Friday, March 24, 2023
  • Login
CEO North America
  • Home
  • Business
    • Entrepreneur
    • Industry
    • Innovation
    • Management & Leadership
  • CEO Interviews
  • CEO Life
    • Art & Culture
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    • Environment
  • Opinion
  • News
  • Multimedia
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
    • Entrepreneur
    • Industry
    • Innovation
    • Management & Leadership
  • CEO Interviews
  • CEO Life
    • Art & Culture
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    • Environment
  • Opinion
  • News
  • Multimedia
No Result
View All Result
CEO North America
No Result
View All Result

Why AI-managed supply chains have fallen short and how to fix them

in Opinion
Why ai-managed supply chains have fallen short and how to fix them
Share on LinkedinShare on WhatsApp

The root cause of the problem lies not with technology but with how and where companies are applying it.

Why hasn’t artificial intelligence fully transformed supply chains? Several years ago, some of us predicted that AI-powered automation would lead to “the death of supply chain management.” We saw the potential to turn supply chains into self-regulating utilities that optimally manage end-to-end workflows with little human intervention. However, despite heavy investments, companies have not realized the vision of AI-managed supply chains.

A recent study by BCG and Aera Technology sought to pinpoint the source of companies’ struggles to maximize value from AI in supply chains. We found that the root cause lies not with technology but with how and where companies are applying it. Most still focus on using AI for analytics and prediction—for example, to forecast demand and plan production. Companies have not pursued the more valuable application of using AI to make recurring decisions by recognizing patterns in big data that humans cannot see.

To unlock the full potential, companies need to deploy an AI-powered learning system that is integrated across functions. This system makes decisions based on enterprise-wide and external data and continuously learns from the outcomes to improve performance. Analytical engines automate decision making instead of just providing insights to practitioners, who must retain the burden of making decisions. Success requires fostering people’s trust in AI and introducing a new operating model, among other enablers. Companies that make the right investments will increase their resilience to market volatility and talent scarcity and achieve higher sustained performance.

Fundamental Problems Persist

BCG’s analysis of supply chain KPIs from 2011 through 2020 reveals insufficient progress in addressing fundamental supply chain problems. During that period, delivery performance declined independently of inventory and staffing levels. Even when companies boosted inventory and staffing levels at the onset of COVID-19, they still could not prevent a steep decline in service.

To improve supply chain performance, many companies have ramped up their investments in digital technology. A BCG survey found that companies plan to use this spending mainly to enhance traditional subfunctions. Demand forecasting is the highest priority, followed by tracking, planning, and automation. We see little evidence that companies are considering AI use cases that enable autonomous decision making. In the absence of entirely new applications of AI, it is not surprising that the decades-old challenges of declining service levels, suboptimal inventories, and excessive manual effort persist.

Why Have Companies Struggled?

Companies have struggled to use AI to address fundamental supply chain challenges for a variety of reasons. Supply chain management is inherently complex. It requires the participation of several functions (including procurement, manufacturing, logistics, and sales) as well as subfunctions (such as demand planning, inventory planning, and scheduling). Organizational structures and incentive systems motivate employees to optimize the performance of their own function or subfunction rather than that of the end-to-end supply chain. Managing tradeoffs among stakeholders is tricky because supply chain personnel often need to address competing requirements from other functions without having the power to make the ultimate decision.

Companies often try to improve their supply chain performance by adding more people to a function. But the problem is typically a lack of subject matter knowledge, which cannot be solved simply by creating larger teams. High-potential performers often do not regard supply chain management as a preferred long-term career path and move to other functions after only two or three years. Because of the high turnover, institutional knowledge ends up dispersed across the enterprise or escapes the company altogether.

These organizational challenges make it hard for supply chain managers to focus on solving problems that can improve long-term performance, such as building new skills, forming the right partnerships, and setting the right KPIs.

On the technical side, we have yet to see proven at-scale solutions for AI-driven learning systems in supply chains. Questions remain about whether it is possible to deploy an all-encompassing integrated system to address all supply chain decisions. Obtaining good-quality data to train learning systems is also a challenge, despite the explosion in the availability of data and the development of innovative technology to integrate it. Moreover, companies are already investing significant funding and resources in new planning systems to address pandemic-induced issues, so they may not be able to devote money and personnel to implement learning systems in the near term.

At many companies, efforts to deploy new technology to improve supply chain performance are impeded by misconceptions. For example, companies place too much faith in consensus decision making to promote alignment and commitment among stakeholders. They are also too confident about people’s ability to make sense of events, situations, and data. Finally, they over-rely on linear upgrades of technology, failing to recognize the need to deploy disruptive technology and adapt legacy systems when doing so.

The New Vision: An Integrated Learning System

To fulfill the promise of an AI-powered autonomous supply chain, companies need to deploy cognitive automation at scale in an integrated learning system.

Here is an example that illustrates what this means in practice: An AI-powered platform learns from supply chain practitioners’ past decisions by considering how they affected key objectives (such as service level and cost to serve). Based on historical patterns, it recommends actions to respond to new, similar situations. As execution proceeds, the platform continuously analyzes real-time data to make recurring decisions that optimize performance. The platform conceals complexity from the company’s personnel and engages with them only as needed. In the earliest stages of using the platform, practitioners are involved in reviewing the validity of proposed actions and executing them. They also give feedback to data scientists and system architects on how to enhance the platform. Over time, the platform matures toward more automated execution with less human intervention. By digitizing the supply chain function’s institutional knowledge and autonomously executing decisions in collaboration with humans, the platform helps to address the challenges of talent scarcity and high turnover.

