{"id":3643,"date":"2022-02-03T07:23:43","date_gmt":"2022-02-03T07:23:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/news.sap.com\/india\/?p=3643"},"modified":"2024-08-20T17:26:53","modified_gmt":"2024-08-20T17:26:53","slug":"address-continuous-disruption","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/news.sap.com\/india\/2022\/02\/address-continuous-disruption\/","title":{"rendered":"How A Synchronized Supply Chain Addresses Continuous Disruption?"},"content":{"rendered":"
COVID-19 has brought into stark relief a reality that perpetually exists: We live in a time of persistent disruptions. Systems of all kinds \u2013 political, environmental, economic \u2013 are under strain. Change is constant, and it\u2019s increasingly difficult to predict anything<\/em> even a few weeks out.<\/p>\n
For supply chain planners, this situation puts a premium on agility. Not that long-term planning is a thing of the past. It remains foundational \u2013 but in addition to it, organizations need more flexible planning processes to anticipate and react faster as circumstances change.<\/p>\n
Supply chain planning is the practice of sensing demand in the market from short to long term and connecting it to the resources required to service that demand profitably.<\/p>\n
Organizations need the ability to plan across long-term, mid-term, and short-term time horizons \u2013 all of which form a connected continuum that synchronizes vertically through the supply chain, down to the machine, truck, or individual labor resource.<\/p>\n