Exploiting the Global Supply Chain
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| What changes when your sourcing and markets go international? Everything! |
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by Jeremy N. Smith
May 1, 2008
The difference between an
international and purely domestic supply chain strategy?
“Everything!”
So says Greg Lehmkuhl vice president, global automotive, for Menlo Worldwide
Logistics, one of five veteran executives World Trade asked to advise companies
going global for the first time or expanding existing international operations.
Doing business abroad introduces vast new variables to a preexisting mostly
domestic supply chain.
“If I looked back five years ago, probably five percent of the requests for
transportation solutions were international,” says Erv Bluemner, vice
president, product marketing transportation solutions, RedPrairie. “Now the
numbers are between thirty and thirty-five percent. Most of that shift has
occurred in just the last twenty-four months.”
Lehmkuhl tells the same story. Five years ago, the automotive suppliers he
serves might have seen ‘going global’ as a choice. Now, however, competitors
have set up shop in Asia or South America or Eastern Europe. “Clients aren’t
asking if you have an international strategy anymore,” he says. “They’re asking
you to demonstrate it. It’s becoming the ante instead of the
differentiator.”
Take the example of an automotive components manufacturer operating primarily
out of Mexico. When a major U.S. automaker representing half their business
ordered them to shift some of their sourcing to China, management balked,
asking Menlo to perform a total landed cost comparison. “It took us four
weeks,” Lehmkuhl says. “We did studies of sixty percent of their procured
parts. We came back with the opinion, given all the risks and all the costs,
that it did make sense in most cases for them to move their sourcing to
China.”
Yet the company wasn’t convinced. They decided to wait and see. Within a year,
Lehmkuhl says, they lost forty percent of their business.
Granted, making the change from a North America-based to a global supply chain
is no slam-dunk.
“The complexity of managing the supply chain increases exponentially when you
move offshore,” Greg Lehmkuhl says. “You have to have a defined,
well-articulated, and proven strategy.”
According to the experts, companies must be willing to examine and rethink
every aspect of their existing business model. That means looking inward before
expanding outward and revising P&Ls to focus on total landed
cost.
“It’s often the C-level executives who make these decisions, but when they go
international, companies need a coordinated strategy across their procurement,
operations, sales, marketing, and logistics groups,” says Jeff Scovill, vice
president, global forwarding, C.H. Robinson. “All those entities need to be
involved.”
Here, as ever, logistics is the tie that binds. “You can be reactionary and
still be successful domestically because the logistics team can come in at the
last moment and take in the slack,” says Scovill. But that doesn’t work
internationally. Start to finish, he says, “Logistics has to make sure, at
every step of the supply chain, you’re moving goods through, you’re tracking of
inventory, and you’re keeping customers happy.”
As firms go global, for example, Scovill says, they should understand their
long-standing channels may become obsolete. “Often customers will just assume
they can feed inventory from overseas supply channels into their existing domestic
supply channels,” he says, “rather than evaluating total landed costs of
ownership.”
A C.H Robinson customer sourced products from Asia and Europe and shipped them
to the Midwest simply because that’s where existing distribution centers—remnants
of domestic manufacturing operations—existed. But eighty percent of their
customers were located close to the East or West Coast. “They incurred costs
moving the products from the East or West Coasts to the Midwest facilities, and
then they incurred costs shipping them back to the coasts,” Scovill recalls.
“Of course, one of the first things we did was change their distribution
channels, so when they were bringing product in, they could keep them on the
coasts and avoid having to go through that additional expense.”
The promise of lower total landed cost—and, with it, higher market share—lures
American companies offshore. Delivering fully on that promise, however, calls
for optimal end-to-end supply chain visibility.
Supply chain software solutions provider RedPrairie sees more and more
middle-tier customers engaging in global supply chain networks for the first
time, Erv Bluemner says. Not all understand the trade-offs. “You can’t save
fifty cents per widget and then pay an extra sixty cents for
transport—especially if it doesn’t get through customs. Purchase and
transportation management systems need to be connected.”
Jim Ritchie, president and chief executive officer of YRC Logistics, agrees.
“The current supply chain process for a lot of clients is that the product gets
sourced in a foreign country, loaded in a container, put on an ocean vessel
that moves to the U.S., gets offloaded, clears customs, and then somebody
breaks open the container.” But opening a container should never be the first
real confirmation companies have that what they ordered was what was shipped.
If so, mistakes and miscommunication will take months rather than days to
discover.
“If you don’t have good visibilities, you can have product that can arrive at
port and sit there for an extended period of time, with no knowledge that they
are there,” says Jeff Scovill. “We have customers who have had their products
sit for 60, 90, 100 days without knowing it. By the time they figure out what’s
happening they’ve incurred thousands of dollars in detention and demurrage fees
before they even get access to their products.”
