S&OP: A Tough Nut to Crack
By Lora CecereJuly
11, 2015Market-Driven, Sales and Operations Planning, Supply Chain ExcellenceNo Comments
Definition
A Tough Nut to Crack: A problem
that is very difficult to solve. Cambridge Dictionary
Sales and Operations
Planning (S&OP) is over thirty years old. I have been studying it as a
researcher for fifteen years. With the rise of the global multi-national,
S&OP increased in importance as a way to align and drive organizational
balance. In parallel, as shown in the attached infographic, challenges to do it
well increased.
Companies struggle to do
it well. The lack of skilled resources is an issue, but executive understanding
is a more pressing and fundamental issue. Too few companies understand that
the supply chain as a complex system with finite and non-linear
relationships between the metrics. Companies also struggle to get to data. The
average company has three-to-five Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems
and two-to-three Advanced Planning Systems (APS), data access is an ongoing
challenge.
While many companies have
implemented solutions for demand and supply planning, the ability to visualize
executive decisions and to evaluate alternative, or what-if scenarios, is an
issue for 76% of companies. Today, companies do not have one S&OP solution.
Instead, they average four processes with many companies having more than
ten discrete processes.
S&OP improves
organizational alignment and drives agility. Improvements happen faster when
there is organizational balance between commercial and operations teams, and
the process reports to a profit-center manager. Roughly one in two companies
are out of balance, and the organizational functional gaps are the largest
between commercial and operational teams. Last month, I interviewed Fran
O’Sullivan, General Manager of IBM. Fran believes that the gap between sales
and operations happens faster when organizations create “T-shape managers.”
Fran defines a T-shaped manager as a person that has excelled within a
function, but also has cross-functional experience. Fran believes that there is
no substitute for cross-functional experience. I agree.
This organizational and
functional barrier is tough to overcome. It is even worse when the organization
lacks an executive team that understands how to drive cross-functional process
improvement.
A second and a
fundamental issue is the lack of technology to model the supply chain.
The use of technologies
to model a feasible plan is not as common as most people would like to believe.
Many organizations still rely on spreadsheets with no understanding that a
complex supply chain cannot be adequately modeled using a spreadsheet.
So, in a nutshell,
S&OP takes time and a focused effort to perfect. It happens over many
years. Start by actively tackling the issues. While it cannot be a technology
project, companies cannot achieve S&OP maturity without technology
modeling.
No comments:
Post a Comment