If you’re interested in developing your supply chain leadership skills, I recommend reading the excellent book
Flow: How the Best Supply Chains Thrive, by Rob Handfield and Tom Linton.
In a post-covid environment, where supply chain organization and decision making must be constantly
adapted to a changing environment, the first quality to develop in yourself and promote in your organization is
critical thinking.
Handfield and Linton define it as a combination of
curiosity, creativity, skepticism, analysis, and logic:
- Curiosity and a willingness to learn
- Creativity that involves seeing information from multiple perspectives
- Skepticism with a “trust but verify” approach
- An analytical mind to examine and evaluate the facts
- Logic to deduce well-founded conclusions
I would add to that a touch of indiscipline to dare to think and take positions outside the box, and a systemic perspective.
In the
VUCA context
we all operate in these days, it is, above all, a question of changing
behaviors, processes, and decision making, in order to constantly adapt
the company. The
Demand Driven Institute
insists on this point: It is more about changing the
“thoughtware” — the ways of thinking — than
installing software.
Software is a vector that feeds teams with visibility, as intuitive as possible, as
Intuiflow
strives to do. But what you do with this visibility to transform it
into action depends on your ability to develop the critical thinking of
your supply chain teams.
On the other hand, if you are driven by conformity to defined
processes, to the way things have been done for years — for
example, if you want to maintain strict adherence to a
MRP II
process... consider other career paths. If you are told, as I once was
myself, “we’re going to do it this way because that’s
how SAP works”, run away!
A few years ago, I led the supply chain team at a high-tech
company’s factory. We had organized a company-wide seminar in
which speakers drew up a behavioral profile of our teams through
several quizzes. The members of the Quality team were predominantly
“procedural compliance” and “discipline”
oriented. The members of my team were distinguished by
“creativity” , bordering on indiscipline…. The
casting was good!