A leading consumer goods company is using such a platform to unlock new levels of agility and learning. A key application is accelerating decision making, execution, and learning when introducing new products into a market. For instance, the platform has rapidly identified which legacy products to remove from the market to maximize the economic benefits of new products. The company has used the capabilities to support a wide variety of applications—such as optimizing media buys based on product availability or stopping a purchase order if a vendor faces sustainability challenges. So far, the platform has issued 300,000 automated recommendations, approximately 60% of which were executed without human intervention. The company now aims to increase this to more than 90%. Reaching this stage has not been easy. The company needed to invest significant effort to design the platform, as well as to build people’s trust in AI-generated recommendations and automated execution.

How Can Companies Realize the Vision?

Companies must take several steps to realize the vision of an integrated learning system.

Focus on cross-functional decision making amid uncertainty. Prioritize AI use cases that apply across several functions, rather than seeking to improve the performance of specific, functional planning activities. Look for cross-functional, transactional applications for which AI can recommend decisions under conditions of uncertainty by learning from comparable situations in the past.

Design entirely new human–machine operating models. Today, people execute most of the work while using analytics platforms to provide often complex situational insights. In the worst cases, they do so in organizational silos that operate too independently along the end-to-end material flow. In the best cases, the company uses a cross-functional, hub-like operating model in which planning teams try to find good solutions in a complex environment with some help from analytics. In the new operating model, a carefully designed AI platform finds the solutions. The vision of seamlessly connecting information across the various “flows” of activity in the end-to-end supply chain becomes more realistic. The AI engine supports planners in gathering information from all sources and escalates only critical decisions to the manager responsible for a specific flow. Practitioners make sense of the AI-generated recommendations, foster “explainable AI” concepts, and promote trust in the recommendations. System architects apply lessons learned to improve the next-generation design, thereby building the AI platform’s capability in decision making.

Courtesy BCG. Click here for full Report

Tags: AIBCGSupply chain

Related Posts

Do you know why your employees are leaving?
Opinion

Do You Know Why Your Employees Are Leaving?

Here are the 5 key drivers of employee engagement
Opinion

Here are the 5 key drivers of employee engagement

What do your customers want in 2023?
Opinion

What Do Your Customers Want in 2023?

Five questions all leaders should always be asking
Opinion

Five Questions All Leaders Should Always Be Asking

Two basic problems of a declining population in a country
Opinion

Two basic problems of a declining population in a country

4 surprises all leaders face
Opinion

4 Surprises All Leaders Face

Women get “nicer” feedback — and it holds them back
Opinion

Women Get “Nicer” Feedback — and It Holds Them Back

Does it feel like your department has been sidelined?
Opinion

Does It Feel Like Your Department Has Been Sidelined?

How to test if your interview process is a nightmare
Opinion

How to Test If Your Interview Process Is a Nightmare

Helping gen z employees find their place at work
Opinion

Helping Gen Z Employees Find Their Place at Work

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • Symbotic’s CEO Rick Cohen shines a light on the consumer goods supply revolution
  • CEO John Wynne outlines how Fortis Solution Group is disrupting the packaging industry
  • CEO Keh-Shew Lu explains how Diodes Inc is pushing the frontiers of connectivity
  • CEO NA Andrea Pirondini explains why the Prysmian Group is best-in-class at cable solutions
  • Eric Clark on how ONE NTT is driving client-led innovation

Recent Comments

    Archives

    Categories

    • Art & Culture
    • Business
    • CEO Interviews
    • CEO Life
    • Editor´s Choice
    • Entrepreneur
    • Environment
    • Food
    • Health
    • Highlights
    • Industry
    • Innovation
    • Issues
    • Management & Leadership
    • Multimedia
    • News
    • Opinion
    • PrimeZone
    • Printed Version
    • Travel
    • Uncategorized

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org

    • CONTACT
    • GENERAL ENQUIRIES
    • ADVERTISING
    • MEDIA KIT
    • DIRECTORY
    • TERMS AND CONDITIONS

    Editorials – stuart.james@ceo-na.com

    Advertising – media@ceo-na.com

    NEW YORK

    110 Wall St.,
    3rd Floor
    New York, NY.
    10005
    USA
    +1 212 432 5800

     

    MEXICO CITY

    Paseo de la Reforma 296,
    Floor 38
    Mexico City
    06600
    MEXICO

    • CONTACT
    • GENERAL ENQUIRIES
    • ADVERTISING
    • MEDIA KIT
    • DIRECTORY
    • TERMS AND CONDITIONS

    Editorials –
    stuart.james@ceo-na.com

    Editor-In-Chief –

    caroline.sposto@ceo-na.com

    Editorials – editorials@ceo-na.com

    Advertising –
    media@ceo-na.com

    NEW YORK

    110 Wall St.,
    3rd Floor
    New York, NY.
    10005
    USA
    +1 212 432 5800

    MEXICO CITY

    Paseo de la Reforma 296,
    Floor 38
    Mexico City
    06600
    MEXICO

    CEO North America © 2022 - Sitemap

    No Result
    View All Result
    • Home
    • Business
      • Entrepreneur
      • Industry
      • Innovation
      • Management & Leadership
    • CEO Interviews
    • CEO Life
      • Art & Culture
      • Food
      • Health
      • Travel
      • Environment
    • Opinion
    • News
    • Multimedia

    © 2023 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below

    Forgotten Password?

    Retrieve your password

    Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

    Log In

    Warning: array_sum() expects parameter 1 to be array, null given in /home/ceonacom/public_html/wp-content/plugins/jnews-social-share/class.jnews-social-background-process.php on line 111