Tag Archives: supplier evaluation

Supplier Risk Management

Normally, when finding topics for this blog, it is I who have to seek out and find the established or ongoing research that I want to promote. Occasionally, ongoing research finds me and asks for help in spreading the word, and most of the time I am more than happy to oblige. This time it is Peter Trkman and Kevin McCormack, whose research on supply chain turbulence was featured on this blog some 6 months ago. Together with Marcos Paulo Valadares de Oliveira they are currently researching how risk management practices can add value to the organization, what the modifying effects of turbulence are, and what risk management orientation companies subscribe to. For this they are conducting a survey, and asked for my help in increasing the number of respondents by advertising their survey on my blog.

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Supplier selection based on supplier risk

It’s amazing how supply chain risk papers appear in the unlikeliest of places, and today I discovered a paper from Iran by Ali Shemshadi, Mehran Toreihi, Hossein Shirazi, Mohammad Jafar Tarokh. It bears the title Supplier selection based on supplier risk: An ANP and fuzzy TOPSIS approach and is published in the Journal of Mathematics and Computer Science, not the obvious place where one would go to looking for a paper on supply chain risk. It is a highly quantitative paper, yet it seems to be very applicable in practice. The paper proposes a hybrid MCDM method based on  ANP and Fuzzy TOPSIS to enhance previous solutions for the problem of selecting the best supplier from a set of potential alternatives based on a set of risk factors. That is an approach I haven’t seen before.

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Hiperos – the Integrated View of Supplier Risk

Supply chains have gone global. No longer are they a point-to-chain of goods flowing from a source to a consumer, but a global network of interlinked businesses, processes and services. Supply chain risks have gone global, too, and one tiny incident somewhere in this vast network may result in devastating effects that can ripple across the entire supply chain. No wonder then that supply chain risk has become a major selling point for consultants  who are making a living from selling solutions that are “guaranteed” to capture  and manage the exact and full risk that a company is facing. We academics often frown at these consultants and their glossy whitepapers, but truth is that some of them are highly valuable and well-researched, and excellent food for thought. Take this whitepaper for instance, An Integrated View of Supplier Risk by a company called Hiperos. Here, supplier risk management is focused on four areas: the supplier’s viability, performance, compliance and corporate social performance. That is a perspective very much in line with my own ideas of holistic risk management.

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Diamonds are forever – suppliers not

Today I am taking a closer look at how buyer-supplier relationships evolve over time. This is the buyer-supplier relationship life cycle, where supply chains are dynamic and  where supply chain partners are constantly changing: New suppliers are added, others are  contractually terminated, cease to exist or become obsolete. Needless to say, nurturing and honing these relationships also improves supply chain performance. However, as Stephan Wagner points out in his recently published article on Supplier development and the relationship life-cycle, supplier development and supplier performance are dependent on the current stage or phase in the relationship life cycle.

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Supply Chain Risk Management in six steps

Supply management is not just about acquiring goods and services at the best possible price. It’s also about identifying possible disruptions to the supply chain and taking steps to mitigate them. So said James Kiser and George Cantrell in their 2006 article Six Steps to Managing Risk, where they discussed six steps that a company can take to build a plan for dealing with potential supply disruptions. While the article may be lacking in academic depth, it makes up for it in its hands-on managerial approach.

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How to secure your supply chain – 3/7

Today’s post is part three of my continuing journey through the Swedish handbook titled “Säkra företagets flöden” or”Secure the company’s flows”, as I have translated it. This part takes a look at a checklist or questionnaire that can be used in assessing disruptions risks in your suppliers or sub-contractors. The following checklist is not meant to be exhaustive, but serves as a gateway or teaser towards asking more in-depth questions, specifically suited towards your own company in the issues you yourself are facing.

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