Strategy & Leadership

Managing supply-chain risk for reward

October 01, 2009

Global

October 01, 2009

Global
Iain Scott

Senior Strategic Analyst, Global Life Sciences Centre

Iain Scott is a lead analyst at Ernst & Young's Global Life Sciences Center, where he manages thought leadership programmes and conducts research across the sector.

An efficient and adaptable supply-chain risk management strategy can be the difference between survival and success.

For several years, it has been possible to correlate effective supply-chain management with above-average market performance. Boston-based AMR Research, for example, pegged the average return of companies in its 2007 "Supply Chain Top 25" list at nearly 18%, compared with less than 6.5% for the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

It is therefore surprising to discover that many companies continue to underestimate the risks of supply-chain failure. As the economic downturn has shown, the rules of effective supply-chain management can change—if labour disputes, IP protection or utility failure were concerns for companies in the past, they have been well and truly replaced by factors such as currency and energy price fluctuations, doubts about customer confidence, supplier insolvency and protectionism.

In the face of such threats, it is noticeable that many companies are working on strategies to boost the resilience of their supply chains, such as supplier audits and sharing information with their peers.

These strategies will serve to put savvy companies in a stronger position as the recession lifts. While there is clearly room for improvement in certain areas, this survey shows that many firms are taking supply-chain risk seriously. Certainly those that remain complacent do so at their peril.

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