (reduced from 40 to 23) but greater manufacturing breadth at each plant. To make this happen, the company used advanced analytics, scenario planning and insightful network design to create a unique “tradeoff curve.”

Via the curve, the company was able to determine the precise cost of adding relative levels of flexibility and that, by raising per-plant investments only slightly, it could increase supply-chain-wide resilience significantly and give each plant more ability to produce the products and quantities dictated by market conditions at any given moment. Basically, the organization got a lot more bang for only a few more bucks.

Dynamic operations components
Four distinctive capabilities work together to give companies the dynamic operations they need to rapidly identify and accommodate an endless stream of supply chain disruptions and anomalies:

Insight to action: sensing, capturing and analyzing external and internal data, and turning it into usable business intelligence. In effect, companies use information to improve their ability to react swiftly to both threats and opportunities—buffering risk while exploiting risk’s upside.

Adaptable structure: creating products, processes, and systems that are easily modified in response to changing conditions. The best and clearest example may be flexible manufacturing: the ability to respond quickly to currency fluctuations, supply disruptions, and sudden demand shifts by altering manufacturing volumes, mixes, and venues.

Flexible innovation: making design and development processes less rigid by reducing changeover times; increasing interchangeability; designing products that embrace multi-channel networks and technology; and structuring ways to smoothly and rapidly rebalance order management, production, and warehousing in response to shifting conditions.

Agile execution: rapidly adjusting supply chain actions by dialing capacity up and down, improving collaboration, formulating supplier contingency plans, and implementing advanced technology such as predictive analytics. The mantra is “flexible resource allocation,” made possible by centralized operations, low-touch (highly automated) processes, cross-trained personnel, solid supplier contingency plans, and an elastic infrastructure that emphasizes outsourcing, vendor-managed inventories, and rent-rather-than-buy philosophies.

Details on each of these capabilities, along with illustrative case studies, will appear in our February through May editorials in Logistics Management.


Article Topics

January 2013
Supply Chain Management
   All topics

Columns News & Resources

Latest in Materials Handling

ISM May Semiannual Report signals growth in 2024, at a reduced rate
11th annual National Forklift Safety Day to be hybrid event, on June 11
PAC Machinery announces leadership transition
Motion Industries to acquire automation company
Automate 2024 heavy on smart warehouse robotics
Lift Trucks & Accesories: The Trusted Workhorse Evolves
Automate & Accelerate: Replacing Pick-to-Light with the Next Generation of Automation
More Materials Handling

Subscribe to Materials Handling Magazine

Subscribe today!
Not a subscriber? Sign up today!
Subscribe today. It's FREE.
Find out what the world's most innovative companies are doing to improve productivity in their plants and distribution centers.
Start your FREE subscription today.

May 2024 Modern Materials Handling

A complete modernization of the sortation and conveyance at Boscov’s DC, along with updated software and a new order processing area, have transformed the ability of the department store chain’s DC to move more cartons in less time, while permitting more frequent replenishment shipment for stores.

Latest Resources

2023 Automation Study: Usage & Implementation of Warehouse/DC Automation Solutions
2023 Automation Study: Usage & Implementation of Warehouse/DC Automation Solutions
This research was conducted by Peerless Research Group on behalf of Modern Materials Handling to assess usage and purchase intentions forautomation systems...
How Your Storage Practices Can Affect Your Pest Control Program
How Your Storage Practices Can Affect Your Pest Control Program
Discover how your storage practices could be affecting your pest control program and how to prevent pest infestations in your business. Join...

Warehousing Outlook 2023
Warehousing Outlook 2023
2023 is here, and so are new warehousing trends.
Extend the Life of Brownfield Warehouses
Extend the Life of Brownfield Warehouses
Today’s robotic and data-driven automation systems can minimize disruptions and improve the life and productivity of warehouse operations.
Power Supply in Overhead Cranes: Energy Chains vs. Festoons
Power Supply in Overhead Cranes: Energy Chains vs. Festoons
Download this white paper to learn more about how both systems compare.