Gartner: CSCOs Increased the
Number of Network Locations
in the Past Two Years
August 2, 2022
Hybrid regional model with
local and regional elements
embedded in global networks
emerges as most popular
option.
In total, 95% of survey
respondents are evaluating
or executing changes to
their China sourcing and
manufacturing strategy, and
55% of those already acted
on their plans.Forty percent
of respondents see APAC not
only as a supply base, but
as an end market.
Forty percent of respondents
see APAC not only as a
supply base, but as an end
market.
According
to a Gartner survey among
403 supply chain leaders in
the second quarter of 2022,
74% of supply chain leaders
made changes to size and
number of locations in their
supply chain network in the
past two years. Fifty-one
percent of respondents said
they increased the number of
locations (see Figure 1).
As constraints, inflation,
sustainability goals and
national industrial policies
put global supply chains
under pressure, chief supply
chain officers (CSCOs) are
adapting their networks to
fit this new environment.
“There’s clearly a supply
chain redesign underway, but
not everyone is moving in
the same direction or even
to the same extent,” said
Kamala Raman, VP with the
Gartner Supply Chain
practice. “Supply chain
leaders have been modifying
networks in a number of
ways, be it with expansions,
consolidations or simply
modifications to buffers –
which are more reversible
than footprint decisions.”
Figure 1: Changes to
Supply Chain Network
Locations in the Last Two
Years

Source: Gartner (August
2022)
The resulting networks span
a variety of operating
models. Twenty-eight percent
of respondents now describe
their network as a hybrid
regional model – a
combination of local or
regional elements in a
global supply chain network.
This is closely followed by
global models with regional
final assembly (23%) and
local-for-local networks
(22%).
“While the range of scales
and approaches is wide,
supply chains are
undoubtedly on the move.
Over half of participating
organizations report making
changes to manufacturing and
supplier networks supporting
at least 20% of revenue,”
Raman added.
China and Asia Remain
Valued As Both Supply Bases
and End Markets
In supply chains with a
presence in China, change is
afoot as well. In total, 95%
of survey respondents are
evaluating or executing
changes to their China
sourcing and manufacturing
strategy, and 55% of those
already acted on their
plans.
However,
the survey data does not
show strong signs of
large-scale nearshoring to
developed markets. Supply
chain organizations are
examining A China Plus One
approach that leaves most of
the China-based network
intact and places net new
additions in other markets,
or a diversification
strategy that still holds
significant sourcing or
manufacturing in China.
As a result of the
diversification away from
China many countries in the
rest of Asia are profiting
from net new foreign direct
investment. There are also
regionalized Asian networks
emerging which are driven by
coordinated industrial
policies, such as the
Regional Comprehensive
Economic Partnership (RCEP)
or the Comprehensive and
Progressive Agreement for
Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP)
trade deals. Of APAC
respondents to the survey,
60% see their home region
not only as a supply base
but as an end market.
Globally, 40% of respondents
consider APAC a supply base
and an end market.
“The signs are clear that in
a fragmented world, global
firms have been making
changes to their heavily
cost-optimized,
one-size-fits-all networks,
and now favor a mix of
global, regional or local
elements. Investments into
other parts of Asia -
outside of China - coexist
with expanded investments
into developed markets as
organizations take advantage
of generous
national/trade-bloc-level
trade incentives,” Raman
concluded.