Thursday, April 14, 2016


The Four Stages of Digital Disruption in the Supply Chain

Matt YearlingOrganizations continue to look for areas of opportunity and inspiration on the quest to improve the operational efficiency of their supply chain. While technology capabilities are plentiful, for many, it’s not immediately obvious where one should start. What I have attempted to do here is provide a staged view on how I would categorize significant technology enablement, with one category potentially building upon the other.
PINC
  1. Managed – The first place to start is to implement a software package that is capable of managing repeatable processes consistently across your organization. This provides the basis for managing and refining processes. Unfortunately, most organizations place too much emphasis on data that is sourced from human input, which is prone to error. This degrades the quality and potential insight the data could provide. This data often resides in siloes of information, focusing on a specific function, such as warehouse automation. Connecting these islands of information makes every such investment more valuable.Connecting data from related systems is not as hard as it used to be thanks to modern web services based integration technologies. Now you can do in days what used to take weeks of programming. We encounter so many organizations suffering from delays and errors caused by reliance on people to double enter information into multiple, disconnected systems. Eliminate islands of information to get a holistic view of your supply chain.
  1. Assisted – Next, let sensors take care of the timely and accurate input of operational information, assisting the flow and management of information in the software, and avoiding the need for workers to input data manually. Thanks to the rise in awareness of sensors in IoT technology, organizations have a multitude of ways to Auto-ID and locate assets. The beauty of using sensor technology in place of manually entered data results in high quality data that you can depend on. Today we see RFID, GPS, OCR, and Barcode technology as being pervasive. As a provider of YMS technology we appreciate the value of knowing where assets are in real-time. Drivers only make money when they are on the road, so they have a habit of dropping trailers in the first open spot they see, not always where they are directed. Real-Time Location Technology System (RTLS) technology uses sensors to provide a way to validate actual locations versus desired locations, which saves a lot of wasted time, fuel, and product quality (in the case of fresh produce).
  1. Automated – In case you have software, you can understand a business process. Sensors collect information. You can take the understanding of the process, together with sensor information a step further in the form of a an automated worker. We see practical examples of this in the supply chain operations all the time – like parcel sorting, product packaging, automated guided vehicles, robotic lift trucks, etc. The key here is taking a repetitive mundane job and have an autonomous robot execute it in a more efficient way. For my company, our approach is the utilization of drone technology to automate the identification and reconciliation of hard to reach inventory.
  1. Optimized – Now you have tools in place to automate processes, sensors to capture events, and robots to automate (where appropriate), what do you do with this information overload? Take a holistic enterprise perspective. You now have this data feed of enterprise grade tools that enables your organization to navigate a path of continued improvement and to provide transparent engagement with partners. Managing enterprise wide metrics, best practices, process execution, flow of information and inventory, provides the business guidance on the continuous path of continuous organizational optimization.
These are exciting times in the supply chain industry as complex challenges can now be tackled using technology more simply than ever before.

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