Blockchain: Reflections on a Webinar
Posted: 16 Nov 2017 04:22 AM PST
Yesterday, I spoke at the University of Tennessee Supply Chain Leaders Forum on innovation. The presentation focused on nine themes. One of the nine was blockchain. I asked the audience for a show of hands to understand how many of the supply chain leaders in the room were testing blockchain. I saw no raised hands.
Later that afternoon, I hosted a webinar featuring blockchain case studies. The Supply Chain Insights webinar series is designed as an educational forum for learning. We use our research as a backdrop, and host supply chain leader panels to have a discussion on the research topic. Yesterday, Bristlecone and IBM presented case studies. The case studies focus on cold chain safety/alerting for out-of-condition limits for milk transport in India and the use of blockchain for fresh produce monitoring. The webinar was well attended. Over 180 people attended and the question panel was the busiest that I have ever experienced hosting a webinar. Lots of interest.
Why the disconnect of interest from the two groups? Blockchain is new. It is not well understood. In the traditional world of supply chain management in the United States, the focus is on the Plateau of Productivity as shown in Figure 1. The current efforts are improving functional metrics and traditional processes. While leaders talk “value chains”, the focus is on the “efficient enterprise” which under delivers on creating value for the firm.
Figure 1. The Supply Chain Management Hype Cycle
Conservative teams, programmed by large system integrators and technology providers, focus on the evolution of traditional supply chain technology approaches. The projects are on the plateau of productivity. As a result, there is very little time to focus on innovation. The focus is not on building value chains. Instead, it is on creating the efficient enterprise.
Rethinking Supply Chain Technologies,
For the company, there is a huge opportunity cost. The singular focus on IT standardization and ERP migration hijacked supply chain innovation. ERP is not the foundation or the future of B2B processes. It is the system of record for Enterprise transactions. Blockchain is a promising technology to redesign B2B processes; but we are at the beginning of the hype cycle; and we must manage the hype through the adoption. If we over-promise, we will kill innovation. Likewise, if we do not adequately test and learn, the technology will not evolve.
The questions on the webinar yesterday, centered on three themes. Here I share some insights.
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Friday, November 17, 2017
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