•   Exclusive

How platforming builds a more resilient supply chain

A successful platforming strategy strengthens choice for the consumer while optimizing flexibility, costs and risk for the company. The end result is a win for the top line and the bottom line.

Subscriber: Log Out

Sorry, but your login has failed. Please recheck your login information and resubmit. If your subscription has expired, renew here.

This is an excerpt of the original article. It was written for the July-August 2021 edition of Supply Chain Management Review. The full article is available to current subscribers.

July-August 2021

We all know the old saying: “When the going gets tough, the tough get going.” It has been repeated so often it’s cliché. I’d like to suggest a variation: “When the going gets tough, leadership matters.” To say that supply chains have had a tough time of it would be an understatement. Despite the positive vaccine news here in the United States, global supply chains are not out of the woods yet.
Browse this issue archive.
Already a subscriber? Access full edition now.

Need Help?
Contact customer service
847-559-7581   More options
Not a subscriber? Start your magazine subscription.

COVID-19 has exposed just how easily supply chains can buckle under pressure. The fragility of globalized supply chains was on full display in the spring of 2020 as exasperated shoppers stared at empty shelves while manufacturers struggled to meet demand for everything from baking flour to bicycles. Many of the worst pandemic supply chain disruptions, including border closures, plant shutdowns due to COVID outbreaks and ship backlogs at ports, have eased in recent months. However, new pressures from inflation and commodity shortages are heating up as demand for housing, electronics and consumables grows across the United States.

A supply chain is only as strong as its weakest link, so operating in a post-COVID world requires a comprehensive approach to managing risk across the entire network. Complexity is the Achilles heel of the supply chain and companies with complex product portfolios inherently have more potential points of failure throughout their networks. Given the lessons of the pandemic, many companies are recognizing that managing complexity starts with design and they are turning to portfolio platforming as a key tool for simplifying their supply chains and building supply chain resilience.

Platforming is a design framework that leverages a common set of design, engineering and operational parameters and maximizes the use of modular or standardized components throughout the portfolio. Building off modular components accelerates innovation while enabling greater supply chain flexibility, particularly though postponement and late-stage customization. The goal is to enable variety where it matters (to the customer) while strategically minimizing its impact on the back end (in the supply chain). A well-executed platforming strategy reduces cost and risk across the entire value chain.

The cost of complexity

In the pursuit of growth over the past decade, companies have added new products to their portfolios at record speeds, largely driven by strong consumer spending, increased consumer demand for personalization and an expanding number of channels for shopping. Simultaneously, many have also been slow to exit legacy products, fearful of jeopardizing consumer loyalty or losing shelf space to competitors.

For some, this has created crippling complexity. For example, the line of fishing reels produced by a manufacturer of leisure sporting goods ballooned to 10,000 retail SKUs across hundreds of design platforms. This company, like many others, heavily indexed on innovation to drive sales; however, because nearly every reel was redesigned from the ground up, each new SKU drove the rampant proliferation of materials and components. This complexity required significant time to manage and added costs throughout the supply chain. Furthermore, portfolio management became increasingly cumbersome, which eventually slowed down their new product development cycle.

Why other solutions are inadequate

Efforts to address complexity are often superficial and may fail or only be partially successful because they focus on the symptoms of the issue rather than the root cause—the product portfolio itself.

SKU rationalization is a common approach for addressing portfolio complexity by trimming slow-moving or margin-dilutive SKUs. Unfortunately, this approach is frequently pursued ad hoc, which may leave the portfolio unbalanced. Complexity is also like the Hydra. Chopping off the tail in one category may cause it to regrow elsewhere. Finally, cutting out the dead wood often addresses only legacy, low-volume SKUs that are sitting in warehouses as inventory. These SKUs are rarely the ones causing operational challenges.

This complete article is available to subscribers only. Log in now for full access or start your PLUS+ subscription for instant access.

SC
MR

Sorry, but your login has failed. Please recheck your login information and resubmit. If your subscription has expired, renew here.

From the July-August 2021 edition of Supply Chain Management Review.

