4 ways retailers can improve supply chain management
Credit: Thinkstock
Supply chain experts share their tips for tracking and
expediting inventory in today’s ‘I-want-it-now,’ multichannel retail world
Retailers and their suppliers are under more pressure than
ever before to deliver more goods to more destinations faster.
To stay competitive, “retailers need to know where things
are at all times so they can redirect shipments, rebalance inventories and respond
to new demands on the fly,” says Rich Becks, general manager, Industry Value
Chains, E2open,
which delivers cloud-based supply chain collaboration solutions.
And if there is a problem with their supply chain, and they
can’t get products to stores and/or consumers, retailers (and their suppliers)
risk losing customers.
So what steps can, and should, retailers take to make sure
their supply chain operations are running smoothly? Following are four
suggestions from retail supply chain experts.
1. Use cloud-based software that can track and manage
inventory in real time.“Retailers
struggle to balance uncertain consumer behavior and long, complex supply
chains,” explains Kurt Cavano, vice chairman & CSO, GT Nexus,
a supply chain technology company.
“These two challenges make it harder than ever to align
supply with demand, which can quickly impact margins and sales,” Cavano says.
“A solution to this is to implement a supply chain network in the cloud that
tracks inventory and demand changes, and allows retailers to respond to the
latest demand signals in near-real time.” This way, “retailers can adapt to
things like seasonal trends and other fluctuations in demand on the fly.”
2. Use source tagging and RFID to keep track of inventory
and stock levels. “To improve supply chain
management from the moment product leaves the manufacturer's warehouse all the
way through to the point-of-purchase, retailers should deploy a source tagging
solution,” says Steve Sell, director, North America Marketing, Retail Practice, Tyco Integrated
Security. “With an increased awareness of the volume and location of
merchandise available across all channels, source tagging helps inform
inventory management and supply chain operations at all levels to better inform
business decisions.”
“For example, warehouse stock levels can be continually
monitored so that stocks can be replenished whenever sensors detect a near out
of stock situation,” says Mark Morley, director, Industry Marketing –
Manufacturing, OpenText,
an enterprise information management provider. “Tagged goods in a warehouse can
[also] help to guide pickers to their exact location,” making for faster
fulfillment.
To gain further visibility into the supply chain, “implement
RFID,” says Melanie Nuce, vice president, Apparel & General Merchandise, GS1 US, a
supply chain standards organization. “A more precise level of inventory
visibility ensures the retailer knows where their product is in the supply
chain. Standards, such as Electronic Product Code (EPC) enabled Radio Frequency
Identification (RFID), are allowing leading retailers to pinpoint their
inventory in real time,” she explains. “By using RFID, a retailer can inventory
20,000 items per hour at 99 percent accuracy or higher. All of this means a
simpler, more efficient way to deliver on the promise to the consumer.”
Furthermore, “by combining RFID-enabled inventory and source tagging with
smarter, more sophisticated electronic article surveillance (EAS), retailers
gain real-time insight into the supply chain, from what is available to sell
via online and in-store channels to how much is needed on the shelf,” adds
Sell.
3. Become a part of a B2B e-procurement network. “B2B [or e-procurement] networks can help companies
predict supply chain disruptions and act quickly to adapt business processes,”
says Sundar Kamakshisundaram, vice president, Procurement and Business
Network Solutions, Ariba, an SAP company. “Businesses need to know their
entire supply chain – not just their suppliers, but their suppliers’ suppliers,
too,” he says.
Using a B2B procurement network can “help [retailers] move
from responding to risk to proactively predicting it to create advantage
and get ahead of supply chain disruption,” he says. That’s because
“business networks, and the cloud-based technologies underlying them, have made
it possible for more efficient buyer/supplier collaboration.”
4. Make sure your marketing and supply chain teams are in
sync. “When executing a promotion, a
lot of retailers overlook the alignment of the supply chain and marketing
teams, which is crucial [if you want] to successfully launch a promotion,” says
Pat Sullivan, senior vice president, Promotions Management, HAVI Global Solutions,
a consulting company. By having marketing alert the supply chain team ahead of
time that a big promotion is coming up, “the supply chain team can determine
how much product is needed to prevent falling short [and] how the product will
be shipped,” minimizing, or avoiding, delays or disruptions.
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