The disruptions caused by the global pandemic have shone a light on existing supply chain issues. In a recent HFS survey study of 302 retail and consumer packaged goods (RCPG) executives conducted in partnership with Genpact, 90% agreed that COVID-19 significantly impacted their supply chains. Inflation, recessionary fears, and the war in Ukraine have exacerbated the situation. Creating modern, value-based supply networks, redesigning the supply chain for sustainability and omnichannel, resiliency and adaptability, and proactive planning are some of the biggest challenges RCPG firms face.
To combat the disruption, 75% of RCPG firms are trying to transition from traditional linear supply chains to autonomous supply networks. HFS recommends attaining enhanced visibility, minimal human intervention, analytics-driven systems, baking sustainability, and leveraging ecosystem data to walk this path.
RCPG firms identify supply chain disruption as the second most concerning macroeconomic factor adversely impacting organizational goals
(see Exhibit 1).
Sample: 302 retail and CPG executives across the Global 2000 enterprises
Source: HFS Research in partnership with Genpact, 2023
Most RCPG firms now realize that supply chains are no longer an operational conversation; they’ve become a boardroom discussion. As Exhibit 2 depicts, CPG and retail firms acknowledge the mayhem the COVID-19 pandemic caused and are still grappling with its aftereffects. Interestingly, CPG firms have managed the supply chain disruption slightly better than retail firms.
Sample: 302 retail and CPG executives across the Global 2000 enterprises
Source: HFS Research in partnership with Genpact, 2023
Five supply chain challenges plague today’s RCPG enterprises (see Exhibit 3): creating modern value-based supply networks, redesigning the supply chain for sustainability, redesigning for omnichannel and direct-to-consumer, resiliency and adaptability, and proactive planning.
Sample: 302 retail and CPG executives across the Global 2000 enterprises
Source: HFS Research in partnership with Genpact, 2023
We attribute these challenges to traditional supply chains’ linear structure; they are limited by design. Traditional supply chains are often a product of siloed functions, limited automation, lack of a feedback loop, variance in the degree of outsourcing, and half-hearted sustainability initiatives. This leads to slow and tardy change management, non-agile response mechanisms, a lack of visibility, and limited automation-induced benefits. Therefore, RCPG firms want to transform from traditional linear structures to networked and autonomous networks.
An autonomous and connected supply chain network—with each function connected to and sharing data with the other with minimal human intervention—will ensure RCPG firms have more control and visibility of the supply chain and less dependence on humans to navigate unforeseen disruptions. As a result, most RCPG firms (see Exhibit 4) plan to transition from traditional and linear supply chains to networked and autonomous supply chains.
Sample: 302 retail and CPG executives across the Global 2000 enterprises
Source: HFS Research in partnership with Genpact, 2023
However, the road to transformation is complex, and building an autonomous and networked supply chain requires forward-looking initiatives enabled via tech. Besides, most RCPG firms would need to work with experienced and capable service providers to accomplish this goal. HFS recommends the following measures for RCPG enterprises looking to take the plunge:
Aim for interim goals, such as evolving from linear to circular chains, where each function connects to the next function in the value chain and the first and last functions are in sync. For example, aftermarket services demand feeds into the existing procurement strategy. Then, gradually move to a more autonomous and networked supply chain with each function connected to the other with minimal human intervention.
Such transitions don’t happen in weeks or months. RCPG firms should consider two-to-three-year horizons with an incremental approach toward modernization. In a nutshell, the first step should be to focus on gaining more visibility, followed by applying automation at various functions and finally integrating all these functions.
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