July-August 2021

We all know the old saying: “When the going gets tough, the tough get going.” It has been repeated so often it’s cliché. I’d like to suggest a variation: “When the going gets tough, leadership matters.”…
Browse this issue archive.
Access your online digital edition.
Download a PDF file of the July-August 2021 issue.

COVID-19 has exposed just how easily supply chains can buckle under pressure. The fragility of globalized supply chains was on full display in the spring of 2020 as exasperated shoppers stared at empty shelves while manufacturers struggled to meet demand for everything from baking flour to bicycles. Many of the worst pandemic supply chain disruptions, including border closures, plant shutdowns due to COVID outbreaks and ship backlogs at ports, have eased in recent months. However, new pressures from inflation and commodity shortages are heating up as demand for housing, electronics and consumables grows across the United States.

A supply chain is only as strong as its weakest link, so operating in a post-COVID world requires a comprehensive approach to managing risk across the entire network. Complexity is the Achilles heel of the supply chain and companies with complex product portfolios inherently have more potential points of failure throughout their networks. Given the lessons of the pandemic, many companies are recognizing that managing complexity starts with design and they are turning to portfolio platforming as a key tool for simplifying their supply chains and building supply chain resilience.

Platforming is a design framework that leverages a common set of design, engineering and operational parameters and maximizes the use of modular or standardized components throughout the portfolio. Building off modular components accelerates innovation while enabling greater supply chain flexibility, particularly though postponement and late-stage customization. The goal is to enable variety where it matters (to the customer) while strategically minimizing its impact on the back end (in the supply chain). A well-executed platforming strategy reduces cost and risk across the entire value chain.

The cost of complexity

In the pursuit of growth over the past decade, companies have added new products to their portfolios at record speeds, largely driven by strong consumer spending, increased consumer demand for personalization and an expanding number of channels for shopping. Simultaneously, many have also been slow to exit legacy products, fearful of jeopardizing consumer loyalty or losing shelf space to competitors.

For some, this has created crippling complexity. For example, the line of fishing reels produced by a manufacturer of leisure sporting goods ballooned to 10,000 retail SKUs across hundreds of design platforms. This company, like many others, heavily indexed on innovation to drive sales; however, because nearly every reel was redesigned from the ground up, each new SKU drove the rampant proliferation of materials and components. This complexity required significant time to manage and added costs throughout the supply chain. Furthermore, portfolio management became increasingly cumbersome, which eventually slowed down their new product development cycle.

Why other solutions are inadequate

Efforts to address complexity are often superficial and may fail or only be partially successful because they focus on the symptoms of the issue rather than the root cause—the product portfolio itself.

SKU rationalization is a common approach for addressing portfolio complexity by trimming slow-moving or margin-dilutive SKUs. Unfortunately, this approach is frequently pursued ad hoc, which may leave the portfolio unbalanced. Complexity is also like the Hydra. Chopping off the tail in one category may cause it to regrow elsewhere. Finally, cutting out the dead wood often addresses only legacy, low-volume SKUs that are sitting in warehouses as inventory. These SKUs are rarely the ones causing operational challenges.

SC
MR

Latest Podcast
Talking Supply Chain: 2025 trends with Abe Eshkenazi
ASCM CEO Abe Eshkenazi joins the Talking Supply Chain podcast to talk which trends will continue in 2025, and what they mean for supply chain…
Listen in

Subscribe

Supply Chain Management Review delivers the best industry content.
Subscribe today and get full access to all of Supply Chain Management Review’s exclusive content, email newsletters, premium resources and in-depth, comprehensive feature articles written by the industry's top experts on the subjects that matter most to supply chain professionals.
×

Search

Search

Sourcing & Procurement

Inventory Management Risk Management Global Trade Ports & Shipping

Business Management

Supply Chain TMS WMS 3PL Government & Regulation Sustainability Finance

Software & Technology

Artificial Intelligence Automation Cloud IoT Robotics Software

The Academy

Executive Education Associations Institutions Universities & Colleges

Resources

Podcasts Webcasts Companies Visionaries White Papers Special Reports Premiums Magazine Archive

Subscribe

SCMR Magazine Newsletters Magazine Archives Customer Service

Press Releases

Press Releases Submit Press Release