Happy Holidays friends!!
The world we live in is more intertwined than it ever has been. Even at our individual level, the lines between personal life & professional life are blurring faster than we can cope with.
We all make & receive personal calls and check our e-mail during work hours. Similarly, many of us work longer than 40 hours each week, many times even on weekends or even while on vacation. If we truly subtract all non-work related activities from the hours that we are in the office, I honestly do not know what % of us "really work" even 40 hrs/week. One can make a valid case that talking about yesterday's game at the water fountain or about the last episode of "American Idol" or "Law & Order" or "
What I want to take about is that "as much as we want to (at least keep trying to) keep professional and personal life separate, there is a valid case for the need to merge these two in a different sense and for a different reason". See if you agree with me.
How many of us actually use (to the fullest) the best practices and experiences from our personal lives in our professional lives and vice versa? As an example, how many accountants who balance the company income and expenses down to the penny can claim to do the same when it comes to our personal income & expenses at home? How many of us who manage several people at work can claim to doing an equally good or better job at managing our personal relationships (or vice versa)?
Coming to our specific profession of "Supply Chain Management", how many of us do a great job of "managing the Supply chain" in our personal life? As you keep reading, you may realize that life is nothing but "Supply Chain Management" and that all the principles and best practices in Supply Chain Management can and should be applied to our personal lives as well.
Think of our needs, wants, desires, dreams as "Demand" and our desire to make them reality as "Supply".
Now, here are the rest of the pieces of the supply chain: "Corporate Supply Chain Networks" consist of vendors / contract manufacturers, corporate plants, DCs, corporate customers, etc. "Personal Supply Chain Networks" consist of family / friends, colleagues, subordinates, bosses, teachers, associations that we are part of, our formal & informal networks etc.
"Corporate Resources" that help with Supply Chain Management consist of machinery, work hours and people (our own as well as those of vendors and contract manufacturers). In personal life, these resources are our own time at work, skill set, interpersonal skills, experience, education, others we help or take assistance from, etc.
You get the idea. Now, you can apply these same concepts to other aspects of "Supply Chain management" - forecasting, demand - supply matching, detailed planning & scheduling, collaboration, alerts & event management, constrained planning, Supplier Relationship Management, Customer Relationship Management, network design, Network rationalization, cost minimization, profit maximization, etc. and find out their "equivalents" in your personal lives.
So then, how do we apply the basic principles and best practices of Supply Chain Management to our personal lives? That will be the topic for the next article.
In the mean time, I would like to get your comments on the above similarities and your suggestions for how to apply the basic principles and best practices of Supply Chain Management to our personal lives.
I would like to invite you to even write "guest articles" on this blog. There are experts out there who can explain (better than I can) if and how any crisis around the world (e.g. the current global financial crisis) is the result of failure to manage the supply chain (global financial supply chain, in case of the above example) and how some of the basic principles and best practices of supply chain management have not been implemented efficiently in the past and the way forward to applying and evolving the basic principles and best practices of supply chain management.
Thanks for your time. Hope for the best and prepare for the worst in 2009!!
2 comments:
Dr. Bhide - quite an insightful and interesting read on drawing parallels between two worlds. Here are some sprinkles of quick thoughts on your blog.
Although, we may be allured to merge the worlds, it is indeed much intertwined and could at times be lot more sophisticated than matching supply and demand. Demands such as 'a rebellious teenager's sentiments towards parents', 'peace of mind for a restless soul', involves unquantifiable complex supply of emotions such as love, apathy, fear, anxiety etc.
These challenges were examined and re-examined over time by the sage. Some have successfully simplified the supply chain of life through their finite wisdom and interpretations. However, I don't believe there is one package that addresses all the different complex variables in our personal lives. Each one's attempt has their flavors and the best of their efforts in some cases have not come to fruition.
Subscribing to these notions does not in anyway mean that the 'resilience' of human nature cannot surmount the challenges of our own supply chain of life. We must develop and implement our own individualized customized supply network solutions comprising of strong covalent bonds of tolerance, love, forgiveness, patience, and similar such virtues. The heuristic involving these factors could be as simple or as complex as one wants to make it.
'Doubt so you be' - life is what one wants it to be; complex supply chain or just simple passage of time. Rejoice every moment, laugh, love and untangle all the ‘secrets’ within you.
Very well said indeed. No amount of philosophizing (did I just create a new verb?), can make the finer things in life be quantifiable.
I was not implying that life is all about "quantifiable" demand - supply planning but can & should indeed include non-quantifiable / non-objective (qualifiable / subjective) aspects also. Even non-quantifiable desires, dreams & wishes are still "demand" so to speak and our determination, motivation & efforts to make these dreams come true is indeed the desire to make the "supply" happen.
Indeed, even the non-quantifiable parameters affect the non-personal (corporate) supply chains where there are multitudes of options and answers to explore. This is precisely why supply chain solutions cannot be counted on giving ALL the right answers. Hence the need for exception based management, ALERTS etc., where manual intervention is required that is not necessarily based only on 1 logic to be applied consistently to all scenarios. If that were the case, even that 1 logic could be automated.
Demand supply planning in corporate life and personal life is indeed like deflating a balloon - if you press it too much on one side (like too many restrictions on a teenager), it will likley pop-out on another side (rebellion of a teenager). Hence the need for balance that is quite subjective - just like the balance between high Customer Fill Rates and high Inventory.
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