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Navigating the Automotive Supply Chain Post-COVID-19

COVID-19 is a disruptive event affecting both demand and supply at a global level and at unprecedented speed. Here's how the automotive industry should respond.

May 17, 2020 4 min read
The automotive supply chain in a post-COVID-19 world.
Continuing from our pervious blog post “Automotive Industry: Navigating Post COVID-19,” this post focuses on the Automotive supply chain - challenges faced and some possible mitigation strategies.

Supply chains have become increasingly complex and global in their reach. However, many firms are unaware of this. In our previous post, we mentioned that 80% of global automotive supply chains have links to China, in some way or the other. Many of the OEMs may have realized the linkage when they were actually hit by the supply disruption.

Most often, efficiencies in supply chains are achieved by applying lean methods and associated “just in time” inventory policies. While these methods work well during most normal operating conditions, they do not respond well when subject to significant disruptive events.

COVID-19 is a disruptive event affecting both demand and supply at a global level and at an unprecedented speed. Firms are facing severe shocks to their supply chains and will continue to do so in the coming months and quarters.  
 
  • The first shock came when manufacturing in China came to a standstill as COVID-19 raged through Wuhan.
  • The second shock is ongoing as automotive demand contracts while societies take drastic measure to combat COVID-19. Many smaller suppliers are at risk of going bankrupt. This raises the prospect of further disruptions.
How can automotive firms respond effectively to such disruptions in the long term?

After COVID, we predict a renewed C-level focus in the areas of supply chain strategy. Going forward, the industry may have to focus on building flexible and resilient supply chains that allow firms to rapidly reorient and respond to disruptions. This can be achieved by including risk mitigation as an integral part of the supply chain along with cost and quality.

Here we will discuss three critical capabilities in that area:

1) A deep supply chain awareness: a detailed view of the supply chain, which goes beyond the first and second tier supply base.
 
  • This is a resource intensive exercise which starts with the bill of material (BOM) and maps the supply chain to the raw material level.
  • Many companies don’t perform this activity because of the length of time and effort it requires. COVID-19 has shown the value of having this awareness. The small number of companies that invested in mapping their supply chains before the pandemic have emerged better prepared to respond.
  • A supply chain map focuses on the key components used in the highest revenue generating products. The goal is to drill down as many tiers into the supply chain as possible to identify any hidden critical suppliers.
  • The map should include information on activities the primary supply site performs, any alternative sites the supplier has that can perform the activity and the time it takes to transfer operations to the secondary site.
Achieving this awareness requires firms to manage vast amounts of data on many aspects of their supply chain. Robust cross functional data models are required to create and maintain the map.
 
2) An early detection capability: the ability to ingest, process and generate insights from data captured from varied sources to provide early warning on potential disruption events.
 
  • Firms must acquire data from news feeds, analyst reports and social media which will include structured and unstructured text and multimedia data.
  • An ensemble of classification models (Decision Trees, Self-Organizing Maps (SOM), etc.) configured to process event streams can help to identify potential events and alert the firm. This requires sophisticated information modeling and data science capabilities, and the ability to deploy advanced analytics at scale.
Let us consider the traditional approach to risk modeling in a supply chain before moving on.

Modeling Risk in Supply Chain: Traditional Approach

Traditional methods for risk modeling rely on two key data points on potential events that could disrupt a firm’s operations: 1) the likelihood of the event occurring, and 2) the magnitude of the impact caused.  This works well for common supply chain disruptions where historical data to quantify risk is available (e.g., poor supplier performance, forecast errors, supplier financial solvency, etc.) This method doesn’t work well for low-probability, high-impact events like COVID-19, because historical data is nonexistent.  

Which brings us to our third capability.

3) An advanced supply chain risk modeling capability: a low-probability, high- impact event modeling and scenario planning tool that focuses on potential failure points along the supply chain. This allows a firm to quantify the impact of an event, irrespective of the probability of it happening. It is crucial that the tool is automatable as it must support quick updates and near-real-time execution as the supply chain is in flux during a disruption.

To build this capability, the firms must use data from their deep awareness capability -- combined with the potential events identified through their early detection capability --and run optimization models to generate a risk exposure index score for nodes in the supply chain. The score allows mangers to quickly pinpoint nodes with the highest risks, versus lower risks, and implement mitigation actions.

Overview of advanced supply chain risk modeling

  • Map the distribution network (dealerships, warehouses, etc.) and combine it with the supply chain map:
    • Integrate data from multiple tiers of the supply chain, including supply information, bill of material, operational and financial measure, inventory levels -- both in-transit and on-site -- and demand forecasts for each product.
    • Represent the supply chain at the lowest granularity. This enables drill-down and roll-up capabilities which allows identification of hidden dependencies within the supply chain.   
  • Determine the time it takes a node to recover should its operations be impaired by a disruptive event. 

Conclusion

All these three capabilities require automotive firms to securely manage and analyze diverse types of data at scale.

We at Teradata help transform supply chains to be more flexible and resilient, through the power of data and analytics at scale, so that industries can be better prepared for such disruptive situations.
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About Udiptya Pal

Udiptya Pal brings more than two decades of diverse experience in the areas of consulting, Analytics, digital transformation, process re-engineering, strategy, business development & sales. He has spent significant time with Tata Motors in various leadership roles in Business Analytics, CRM, large technology-led transformation projects and business development. Previously he also worked with Larsen & Toubro in India. Currently, he leads the Automotive Industry Consulting practice for APAC at Teradata where he leads consultative selling in the Automotive industry in areas of connected vehicles, electric mobility, supply chain, customer experience, finance transformation, aftersales excellence. Udiptya holds a post-graduate degree from XLRI, Jamshedpur in the area of General Management and a Bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering from Jadavpur University, Kolkata. He is also an alumnus of IIM Ahmedabad. He resides in and works from Mumbai. View all posts by Udiptya Pal

About Danesha Marasinghe

Danesha Marasinghe is an experienced supply chain, logistics & procurement professional with more than 15 years of industry experience. He has diverse global experience spanning Asia, Middle East, Europe & North America across a range of industries. He has spent time at PwC, Amway & DELL. Danesha is a strong believer in the transformative power of data in supply chain. He holds a bachelor’s degree in Information’s Systems from the Manchester Metropolitan University, UK and a master’s in supply chain management from the Ross School of Business from the University of Michigan, Ann-Arbor.
 

View all posts by Danesha Marasinghe

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