Most Organizations Lack Supply Chain Confidence
December 27, 2022

New
research from Capgemini reveals that three-quarters of organizations have been
impacted by closing facilities, supply chain disruptions, employee absence, and
remote work in the past three years, and less than 20% of organizations feel
equipped to handle the impacts of these changes. Capgemini Research Institute’s
report,
“How greater intelligence could supercharge supply chains”, explores how organizations across industries can leverage
technology to create resilient, sustainable, and intelligent supply chains to
navigate these disruptions and adapt in real time.
Greater focus on sustainability, global socio-economic changes, and shifting
consumer demands has meant that organizations are facing considerable disruption
to their supply chains. In this context, leaders’ most pressing concerns are
reducing CO2 emissions across all tiers of the supply chain (95%) and growing
e-commerce volumes (90%). Around 92% of organizations surveyed said that the
ongoing relocation of the global supply chain will impact them but only 15% are
equipped to deal with this.
Investing in supply chains now is critical for organizations to be prepared to
meet future demands, cites the report. On average over the next three years,
organizations plan to increase their investment in supply chain transformation
by 17% and expect to double their business outcomes in terms of growth,
profitability and sustainability.
“There are numerous building blocks that need to come together to create a
future-ready supply chain network and provide differentiated offerings that
customers are looking for. The last few years have highlighted the need for
organizations to build agile and resilient supply chains, not only to cope with
disruptions but also to help them stay ahead of the curve, especially from a
sustainability perspective,” comments Mayank Sharma, Global Supply Chain Lead at
Capgemini. “It is clear that there’s no one-size fits all solution, but
organizations that lay the foundation for a data-driven, technology enabled,
scalable, and sustainable supply chain are the ones that will reap the most
impressive returns in terms of driving improved customer loyalty, creating more
business value and meeting sustainability goals.”
The report highlights a need for organizations to design resilient, connected
networks with integrated data-driven planning. It suggests that technology will
be a critical enabler here, giving organizations access to real-time insights
which in turn can enhance the ability to predict change and help them plan for
possible future scenarios.
‘Supply chain masters’ – organizations defined as having displayed the ability
to successfully balance multiple demands on their supply chain – are already
reaping business benefits. The research found that this small cohort of
respondents (9.5%) reported a 15% incremental growth in revenues, a 17%
reduction in CO2 emissions as well as a 1.8 percentage point higher market share
when compared with others.
Focus on sustainability is crucial
Supply chains currently account for over 90% of an organization’s greenhouse gas
emissions[2]. Companies are increasingly reshaping business strategies to
prioritize sustainability, with many setting top-line targets to improve the
overall environmental impact of their products and services. There is a clear
need for supply chains to be at the core of these sustainability initiatives.
The vast majority of organizations surveyed (95%) recognize the need to reduce
CO2 emissions across the entire supply chain, but only 13% feel well prepared to
handle these changes. Currently, reducing Scope 1[3] emissions dominates an
organizations’ sustainability initiatives (38%), versus scope 2 and 3 emissions
which account for 22% and 27% respectively. The report suggests that sustainable
practices must be adopted across the value chain with transparent metrics set to
measure performance plus real-time tracking systems implemented to monitor
performance. Investing in supplier training and education initiatives will help
to empower stakeholders to make a real impact and enable an organization to
reach its sustainability goals.
The research found that only one in four have started scaling sustainability
initiatives in their supply chains, highlighting opportunity for organizations
to improve.
Embrace automation and technology for robust management
As
organizations plan to increase investments in supply chain transformation, the
report suggests there will be considerable focus on change management and
upskilling stakeholders. It will also be important to improve collaboration with
ecosystem players (customers, suppliers, peers), as well as invest in automation
and robotization to improve operational efficiency and redeploy resources (such
as customer interactions, analysis, dynamic planning and decision-making).
Building a composable, integrated, and customer-centric architecture will enable
organizations to respond quickly and mitigate supply or fulfilment risks. This
combines a transactional backbone and best-in-class industry solutions for
execution, as well as data-sharing and collaborative platforms that breaks down
siloes, enabling end-to-end management of the supply chain. Integrating
existing, otherwise-siloed supply chain management systems will enable
organizations to collate, analyze and react to the huge volume of internal and
external data that a network produces. The research found that supply chain
masters stand out from other players by how quickly and accurately they complete
this process of aggregating, analyzing, and acting upon data. Those who adopt a
centralized “control tower” approach, where data is collated in one cohesive and
connected dashboard, will help break down silos within the supply chain network
to provide end-to-end visibility that enables harmonized management. |