Rethinking Supply Chains in The Asia-Pacifi C Region For Global Growth
Rethinking Supply Chains in The Asia-Pacifi C Region For Global Growth
Figure 1: For the vast majority of executives in the Asia-Pacific region, their supply chain is a top priority
Our supply chain in the Asia-Pacific region is a top priority
in my organization today
100%
100%
Strongly agree
80
60
80
60
Agree
40
20
Strongly agree
40
Neutral
Agree
20
Neutral
Disagree
Disagree
0
All respondents
All respondents
Note: These graphs are based on responses from 37 respondents from the survey
Source: Bain executive survey, 2014 (n=66)
Figure 2: Only about half of executives feel ready for the challenges, and those in the C-suite are less optimistic
My company is well prepared to address the top three challenges
Percentage of executives who believe
they are ready for the challenges
24
100%
80
42
Strongly agree
Agree
60
Neutral
40
Disagree
20
Strongly disagree
0
Supply chain executives
C-suite executives
Source: Bain executive survey, 2014 (n=66)
Participants were able to assess where they stand compared with best-in-class performance on a range of key
supply chain dimensions. In their view, the widest gaps
are in the areas of strategic alignment (a companys
ability to use supply chain to support its growth ambitions), customer centricity (customer service levels and
complexity management), digitalization, and organization
and talent. Local champions are more likely than multinationals to feel they trail the best in class in complexity
management. The area with the smallest gap between
local champions and multinationals is organization
and talent.
Figure 3: Executives are most concerned about increasing service requirements and rising costs
Please select your top three supply chain concerns in the Asia-Pacific region over the next three years
Expanding footprint
1 Rapid expansion of Asia-Pacific footprint
20%
Regulatory changes
29%
48%
12%
65%
23%
Volatility of demand
15%
Performance of suppliers
Infrastructure constraints
9%
17%
Growth of e-commerce
6%
27%
2%
0
20
40
60
80
Figure 4: Trends in Asia create six major challenges for supply chains
The impact of these trends also varies between multinational and domestic companies. Multinational companies in the Asia-Pacific region must make decisions
about product localization and choose among local,
regional or global supply chain models. Local companies
face a different form of complexity: They must continue
to innovate with new products to grow in their home
markets while building a broader supply chain to serve
export markets.
Figure 5: From Bains perspective, high-performance supply chain setup flows from the business strategy
Key Questions
Minimize
complexity
Design
Maintain
alignment
Operations
Plan
Source
Make
Fulfill
Recover
Enablers
Organization
& decison rights
Metrics
IT systems
Strategic alignment
Translate business strategy into specific supply chain requirements that support
growth ambition across Asia-Pacific markets
Customer centricity
Tailor service levels to the needs of the customer segment, with processes to ensure
lasting simplification and to track the cost of complexity across the complex
customer landscape
Operations excellence
Create clear roles and responsibilities for the local and global supply chain teams;
integrate supply chain fully with other functions; strengthen talent pipeline to
support growth
Digitalization
Build technology infrastructure that uses the latest global best practices to provide
end-to-end real-time visibility on performance and to enable integration of e-channels
Asia-Pacic:
Europe,
Middle East
and Africa: