Supply Chain Vulnerability, Risk, Robustness and Resilience - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 29
About This Presentation
Title:

Supply Chain Vulnerability, Risk, Robustness and Resilience

Description:

Known Unknowns, Knowable Unknowns and Unknowable Unknowns. Y2K: ... Knowable Unknowns ... All knowable unknowns' events could be the example of creeping crises' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:928
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 30
Provided by: Supe1
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Supply Chain Vulnerability, Risk, Robustness and Resilience


1
Supply Chain Vulnerability, Risk, Robustness and
Resilience
Chapter 12
  • Donna 2009.5.4.

2
Outline
  • Some working definitions
  • Changing times and an uncertain world
  • The shortcomings of risk management
  • The need for holistic approaches
  • A simple framework for a wicked problem

3
Some Working Definitions
  • Risk
  • Supply chain vulnerability
  • Robust SCM
  • Resilience

4
Risk
  • In decision theory a measure of the range of
    possible outcomes from a single totally rational
    decision and their values, in terms of upside
    gains and downside losses (e.g. gambling)
  • A particular type of hazard or threat e.g.
    technological risk or political risk
  • The downside only consequences of a rational
    decision in terms of the resulting financial
    losses or number of casualties

5
Supply Chain Vulnerability
  • We should strive to identify vulnerabilities by
    asking questions such as
  • What has disrupted operations in the past?
  • What known weaknesses do we have?
  • What near misses have we experienced?
  • What would be the effect of a shortage of a key
    material?
  • What would be the effect of the loss of our
    distribution site?
  • What would be the effect of the loss of a key
    supplier or customer?

6
Robust SCM
  • Strong in constitution, hardy, or vigorous
  • Enable a firm to manage regular fluctuations in
    demand efficiently under normal circumstances
    regardless of occurrence of a major disruption
  • But does not in itself make a resilient supply
    chain

7
Resilience
  • The ability of a system to return to its
    original or desired state after being
    disturbed
  • The core concept of resilience is
  • It encourages a whole system perspective
  • It explicitly accepts that disturbances happen
  • It implies adaptability to changing circumstances

8
Changing Times An Uncertain World
  • In a complex inter-organizational supply chain it
    would be difficult if not impossible for anyone
    to identify every possible hazard or point of
    vulnerability
  • Known problems are only part of the picture
  • Known Unknowns, Knowable Unknowns and Unknowable
    Unknowns
  • Y2K The Millennium Bug
  • Creeping Crises (e.g. Foot and Mouth disease)
  • Post 9/11 Security Matters
  • Corporate Scandals, Operational Risk and
    Business Continuity

9
Known Unknowns, Knowable Unknowns and Unknowable
Unknowns
  • Known Unknowns
  • We know that there exist uncertainties, which we
    know how to solve
  • Known known
  • Knowable Unknowns
  • There are some uncertainties which we dont know
    how to solve, We may choose ignore or face it
  • Unknowable Unknowns
  • However, there are still uncertainties that we
    dont know that we dont know

10
Y2K The Millennium Bug
  • A Known known example
  • In the UK, the government encourage businesses to
    take the necessary measures to prevent system
    crashes, and engage in business continuity
    planning

11
Y2K The Millennium Bug
  • As a result, nothing happened and the government
    was delighted, believing the planning had saved
    the country from disaster
  • But the non-event left many managers skeptical as
    to whether the costly preventive measures had
    really necessary?

12
Y2K The Millennium Bug
  • Y2K is one of the intractable problems about
    proactive measures to improve organizational and
    supply chain resilience
  • If successful, mean nothing happens, but leads to
    questions of value or cost/benefits justification
  • It is very difficult to make a business case for
    proactive just in case measures to improve
    resilience

13
Creeping Crises
  • The outbreak of foot and mouth disease(FMD) in
    British livestock herds in February 2001 resulted
    in damage to whole sectors of economy
  • FMD was a known threat to livestock, albeit one
    that had not been seen in UK for a generation
  • The impact is engaged in production and
    distribution of food

14
Creeping Crises
  • But FMD also affected car manufacturers and
    fashion houses across Europe because of the
    shortage of high-quality leather
  • All knowable unknowns events could be the
    example of creeping crises
  • Creeping crises show the fact that supply chains
    are more than value-adding mechanisms underlying
    competitive business models
  • Supply chains link organizations, industries and
    economies, they are part of the fabric of society

15
Post 9/11 Security Matters
  • The events of 9/11 were so far out of risk
    managers field of reference, that they can be
    classed as unknowable unknowns
  • The closure of US borders and the grounding of
    transatlantic flights dislocated international
    supply chains making supply chain vulnerability
    front page new

