Confronting the Growing Supply Chain Crisis
June 1, 2008
George Stalk, a senior partner with Boston Consulting Group, explains why American companies are facing a supply chain challenge unlike anything they've seen before and discusses some strategies that can help to address it, as found in his new book titled 5 Strategies You Need Right Now (Harvard Business Press, 2008).
BF: The title of your new book suggests that there is some urgency around the strategies it discusses. Where's the greatest urgency?
George Stalk: Of all the subjects we discuss in the book, the supply chain is probably the closest to being in a crisis. It's a crisis that's going to be forced upon everybody. If we just assumed for the moment that bridges are not falling in the river in Mississippi or in downtown Montreal and that everything was in perfect shape, we would still have a crisis looming because the demand for the load on our infrastructure is far exceeding its capacity. There are not going to be any major roads or railroads built in the United States, and even if you look at major airports, there have been four airports built in the United States in the past 40 years. All but one were replacement airports.
The whole system is coming under strain. At the same time, the logistics practices of most industries were laid down in the '60s and '70s. This means that they were established in a period when transportation costs were coming down. They were laid down in a period when response times were improving constantly because of the improved quality of the logistics system. This is all reversing. Costs are going up, response times are lengthening and — worse — the variability of the response time is increasing, just completely upsetting these economics in the very same way that the economics across the ocean can be upset by the choking ports.
BF: Those ports you are referring to are the West Coast ports of the United States, which you point out are very quickly reaching their combined container loading and unloading capacity. You refer to this as a riptide — where the huge surge in goods washing up on American shores is overtaking our handling capacity. How can companies respond to the riptide?
Stalk: There are things that you can do to sidestep the riptide phenomenon, such as in terms of reducing time, improving procurement processes, going to air freight. There are things that you can do on the land side as well, such as buying preferred positions on carriers. Going direct store-to-ship instead of through distribution centers is a way to avoid exposing your entire network to the infrastructure problem.
All of these come at a cost, though, many of which people don't often carry in their minds when they initially react to these increased expenses. Things such as the hidden costs we described in the riptide book — the cost of a stockout, the cost of an overstock. These are huge costs compared to some of these logistics cost numbers.
BF: Is there a real-world example that can help to illustrate the challenge that the riptide presents?
Stalk: Well, we have one client who's a supplier of women's fashion clothes. When we first started working with them, looking at what they could do to improve their Asian sourcing, it was because we were helping them to advance from being fairly standard — if you can be that in the fashion industry — to being much more fashionable. We were speeding up their fashion cycles and increasing the frequency with which they introduced new products, and we immediately ran into supply chain problems.
This is a short vignette. They were at 30 percent air freight when we started doing this work; they are now at 95 percent. The 30 percent they had when we started the work was kind of like an “Oh, rats” type of 30 percent — where the thinking was that if things went wrong, to “send it by air.” This is a common approach for companies — including the automotive companies, which will ship engine blocks by air if they have to. The 95 percent right now is planned. They know that they're paying a higher price, but 15 percent air freight cost to save 90 percent lost gross margin is a good investment. And 15 percent air freight cost to avoid a 45 percent markdown is a good investment. This is why they're so high. This is going to be true all across the supply chain; companies are going to see this.






