C.H. Robinson served a consumer products company whose earlier efforts at
overseas sourcing ended in an even worse situation. As flow of goods increased
from China to the U.S. West Coast, the buyer found itself with significant gaps
in supply chain visibility. “They needed a set of four or five SKUs for
fulfillment of their customers and didn’t know where they were located, when
they were arriving, or when they would be available,” Jeff Scovill says.
The solution: assert control and get visibility, either with your own custom
transportation management system (smaller companies can subscribe to hosted
solutions at affordable cost) or through service providers like 3PLs, freight
forwarders and ocean carriers. If you choose the second option, Erv Bluemner
warns, buyer beware. “Any number of times I’ve gone into customers and they’ve
said that they use one specific freight forwarder for everything and they don’t
have any basis for cost comparison,” he says. “Often you can do better if you
have a system that allows you to connect to multiple ocean providers and
multiple freight forwarders, where you can consider multiple ports of exit and
entry.”
An international supply chain entails a new approach to financing. Mike
Bellardine, director of global trade and international payment services,
KeyBank, suggests hiring an experienced cash manager. “Working capital is hard
to forecast. One size doesn’t fit all.”
New sets of risks comes into play. “It’s possible that the seller may have the
goods on the boat and delivered before the financial papers clear,” says
Bellardine, offering the example of a KeyBank client purchasing internationally
in an Asian country for the first time: “The inventory was time-sensitive and
they wanted to make sure it fit their sales window. What happened was
physically the goods arrived in port ahead of the documents necessary to clear
customs.” No documents, no deliveries. No deliveries, no
sales.
Tricky as it may be, coordinating international inventory and paperwork can
seem simple by comparison with the task of foreign currency calculations. “As
soon as a customer crosses the border, they face the same cash management
issues they did domestically—but now on steroids,” says Bellardine.
Or consider the more complicated case of a domestic grain seller distributing
in Eastern Europe. A surging euro made such export sales attractive, but what
guaranteed each new buyer would pay as promised? “Normally, if you have a new
domestic client, you can set internal house or credit limits,” Bellardine says.
“In this case there were two problems. One, they’re in Eastern Europe—how do I
get a view on the buyer? Two, even if the buyer’s good, how do they get the
currency to pay me?”
Answering those questions required the buyer to get a letter of credit from a
Russian bank, then the seller to get a confirmation from KeyBank of the Russian
bank’s reliability. “Of course it
costs a fee, but it’s almost like buying insurance on the
receivable.”
The physical supply chain carries additional risks when it goes global.
Containers take an average of 11 to 23 days to travel from foreign suppliers to
the United States. What happens in the case of delay or
error?
“If you have only a one-week float to meet your customer’s lead time and you’re
shipping by sea, a blip is going to devastate you,” says Menlo’s Greg
Lehmkuhl.
He speaks from experience. An automotive component manufacturer turned to Menlo
for help after betting big on Asian outsourcing without properly calculating
the risks to inventory. “They were going to save $4 or $5 million a year, but
there was port congestion in Los Angeles-Long Beach,” Lehmkuhl says. Instead of
paying $20,000 for a chartered aircraft from Mexico to the United States, the
company paid $750,000 for aircrafts originating from Asia. Just like that, an
anticipated $5 million savings became a $20 million loss.
Whether moving goods by land, sea, or air, going global means a company or its
partners must adapt to existing physical infrastructure, supply channels, and
foreign regulation.
Europe, for example, has a well-developed transportation infrastructure and
short distance between ports, but an emerging market like Vietnam—where an
increasing number of American companies are sourcing—often lacks direct ocean
or air freight links to the United States. That creates opportunity for delay,
damage, and other risk factors. Even in fast-modernizing China, standard
business practices may ignore what can be taken for granted in the U.S.
Pallets, for example are costly compared to labor in China, so goods move
manually, taking extra time to load and unload as well as increasing the
frequency of damage. Paperwork, meanwhile, literally changes hands, passing
from driver to driver, truck to truck, all to align with different regional
regulations.
“There’s no slick Internet system that’s going to manage that process in China
or any other country,” says Greg Lehmkuhl. “It’s about real, on-the-ground
operations.”
Last on the going global checklist: read the fine print.
Changing international regulations may challenge even the best expansion plan
and execution. “It’s shocking—if you don’t pay attention to regulatory events
in targeted emerging markets—how fast your business case can dissolve,” says
Greg Lehmkuhl. He cites the case of an automotive parts distribution center
moving from Southeast Asia to China’s Guangxo province. “In this province,
hazardous material regulations changed. They had to warehouse all hazardous
materials offsite in a separate and contained hazardous material warehouse.”
