Log In   |  Register Free Newsletter Subscription
Skip navigation
Zibb
Subscribe to Manufacturing Business Technology
FirstLight 
Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS

There's New Momentum afoot to minimize risk, forge a stronger supply chain

By Jim Fulcher, contributing editor (jimfulcher@comcast.net) -- Manufacturing Business Technology, 12/1/2007 12:00:00 AM

As more companies realize just how fragile the links in a global supply chain actually are, risk mitigation moves from a low-level to a high-level priority.

“To cope with largely unpredictable events, leading companies make supply chain investments to ensure goods continue to flow despite major disruptions,” says Patrick Connaughton, senior analyst with Cambridge, Mass.-based Forrester Research.

Connaughton says leaders know the key to success is establishing day-to-day processes that can scale in times of crisis.

These best practices are said to offer the highest return:

  • Design networks for maximum resiliency;

  • Extend situational awareness to supplier and carrier networks; and

  • Boost prevention efforts by integrating better security measures.


Joe Stafford, executive VP of risk management solutions vendor New Momentum, says constant monitoring of buying, selling, and other market activity protects revenue streams and leads to stronger, more flexible supply chains.

But supply chain risk mitigation doesn't necessarily stop there. For one, there's the inherent risk involved with sharing intellectual property (IP) with partners and suppliers.

“To cut costs, many companies have moved manufacturing operations overseas. Now they are looking at ways to protect those revenue streams,” says Joe Stafford, executive VP of New Momentum, a vendor of supply chain risk management software that targets companies that either make or use electronic components. “One way is to take steps to protect IP from counterfeiters and detect sales through unauthorized channels, which can prevent lost revenue growth and brand reputation erosion.”

But the problem, claims Joshua Greenbaum, principal for Berkeley, Calif.-based Enterprise Applications Consulting, is that tracking product loss through the gray market presents a classic needle-in-a-haystack scenario.

“There's an enormous wealth of product-related data beyond a company's firewall that needs to be tracked and analyzed,” says Greenbaum. “Understanding this data can be a tremendous undertaking. The requirement to continuously monitor changing conditions makes the task that much more complex.”

The solution for a growing number of companies is adoption of supply chain risk management software.

According to Stu Clifton, CEO, New Momentum, “Our latest solution, introduced last summer, provides global enterprises with comprehensive capabilities for finding counterfeit components and unauthorized distribution. Most important, what we do is protect our customers' revenue streams.”

The process begins when the customer supplies a list of part numbers to New Momentum. The on-demand solution then monitors constantly for email activity, as well as buying, selling, and other market activity concerning those part numbers. Next, New Momentum provides the customer with an alert that details the findings so the company can act accordingly.

“That's our real strength: this type of constant monitoring and building on results,” Stafford says.

That approach is of significant interest to Inventec, a Taiwan-based supplier of high-tech products including notebooks, enterprise servers, storage solutions, wireless communications, network applications, mobile devices, and wireless applications. Inventec will use the New Momentum solution to protect IP, and identify possible supply chain constraints before they become a problem, Stafford says.

Given the many parts in its products, New Momentum will enable the manufacturer to monitor the market for movement of those parts, including whether prices for various commodities are rising or falling, and who's doing the buying and selling.

“Interruptions in manufacturing can be very costly,” Stafford says. “Constantly monitoring the market will enable Inventec to—among other things—identify potential suppliers it could turn to in case its suppliers' commodity quantities dry up for some reason. The result is a stronger and more flexible supply chain.”

Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS
Talkback
Reed Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Related Resources

Advertisement

Related Microsite Content

Related Links

More Content
  • Blogs
  • Webcasts
  • Podcasts

Jim Brown

PLM and Profitability

Jim Brown, President and founder of Tech-Clarity
November 12, 2009
Research Rap: Role of Component and Compliance Information in Supply Risk Management
A quick peek into some research on … the importance of good supply chain...
More

Roberto Michel

Operation Green

Roberto Michel, Senior Contributing Editor, Manufacturing Business Technology
November 11, 2009
Plant-focused software vendors correlating energy with production management
The last few days have seen more announcements from plant automation software...
More

VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS
  • Enterprise PLM


    Is your company ready for Enterprise PLM?

    Enterprise product life-cycle management (PLM) encompasses nine business processes—among them the much-embraced Design for Supply and Cost. This podcast sets up the relationship between PLM software and Enterprise PLM processes in basic terms, including the bonuses found in time-to-market and product quality.

    Sarvesh Jagannivas
    Speaker: Sarvesh Jagannivas
    Vice President of Marketing for Oracle’s Agile PLM software group
    Sidney Hill
    Moderator: Sidney Hill
    Executive Editor of Manufacturing Business Technology
    Hear It Now

Advertisement
Wonderware
NEWSLETTERS
Mid-Day Report
Innovation Strategies
Intelligent Manufacturing
Lean Enterprise



Please read our Privacy Policy

About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   FREE Subscription   |   Affiliate Links   |   RSS
© 2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites