Forget Managing Distribution - To Be Successful, Logistics Professionals
Need To Manage Change
In 2003, e-commerce revenues
were $113 billion, up from $55 billion in 2001. Last year, a record
33,678 new products were launched (6% more than 2002) and there
were nearly 1 million new business starts.
Its an
unpredictable, volatile business world, and as logistics professionals
we are right in the middle of it. Sometimes picking up the pieces.
But hopefully facilitating the change.
Most change
is driven from the top. Todays successful CEOs are not necessarily
great marketers or deal makers, but great agents of change. Leaders
who can get their organizations to change on a dime in order to
anticipate and capitalize on market trends before the competition.
- Egghead
software closed all its stores in a day in favor of selling
on the net.
- Dell Computer
never had any stores. Today, Dell registers $14 million in revenues
per day through its web site from customers who have been conditioned
to expect custom-built systems in a couple of days.
For changes
of this magnitude, logistics leaders can adopt two approaches:
1. Wait for
the change to happen (and it will) and say: "This company
cant do that. We dont have the infrastructure to support
it. Give us 12 months"
2. Build an
infrastructure NOW - internally or through a partnership with
a logistics services provider – that is flexible enough
to quickly, effectively and economically manage future changes
in business requirements.
Which approach
do you think todays change agent CEOs would support?
All this brings
me to public, or shared, warehousing. (Bet you didnt see that
coming.) The ability to maintain inventory anywhere in the world
with the added flexibility of paying only for the space and services
you require is becoming a necessary strategic advantage.
A major
greeting card manufacturer wanted to increase its sales via the
web without concerns about distribution capacity. The company
now outsources fulfillment of web orders to its logistics partner
who increases space and manpower as required.
A major
pharmaceutical manufacturer needed to reduce overhead costs to
drive shareholder value after a multi-billion dollar merger with
another firm. As the two companies merged operations into
a single distribution center, some product and all literature
and sample distribution was moved to a local shared warehouse
to sustain high service levels until the consolidation was completed.
In these cases,
shared warehousing provides a strategic solution to a real business
need. But despite the advantage of such an option, many third party
logistics firms are focusing less on managing shared space for multiple
clients and more on building and managing dedicated facilities as
part of large, long-term contracts. Why? To minimize financial risk.
Most contracts for shared warehousing allow shippers to eliminate
services and space with 30 days notice.
But the demand
for shared warehousing remains strong. And the ever-increasing pace
of change in todays business world will likely heighten this
demand and the availability of such services.
Successful logistics
professionals can no longer think of themselves as managers of distribution.
That is a tactical response to outside forces and events. Instead,
we need to proactively manage change by creating a distribution
infrastructure flexible enough to adapt to market changes. We must
be the strategic enabler that allows the CEO to aggressively pursue
business strategies that will give our companies or our clients
a competitive advantage.
Rather than
heavily invested roadblocks, our distribution infrastructures must
become the secret weapon of the change agent.
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