Existing U.S. trade agreements and customs laws are no less important. Time and
again, return on investment may disappear with a single duty rate or
classification change.
Remember, too, work-in-progress inventories may enjoy lower duties than
finished products.
A concurrent trend—often called pre-mixing—is siting distribution centers
outside the United States. Rather than by individual item or manufacturer,
shipments are grouped by ultimate destination—regions, cities, and even single
stores. Total transit time shrinks, domestic labor and infrastructure costs
decline, and orders are verified before they leave the foreign country; nor do
overseas mixing centers show up on a company’s working capital balance
sheet.
“You eliminate your risk based on what was ordered versus what was shipped and
you accelerate your time to final destination,” says Jim Ritchie, calling it
one of today’s strongest international supply chain trends. wt
Sidebar: Rule Number One: Take Your Time!
The top mistake executives make in going global is being unrealistic about
their timelines.
“They expect to have a Chinese partner up and running in a year, but the
partner wants to gain friendship and get to know you,” says Greg Lehmkuhl, vice
president, global automotive, for Menlo Worldwide Logistics. Time and again,
he’s seen American executives fly in, interview suppliers, and want to start
buying six to ten weeks later. Every time they’ve failed.
Step one is devoting sufficient time up front to your partnerships, be they
with overseas suppliers or third-party supply chain providers. In every case,
what matters for success is that the partner offers sufficient presence and
expertise in the target region.
Step two is executing slowly. No company’s first overseas subcontract should be
for any of its five most critical components. Instead, firms should start
outsourcing with low-volume, low-impact, multi-sourced products that they can
easily replace domestically. That way if expected shipments don’t arrive on
time—or product quality isn’t up to par— business life goes on as
usual.
Step three is strategizing risk. This can be as easy as asking a simple
question: How fast could you change your supply chain if something bad happens?
Make sure the answer is one you can live with. Otherwise, Lehmkuhl says, a
single missed shipment may devastate the company.
Sidebar: Know Your Terms
Negotiating an
international sales contract? “Both parties need to pay as much attention to
the terms of sale as to the sales price,” reminds the International Business
Institute.
Between consignees and consignors on each international transaction, so-called
INCOTERMS dictate every aspect of the purchase: when title to goods changes
hands, where risk is involved, who is responsible for various costs and charges
that occur in the supply chain. “What will happen a lot of time is that people
get into global supply chains and they go overseas on an import basis,” says
Jeff Scovill. “They make the mistake of getting things from point A to point B
without knowing the terms.”
In short, Scovill says, importers purchase goods under one of four
INCOTERMS:
• CIF—cost
insurance and freight
• CFR—cost
and freight (no insurance)
• DDU—delivered,
duty unpaid
• DDP—delivered,
duty paid
In either of the first two cases, the seller of the goods is responsible for
all the costs of moving the goods to a named location—for example, a port or
container yard or warehouse in the United States. Only in the second two cases,
however, is the seller also responsible for performing customs clearance.
Whether DDU or DDP, says Scovill, “they’re acting as the importer of record,
and either they or the buyer pay the duties.”
Customs, duties, taxes, and delivery—clearly, the costs add up. Read
international contracts carefully and consult an expert before signing on the
bottom line.
Sidebar: Global Sourcing 101 for Retailers
Global and domestic retail supply
chains share the need for speed, agility and flexibility regardless of length
of chain. However, domestic supply is simply not as complex or risky. Global
supply brings an increased risk for errors, delays, regulatory and customs
challenges and a need for greater, broader visibility to manage the flow of
product and information.
Today’s most successful retailers realize the competitive advantage of sourcing
products through an array of global sources that is not possible through a
domestic supply chain.
Advanced global sourcing tools expose opportunities invisible to technology
laggards, and encompass a much broader array of information traditionally
tracked in domestic sourcing applications.
The right technology is critical for a global supply chain. Global sourcing
platforms such as RockBlocks, serve the fastest growing, largest and most
profitable retailers by providing visibility into alternative sources, costs,
compliance, quality, speed, reliability and a host of other factors.
Domestic sourcing applications aren’t set up to embrace multiple currencies and
fluctuation; alternate source and multi-country components/substitution,
multi-level supplier trees (many to many relationships); multi-country tariff
classification, duty and quota processing; different government security
regulations (like C-TPAT and 10+2 programs); import and export procedures; port
capacity; intermodal transportation and multiple hand-offs
While platforms for domestic supply chains do not scale to meet international
needs, global supply platforms can be used for domestic supply as the superset
of a larger, deeper solution.
—David
Diamond , CEO, RockBlocks Group, Inc
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