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Columnist: A. Blanton Godfrey

Photo: A. Blanton Godfrey

  
   

Déjà Vu All Over Again
Supply chain management deserves a second look.

A. Blanton Godfrey
agodfrey@qualitydigest.com

 

 

I recently attended a workshop on supply chain management. After a particularly good presentation by James Tompkins, I turned to the person sitting next to me and remarked: "Haven't we heard all this before? Isn't this just reengineering with a new name?"

A few months earlier, while preparing for another workshop on the same subject, I was working with the workshop's keynote speaker, Robert Handfield, Bank of America professor of supply chain management at North Carolina State University. I wanted to integrate my talk on Six Sigma with his on SCM. We both struggled with the question of the two approaches' differences and similarities.

Supply chain management comprises many elements similar to those of reengineering, total quality management and Six Sigma. An organization's biggest opportunities often cross departmental, divisional or functional boundaries. Changing practices in one part of an organization often beneficially affects another part's performance. Unfortunately, most companies can manage competently only within structural lines, and their financial systems usually discourage any cooperation.

Both Tompkins and Handfield have developed maturity grids for evaluating where a company stands in its SCM implementation. It's easy to see these grids' similarity to the work of Carnegie-Mellon's Software Engineering Institute or Hewlett-Packard Co.'s quality maturity grid of the 1980s. The different stages of maturity even sound similar. Of course, many of us questioned the differences between total quality management and Six Sigma when we were first exposed to the latter.

However, for many companies--the vast majority, in fact--many differences exist between the two quality philosophies. When implementing TQM, these organizations implemented pieces of methods or selected tools--rather than linking projects to company priorities. They'd forgotten or overlooked the importance of focusing on bottom-line results and often even failed to implement the solutions generated by their teams. Senior leadership was only passively involved at best.

Six Sigma and supply chain management do offer new ideas, although perhaps not as many as their proponents claim. But the new methods indicate that we're collectively becoming smarter about managing our organizations. Driven by intense global competition, companies actively search for every advantage and implement new ideas at speeds only dreamed of a few years ago.

Supply chain management's time has come. Within their organizations, most companies still struggle with managing across boundaries. One of supply chain management's new ideas, or at least new emphases, is working not only across organizational departments but also upstream and downstream with customers and suppliers. Truly outstanding organizations go beyond their immediate suppliers and engage their suppliers' suppliers. They're beginning to really manage the supply chain.

Another major new practice is the intense application of information technologies. Many of us now recognize ideas first introduced in reengineering. But almost 10 years ago, information systems were far less sophisticated, the Internet was just beginning to take off, and gains were possible simply by flowcharting previously hidden processes. What we now recognize as supply chain management was still in its infancy.

A third outstanding application of SCM is its emphasis on collaboration across organizations. This goes beyond sharing information, straight to the problem of complex supply chains that exist in almost every industry, where several organizations must work closely together to design, produce, distribute and sell to an increasingly competitive marketplace. With SCM, we see designers co-located with major customers, cross-functional and cross-organizational improvement teams changing processes, shared cost information and decision making, and long-term relationships established between customers and suppliers throughout the supply chain. Tompkins also emphasizes synthesis, a continuous improvement process to harness the energy of change, and velocity, the ideal state of synthesis in which the chain works faster and faster.

Is this really new? In many ways, no it's not. As long ago as 1983, I organized and led benchmarking teams from Bell Labs, AT&T and Western Electric to study the relationships between leading companies such as Toyota and key suppliers. Didn't we also learn many of the ideas we now call lean manufacturing from the Toyota Production System? Most of the best modern business practices start within leading organizations, are copied, modified and improved by other leading companies, and then named and popularized by an enterprising consultant, professor or author. Later, researchers formalize these practices' theories and write books about them.

The same process is now happening with supply chain management. Companies such as Toyota, Dell, Procter & Gamble and others are pioneering new methods, and companies within other industries are beginning to see the significant gains possible by incorporating many of these ideas into their own management systems.

About the author

A. Blanton Godfrey, Ph.D., is dean and Joseph D. Moore Distinguished University Professor at North Carolina State University's College of Textiles. Letters to the editor about this column can be e-mailed to letters@qualitydigest.com.