Saturday, September 2, 2017

5 Stages of Logistics Maturity

These 5 stages of maturity will help supply chain and logistics leaders set strategic goals that are appropriate to their organization’s maturity level
Organizations often find it difficult to define what their journey to logistics excellence should look like. This journey typically involves development of several operational capabilities, but without a clear frameworksupply chain and logistics leaders may find it challenging to focus on the right areas for their organization.
Broader supply chain visibility and timely, fact-based decisions increase market share and growth opportunities.
“The path to logistics excellence is partly defined by an organization’s current level of logistics maturity,” says James Lisica, research director at Gartner. “Gartner has created a five-stage logistics maturity model against which supply chain and logistics leaders can measure their organization’s maturity, and then develop a clear, long-term vision.”
Most leading supply chain organizations consistently take a maturity-based approach to designing and executing strategy. “This is why we have developed five stages to help supply chain and logistics leaders assess their logistics maturity. These stages will help them set a strategic goal that is appropriate to their organization’s maturity level,” adds Lisica.

Stage 1: React — Siloed Autonomous Operation

This stage is characterized by autonomous departments, such as sales and manufacturing, driving logistics priorities via manual processes and disparate, disconnected systems. There is no cross-divisional standardization of the logistics services offered to customers and little coordination. For example, the sales department might take an order for 30,000 items and promise delivery without consulting the logistics team.

Stage 2: Anticipate — Functional Scale and Efficiency

Centralization of the logistics function is beginning to improve efficiency and productivity. Logistics activity and performance are captured and reported using an organization-wide model, enabling better anticipation of demand. At this level, there is a focus on creating standardized processes and methods to benefit from economies of scale and increased efficiency. Performance is internally focused on fulfillment percentage, productivity, costs and return on assets.

Stage 3: Integrate — Integrated With the Supply Chain

The focus now is on integrating the logistics function into the overall supply chain. There is increased consideration of how logistics will affect customer service, procurement and manufacturing. Productivity enhancements and cost reductions are achieved through connections to supply management and third-party logistics providers.

Stage 4: Collaborate — Collaborating With the Value Chain Network

By this stage, logistics is an integrated part of a shared supply chain management vision, with trade-offs orchestrated between profitability and customer value. There is collaboration and visibility with suppliers and customers, as well as strategic partnerships with logistics providers that go beyond simple transactional services. Logistics capabilities are reliable enough to consider opportunities to shape market channel requirements.

Stage 5: Orchestrate — Network Orchestrator of Profitable Customer Value

Logistics and the rest of the supply chain facilitate processes across an ecosystem of partners to capitalize on unique business opportunities. As a result, information flows across the supply chain network in real time. This enables broader visibility and timely, fact-based decisions, which increases market share and growth opportunities.

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