C.H. Robinson, SAS Team for Dynamic Business Planning
January 14, 2021
C.H.
Robinson and SAS partnered to rewrite the way global supply chains work as they
become increasingly more complex. Until now, supply chain demand planning and
shipping execution often worked in autonomous siloes without connection, digital
integration, or real-time visibility. This partnership will solve that problem
by creating a first-of-its-kind offering: an end-to-end supply chain solution
that integrates inventory and demand signal data with real-time transportation
data. Steering a supply chain from a centralized operation like this will allow
companies more fluid adjustments in scheduling, carriers, and responses to
changing consumer demand while inventory is still moving on the ground.
Retail and CPG (consumer packaged goods) companies in North America will benefit
first from this integration, although it is designed to eventually fill the gap
between business and logistical planning across all industries.
“The C.H. Robinson and SAS collaboration uses data and analytics to solve a
gargantuan supply chain problem: agility,” said Brian Kilcourse, retail and CPG
analyst at RSR Group. “As 2020’s shortages illustrated, COVID pushed retailers
and consumer goods companies over the supply chain cliff. The C.H. Robinson-SAS
partnership combines data from retailers and consumer goods companies with
logistics and transportation data to build faster, more resilient,
cost-effective shipping methods that honor traditional models while clearing a
path for needed innovation.”
According to SAS’ Richard Widdowson, Vice President of Global Retail & CPG
Solutions, the future winners in transforming retail supply chains will be those
who change their mindset from long-term planning to agile planning by
effectively leveraging data to make adjustments in real time. “Powered by SAS
and mobilized by C.H. Robinson, this partnership helps companies see their
supply chains in a new light,” Widdowson said. “It will help make opportunities
and challenges visible as they happen so our customers can accomplish more –
even during a disruption of pandemic proportions.”
Within an integrated data loop, SAS triggers a demand plan which feeds into C.H.
Robinson’s dynamic transportation procurement tool. In turn, that connects into
the world’s largest supply chain management platform, Navisphere, to provide
real time visibility of inventory, which then links back and informs SAS’
Intelligent Planning suite. This means a retailer or maker of packaged goods,
for example, can connect its corporate demand plans to products and freight on
the move. They then can better react to real-time changes in demand, such as
surge in consumer interest, and real-time changes in transportation factors,
such as inclement weather.
“By
establishing this unprecedented information loop, we are transforming the
procurement process and giving companies the information advantage and
flexibility needed to better compete in today’s rapidly evolving transportation
marketplace,” said C.H. Robinson’s chief commercial officer Chris O’Brien.
“Rather than relying solely on an annual transportation contract event which
frequently becomes out of sync with real-world variables, we can build a more
dynamic procurement plan that can flex based on real-time changes in product
demand and the transportation market. More than ever, supply chain agility,
based on real-time data, can be a competitive advantage for companies.”
“Our work with C.H. Robinson and others at the MIT FreightLab has shown that the
freight transportation industry needs innovation in procurement and
demand-planning to reduce cost, minimize risk, and increase the level of service
for shippers,” said Chris Caplice, Executive Director of the MIT Center for
Transportation & Logistics (CTL) and FreightLab. “This partnership helps move
the industry forward in the right direction of a more responsive and agile
transportation procurement solution.” |