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Supply Chain Woes Solved With Simulation

Creating a virtual replica of the physical infrastructure can help OEMs and CPGs overcome logistical obstacles.

Getty Images Global Supply Chain (1)
Getty Images

It’s 2023, and packaging and processing OEMs are still saddled with supply chain problems, which are primarily tied to a shortage of electronic devices, including motors and controllers. To date, the only solution has been to overstock the shelves when components are available—and oftentimes the product is only available on eBay, for a much higher price tag.

For machine builders trying to fulfill customer orders, it’s been a frustrating experience that has required resourceful out-of-the-box actions.

“Our work-around has been brute force—pre-ordering items that are standard and forecasted for use, as well as getting engineering to find alternative suppliers, which is painful and tedious, but we have made substitutions,” says Brian Ormanic, senior applications engineer at Pearson Packaging Systems. “There’s been a lot of communication and time investment from our supply chain department.”

Stacy Johnson, vice president of business development for Hoosier Feeder Company, has had a similar experience. “We are still seeing supply chain issues primarily tied to motors, controls, and sensors. It’s a unique situation, because often, in the past, customers would specify items like controls. But now, they’re having to choose between getting the accessories they want with a longer lead time, or letting us use the accessories we have available on the shelf to build their product.”

OEMs aren’t the only ones struggling right now. Their CPG customers, too, are trying to balance customer needs with product and material availability.


Read article   Read more about how to apply agile practices to the supply chain. 


“Different components are coming from different vendors, and one of the most important components to manage for is lead times,” says Diego Pantoja-Navajas, vice president of AWS Supply Chain at Amazon Web Service, Inc. (AWS). “Incorrect lead times can lead to disastrous manufacturing outcomes.”

But, it’s hard to manage lead times because the manufacturing supply chain is so complex. There are changing demands for product, varying levels of lead times for supplies, the balancing of production capacity, and logistical bottlenecks. Throw a global pandemic on top of that coupled with a raw material shortage and even a ship wedged across the Suez Canal—among other things—and it’s a real business nightmare.

“It’s a big Rubik’s cube,” says Adrian Wood, director of strategy and marketing for Dassault SystèmesDelmia brand. “Companies are trying to get the best forecast of supply and demand, and crunch that into a strategic plan. It’s an optimization problem that companies today normally solve through Excel and manual processes.”

But there’s an evolution taking place as companies wake up to the fact that they must move off of manual processes and start automating aspects of their supply chain. That doesn’t mean throwing a robot into the mix, rather, it requires the creation of a virtual replica of what’s going on as a way to predict outcomes that can be preemptively acted upon.

And the simulation software providers are responding.

For example, Dassault Systemes is known for its ability to create digital models that virtually simulate products, processes, and factory operations via its 3DExperience platform. It has traditionally been used to test out an airplane or automotive design, or experiment with layout and process flows in a manufacturing facility. With the company’s acquisition of Quintiq in 2014, those simulation capabilities were extended to supply chain planning and optimization.Dassault Systemes’ virtual supply chain allows businesses to simulate various scenarios or resource configurations against baseline operations, enabling managers to look for ways to optimize normal operations, or perform ‘stress tests’ against simulated disruptions.Dassault Systemes’ virtual supply chain allows businesses to simulate various scenarios or resource configurations against baseline operations, enabling managers to look for ways to optimize normal operations, or perform ‘stress tests’ against simulated disruptions.Dassault Systemes

“The supply chain deserves to have a digital twin of its own,” Wood says. “It’s a model of the capabilities and constraints of an organization that allows you to play with ‘what if’ [scenarios].

What if demand suddenly skyrockets? What if demand falls off a cliff? What if the supplier goes out of business? What if we open a new distribution center or change the supply chain layout? When the pandemic came in, I don’t think there were many dramatically new problems, but they were all exaggerated. And the magnitude of problems have forced [manufacturers] to get off the manual processes and to design a virtual twin model to prepare for future disruption and have the agility to react.”

Supply chain opportunity

The supply chain is quickly becoming a strategic priority. According to the IDC white paper “A Modern, Connected Cloud Environment Optimizes Supply Chain Collaboration—A North American Perspective,”  published in June of 2020, “the supply chain has traditionally been thought of as a support organization that works in the background to ensure that products are planned, made, and fulfilled to customers and consumers. That is changing. The supply chain is now perceived by manufacturers and retailers as a strategic tool for business performance and growth—and is moving from a cost center to an opportunity center.”

But it’s not so easy to reengineer that monolithic ERP system that has been coordinating supply chain schedules. Which is why, according to IDC, cloud and Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) applications that can be layered over the manufacturing and enterprise systems are rapidly becoming the default choice for the supply chain.

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