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By
Ann Grackin
Service Chain Information Will Transform
the Total Chain
and How Firms Make Money
Spending time with very diverse sets of businesses—from
Combatant Commanders in the Military to a dishwasher repair
business, the obvious facts continue to haunt me—and
probably a huge amount of business people—is the lack
of real information about what happens to products once they
leave the Manufacturer. From a hot bumpy ride (rfid sensors,
anyone) to a lost shipment bound for Iraq, everything that
happens has some kind of relevancy to a host of business
people, product designers, quality engineers, logistics firms,
aftermarket managers...oh and did you mention the customer.
Everyone seems to want the data, yet so little is known.
There are a whole series of structural reasons for this.
First, many user organizations have a stovepipe procurement
process where the purchaser (or the original equipment) is
not the same person maintaining it. So information about
performance on the plant floor or in the field may not be
known in headquarters. Also, many products don’t stay
with their original owners, making their way to new buyers—from
huge used car networks to ebay. The recent commercial where
the father is quizzing the automobile to determine if it
will take good care of his daughter highlights this issue.
The converse of this is also true. The OEM’s service
business is disconnected in process, systems philosophy,
accounting, etc. In fact, today much of the last mile service
businesses may be outsourced. Though best practice says we
get connected for the total life cycle of the product, only
the very best and very rare of entities can boast this.
Lack of integration between logistics and repair. Getting
the stuff to the point of breakdown is a nontrivial exercise.
Vision of FedEx packages with laptops might be great for
consumer electronics, but large components of aircraft, power
generators, even autos—well they don’t get there
in a mailer—may require a hard day’s night, or
weeks of travel to get to where it is needed.
Performance Based Management Philosophy will transform business
In recent years we have gone through a life cycle of improvements
in the service infrastructures. And with more and more manufacturing
moving offshore, the need for still more local service providers
is evident. Long life products are particularly expensive
not only to repair, but many businesses maintain significant
back-up parallel equipments just to offset the vagaries of
downtime. But that stuff’s expensive! And the tolerance
for this is waining, with economic pressures increasing.
We just don’t have an unlimited amount of capital—and
it is possible to get much better performance. Imagine the
average household buying a back-up auto, dishwasher, TV,
and all our appliances, because our uptime on these products
was less than 50% and we had to have a backup while our furnace
was in for repair.

click on image for larger view
Performance Based Management
Moving to a performance based business model will have huge
implications for the whole value chain. Firstly, it’s
giving customers what they really want. As some one once
said, “our customers don’t want drills, they
want holes!” Having said that, it means architecting
your processes and technology, from the point of performance
back. Rather than pushing our parts through distribution
networks, it’s predicting performance, building products
better and sensing or predicting when they will fail—before
they fail—and then averting downtime.
The implications are profound and don’t make every
one feel happy about this.
More uptime means less sales of original equipment.
The DoD, for example, is beginning to write contract for
these “Performance Based Logistics” weapons
systems, like the Joint Strike Fighter, etc. Performance
Based Logistics is a leading edge approach to managing
complex supply chains. Its principal is to manage for outcomes—procure
performance rather than parts and people. It requires total
business process reorientation from service/maintenance
through procurement techniques, as well as the IT platform
for integration. Technologies that allow predictive management
dramatically improve the DoD’s ability to predict
and prevent weapon system failures. This includes the addition
of sensing and monitoring technologies for both new and
legacy weapon systems, and incorporates consideration of
operational and environmental factors in preventative maintenance.
It also includes data gathering and transmission in a distributed
environment, and represents an integrated approach to driving
weapon systems availability.
Many IT focused businesses already have this approach as
a core tenant. If you outsource your data center to SUN,
or Unisys, etc., you are not particularly interested in details,
you expect uptime. SUN has done a good job of marketing this
approach—access anywhere—total performance to
their customers. Real-time sensing tools, performance analysis
and remote diagnostics have all been part of this model for
some time.
Owning or managing more of the logistics process.
So, an OEM will sell less parts—less original equipment,
but increase service. Less parts can mean JIT Logistics,
if you will. So planning systems like multi-echelon planning
play a prominent roll here as well. What is the best network,
how do I position inventory best. Many OEMs are starting
logistics businesses, either with partners or moving into
this on their own. Good product companies who may not have
overly thought much about supply chain excellence, now have
to be just that—excellent.
The IT business.
Performance based management is an information intensive
play. The information at the point of performance is key
to so many partners, processes etc., but the challenge
will be— how to get that data. On-boarding diagnostics
technologies embedded within the product, and then integrating
that intelligence through a network provides not only the
pin point data, but also allows the various entities who
need the information access to synchronize the whole execution
process as well as feed demand, product quality, etc.
Change in Revenue Model
Many firms will also need more knowledge –not just
on what to do—but how to make money at it. From selling
equipment and systems to leasing and transaction fees, in
businesses where they may not adequately understand the business
model—what to say what it takes to provide stellar
performance—will challenge firms who will attempt this.
Understanding the path and practices of firms who already
deliver in the model—at least at a foundation—will
provide some guideposts. But managing an industrial facility,
vs. a data center, vs. an automobile repair center, vs. a
30 year weapons system, all have their unique attributes,
as well as winning the supply chain components to ensure
the compete seamless efficient model.
There is gold in this model, though, not just in added services
to charge for, but in customer retention and an exclusive
feedback loop to your product developers for the next generation
of ‘satisfiers’ in the killer product.
The Value Shift
Managing performance—sustained, responsiveness, and
customer centric—changes the way we think about, procure
and manage supply chains. This Value Shift to the real desired
outcomes, performance based management (PBM), has a dramatic
impact on the design and cost of supply chains, as well as
how core suppliers and OEMs design, build, and service their
products. It changes the business models of the enterprise.
Policies, processes and IT systems that are designed around
building, buying, and moving assets—with material as
their core—will change to performance as the core.
Integrated, visible processes allow the sensing and seeing
of what is needed, rather than over-procuring equipment or
overstocking inventory. Technology innovation is creating
capabilities supporting the next shift toward this performance-based
approach.
Partnerships in the value chain— sharing of knowledge,
process innovations, and technology concepts, as well as
the building of agreements, will be bedrock to the success
of Performance Based business models. The data is housed
in too many locations, in too many enterprises, in all level
of aggregation, formats etc., for partnerships not to be
essential to performance driven business models.
©2005 ChainLink Research, Inc.
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