Supply Chain Resilience
Key Takeaways
- Supply chain resilience combines both resistance capacity (avoiding/minimizing disruption impact) and recovery capacity (quickly returning to normal operations after disruptions occur).
- Organizations must balance between developing preventive measures and recovery capabilities, as maintaining high capacity in both areas requires substantial resources.
- Resilient supply chains demonstrate adaptability by either returning to their original state or evolving to a more advantageous position following disruptions.
- Locus's dynamic route planning and end-to-end visibility solutions help organizations build resilience through automated decision-making and real-time operational control.
What is Supply Chain Resilience?
Resilience has played a key role in the fields of psychology, disaster management, and systems thinking, emerging as an essential part of supply chain management only recently. The concept first found meaning in the work of ecologist C.S. Holling, who noticed resilience in some ecological systems in the year 1973. It served as inspiration for management to be flexible, adaptive, and even experimental when handling their supply chains.
The term has been interpreted differently in the field of supply chain management, however. While some see it as an ability to bounce back post disruption, for others, it is the ability to withstand shock. The ability of a supply chain to handle unexpected risk events is known as supply chain resilience. A resilient supply chain can manage to respond and recover quickly to such disruptions by either returning to its original state or a more desirable one and increase financial performance. The two resilience categories are as follows:
- Resistance capacity: The main motivation behind this is avoiding damage as much as possible or reducing the time between the onset of disruption and the start of recovery.
- Recovery capacity: The main motivation behind this is to return to the stabilization phase post-disruption as quickly as possible, followed by a steady return to original performance levels. It is marked by a quick system response at the turning point between impact and recovery.
While it is ideal for companies to possess a high capacity for both resistance and recovery, most are busy trying to balance between the two. The select businesses that can both avoid risks as well as rebound quickly are classified as “hardy” and usually possessed with bottomless resources.
Locus contributions for supply chain resilience
Flexible all-mile delivery operations | Dynamic route planning | End-to-end visibility | Minimize human dependency in decision making
