The importance of customer centricity and speed in today’s consumer economy is well understood. Examples are everywhere — from custom vending machines that integrate with social media to companies such as Netflix and Uber. Consumers increasingly expect products to be individualized to their unique specifications and to be delivered on demand.
The extended supply chain — from design and manufacturing to logistics and opera-tions — is similarly affected. With a wealth of variants to products and their delivery being introduced, the entire extended supply chain must be reworked to accommodate the dual demands of customer centricity and speed.
We are seeing a need for organizations to transform their supply chains into demand and product net¬works, with a focus on integrated business planning to create a real-time supply chain environment that offers end-to-end visibility. This strategy increasingly includes the Internet of Things (IoT) and machine-to-machine (M2M) communications, which for the most part have been understood in terms of their relevance for consumer products such as smart refrigerators or thermostats.
Networks and networked devices, though, are just as vital to a business as they are to the end consumer product, and organizations that are serious about transforming their supply chains into demand and product networks need to consider how this new network economy affects their entire business model. To understand how this translates from a consumer to an enterprise model, consider how Uber is transforming transportation with the advent of ride-sharing mobile applications. This same business model would be enormously beneficial to any number of industries with a newfound focus on customer centricity and speed. Linking chain-of-delivery communications, for example, could optimize scheduling efficiencies in ways never considered.
Network Touch Points
As organizations explore ways to reconfigure their supply chains and rethink business processes to meet these demands, they begin to see how this transformation touches all parts of the enterprise.
Brand recognition, for instance, becomes so much more than just delivering an exceptional product; it’s about the response to the product, which is driven by putting the customer, the customer experience, and the customer networks at the center of design, manufacturing, and delivery. Additionally, an organization’s social responsibility is now an intricate part of its brand identity, especially with the purchasing power and social media savvy of the millennial generation. Consider how this affects track-and-trace requirements, the need for complete end-to-end visibility, and product compliance.
Another important facet of the extended supply chain is near-shoring, which is a necessity for having the flexibility to customize and produce to demand in shorter planning cycles. When manufac¬turing plants are near both suppliers and the target customer demo¬graphic, customized products can be delivered in hours or days as op-posed to weeks or months. This is a fundamental change from when outsourcing was viewed as a primary means of controlling costs and achieving efficiency for nearly every industry and every product.
IoT for Business
IoT for business is the glue that helps hold together these strategies in the extended network supply chain. Product sensor data can pro¬vide new, different insights into supply chain efficiency, and has im¬portant service level considerations. For example, M2M communica¬tion can provide a direct link to maintenance contracts with original equipment manufacturers (OEMs).
When speed and customer centricity are the drivers, it’s imperative to have instant visibility into any changes to a platform strategy. From a design standpoint, knowing which components are being used where is extremely important for shedding light on cost estimates, which in turn helps provide the most efficient way to produce products.
Then consider the effect of connected products for IoT as it relates to product lifecycle management (PLM). It is no longer enough that a PLM solution track a product’s life cycle in the supply chain — now it must also track how the product connects to larger financial and marketing networks. This is an important component of the extended network supply chain; connecting PLM to the demand side in addition to manufacturing. In short, no part of the enterprise goes untouched by the creation of a visible, end-to-end, real-time extended network supply chain.
A Real-Time Transformation
With an extended supply chain supported by IoT for business in a networked environment, everything is connected to the larger enter¬prise. Companies can now respond to real-time information, capturing opportunities and solving problems flexibly. This concept transforms supply chain silos into product and demand networks, facilitating a real-time information exchange that keeps an extended supply chain humming, driven by the focus on customer centricity and speed. In doing so, you can accomplish seven key tasks that revolutionize your extended supply chain into a business driver.
This is what the supply chain of tomorrow will look like. For some organizations that are producing innovative products, it is a reality today.
This article was originally published in the Jan-March issue of SAPInsider by Hans Thalbauer, Senior Vice President of Line of Business Solutions at SAP.
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