Manufacturing Is Becoming More Complex. Your Supply Chain Shouldn’t Be

An engineering supply chain is only as strong as the connections between the companies involved.

That might sound obvious, yet many manufacturing projects become more difficult not because of the component being produced, but because every stage of production is handled by a different supplier. One company cuts the material, another machines it, another fabricates it, while finishing, coating and inspection take place elsewhere.

Each supplier may do an excellent job but the real challenge lies in everything that happens between them.

Every handover introduces another opportunity for delays, miscommunication or quality issues. Drawings are transferred, components are packaged and transported, production schedules are coordinated and specifications are interpreted by another team. None of these activities adds value to the finished component, but all consume time and introduce risk.

As manufacturing projects become more sophisticated, many organisations are beginning to question whether managing an increasingly fragmented supply chain still makes commercial sense.