16
Post 9/11 Security Matters
  • Post 9/11, new security measures were hurriedly
    introduced at US border posts, ports and
    airports, affecting inbound freight to USA,
    including
  • Container Security Initiative (CSI)
  • CSI looked to new technology to pre-screen high
    risk containers before they arrived at US ports
  • Customs-Trade Partnership (C-TPAT)
  • C-TPAT is a known shipper programme, which
    allows cargoes from companies certified by US
    Customs to clear customs quickly

17
Corporate Scandals, Operational Risk and
Business Continuity
  • In the world of corporate risk management
    events(e.g. 9/11) were unfolding that would push
    operational risk to the top of the corporate
    agenda
  • The Enron Corporation collapsed in late 2001
  • Once held up as a model of best practice
    corporate risk management
  • Another three companies quickly followed

18
Corporate Scandals, Operational Risk and
Business Continuity
  • New regulation, Sarbanes-Oxley Act(SOX) is
    noteworthy (Ch10)
  • SOX requires full disclosure of all potential
    risks to corporate well-being within the business
  • Board members have become more interested in
    identifying knowable unknowns and have turned
    to risk management and to Business Continuity
    Management(BCM)

19
Business Continuity Management
  • Rooted in IT disaster recovery, but its remit has
    expanded greatly
  • Helps to prove that management have acted with
    due diligence
  • Start with the preparation of a Business
    Continuity Plan
  • Best practice
  • An on-going programme of training, rehearsals and
    reviews of the initial plans to cope with various
    eventualities
  • Careful consideration to the management of an
    after-the-event recovery phase

20
The Shortcomings of Risk Management
  • Decision Theory and Managerial Tendencies
  • Objective Risk and Perceived Risk

21
Decision Theory and Managerial Tendencies
  • Concerned paid little attention to uncertainty
    surrounding positive outcomes, viewing risk in
    terms of dangers or hazards with potentially
    negative outcomes
  • Managers focus on the possible losses associated
    with plausible outcomes
  • Decisions involving risk are heavily influenced
    by their impact on the managers own performance
    targets

22
Decision Theory and Managerial Tendencies
  • In comfortable circumstances managers are likely
    to be risk-averse, but when staring failure in
    the face, researchers show that this tendency
    reverses and they become risk-pron
  • There is unlikely to be a single unified attitude
    to risk taking within a large organization

23
Objective Risk and Perceived Risk
  • A view of risk set out by the engineers and
    physicists of The Royal Society
  • Objective risk determined by experts applying
    quantitative scientific means
  • Perceived risk the imprecise and unreliable
    perceptions of general public
  • Detriment the numerical measure of harm or
    loss associated with an adverse event

24
Objective Risk and Perceived Risk
  • Social scientists contend that, where people were
    involved, objective and perceived risk become
    inseparable
  • Risk is not a discrete or objective phenomenon
  • Risk is an interactive culturally determined one
  • Risk is inherently resistant to objective
    measurement

25
Objective Risk and Perceived Risk
  • Engineering-derived objective views lead to a
    business process engineering and control
    perspective
  • Open interactive societal systems views offer a
    persuasive argument for perceived risk
  • The global supply chain view illustrates that
    culturally determined perceptions of risk could
    vary greatly from one region to another
  • Hence the forces of nature can demonstrate just
    how far removed from a controlled environment
    this all might be

26
The Need for Holistic Approaches
  • SCM is integrative and interdisciplinary
  • Logistics is just one of several established
    sub-disciplines
  • Supply chain risk management can be expected to
    display all the characteristics of a wicked
    problem

27
The Need for Holistic Approaches
  • Wicked Problems
  • Societal problems are inherently different from
    the problems that scientists and some engineers
    tackle
  • Involve multiple stakeholders
  • Any solution, after being implemented, will
    generate waves of consequences
  • Should be considered within valuative frameworks

28
A Simple Framework For A Wicked Problem
  • A supply chain as an interactive system

Unfortunately!! We dont live in an ideal world,
so levels two, three and four bring in a host of
other factors that often intervene.
  • Socio-political factors, such as action by
    pressure groups can be identified by routine
    horizon scanning using specialist or general
    media sources, allowing measures to be put in
    place to mitigate the impact.
  • The creeping crises referred to earlier in this
    chapter could all be regarded as level four
    disruptions, but it would be wrong to regard them
    only as external threats to the supply chain.
  • From a pure SCM perspective risk at this level
    is the downside financial consequences of a
    specific event. The loss of a sole supplier or
    customer is the most obvious danger here.
  • Focuses on what is being carried- work and
    information flows- and process design within and
    between organizations.
  • In the ideal world of scientific management,
    mastery of process control methodologies would
    facilitate the identification, management and
    elimination of risk.
  • It is helpful to explore the impact on
    operations of the loss of links or nodes in the
    production/distribution and infrastructure
    networks, through network modeling.
  • e.g. With the element of SCM and resource
    requirements are increasing, the probability that
    assets may be damaged, stolen or mislaid along
    the way is increasing.

29
Thank You for Your Attention
  • Thank You for Your Attention
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com