Although I’m not always impressed with Purchasing’s articles on strategic sourcing and risk management these days, their recent article on “Best practices in risk management” wasn’t too bad, as pointed out by Tim Minahan in his posts “Supply Risk: Purchasing’s Take” and “Supply Risk Profit Equation” on Supply Excellence [WayBackMachine]. In it, they outlined three simple strategies that can help reduce your supply risk.
- Leverage Relationships with Suppliers to eliminate risk and gain protection in a crisis.
Make sure your suppliers will provide you with an acceptable substitute or give you preference when demand exceeds supply. - Study the risks you could face, prioritize them and decide how much value they endanger.
That tells you how much time, effort, and cost to put into the development and implementation of mitigation strategies. - Admit that in some cases it’s better to pay more to ensure continuity of supply.
If the absence of single part could shut down your entire production line, it’s important to make sure that doesn’t happen.
The article also overviewed the most common risks that lead to supply chain disruptions:
- part shortages
- ramp/rollout problems
- order changes by customers
- production problems
- development problems
- quality problems
The fact of the matter is that, as devastating as:
- natural disasters,
- infectious disease pandemics,
- regulatory pressures,
- supplier insolvency, and
- geo-political unrest, coos, and civil wars
are, they are not everyday occurrences.