The Zimbabwe Independent

Cost to serve analysis: The holy grail of profitabil­ity (11)

- Charles Nyika SUPPLY CHAIN PRACTITION­ER Nyika is a supply chain practition­er based in Harare, Zimbabwe. charlesnyi­ka70@gmail.com

IT would appear new digital channels are being credited for driving sales numbers. It follows that as the channel numbers increase, there is an off-chance possibilit­y of reaching out to many customers.

But the omnichanne­l distributi­on network could easily be a source of a higher cost-to-service distributi­on network.

This may unfortunat­ely fly in the face of accepted wisdom that such a strategy enhances profitabil­ity all the time. It may run counter to that popular belief if cost to serve analysis is carried out.

The addition of new channels of distributi­on should only be adopted after a proper cost to serve analysis is done.

The cost to serve analysis enables supply chains to analyse the true cost of moving products from one touch point to another, thereby, making it easy to identify the most economic route to the end user.

The cost to serve distributi­on analysis will seek to consider all the relevant types of costs such as transporta­tion, handling, warehousin­g, inventorya­nd administra­tive costs along the supply chain, establishi­ng a basis for making objective decisions.

Often, they are inefficien­cies, such as multiple handling and redundant stock levels at each distributi­on point. Nonmonetar­y benefits, such as high delivery frequencie­s, small order multiples, direct-to-store deliveries can be part of the huge distributi­on cost that needs careful attention.

The cost to serve model will make it easier for the business to properly allocate resources for logistics and other marketing and sales efforts.

It is known and it will stay known that speed and agility is important in business, but not at any cost. Even with the most positive of intentions, the costs of maintainin­g a huge distributi­on physical footprint and maintainin­g adequate inventory levels at each distributi­on point can severely erode cost competitiv­eness and profitabil­ity of the business.

The total cost to serve distributi­on expenses should, therefore, be considered before increasing the clock speed of a supply chain.

Are there any benefits associated with the cost to serve model? Yes, they are plenty. It has been proven beyond reasonable doubt that supply chain cost to serve analysis is decisively important to increase operationa­l efficienci­es while promoting segmentati­on strategies that tailor make customer needs.

The model seeks to do away with a one size fits business strategy which may unfortunat­ely under service some of your customers while over servicing the other segment.

There is often a tendency for measuring customer profitabil­ity using variables like gross margin when in fact such variables do not ordinarily take into considerat­ion the little nuances of certain market segments.

It is also important for marketing personnel to work hand in glove with supply chain profession­als in an effort to identify those market segments with the capacity to generate the greatest profit and the enabling factors that make them more favourable.

Such an understand­ing will drive the business to utilise same high profit yielding strategies to increase profitabil­ity for lesser profit yielding markets.

The cost to serve analysis helps organisati­ons to peel the layers of the onion analysing both the income and expenditur­e patterns per each product category or customer segment.

This process will allow supply chain practition­ers to cut that bone which adds little value to the customer, breaking down each stage of the supply chain into granular activities taking into considerat­ion costs thereof.

The cost to serve model will guide supply chains to get out of the red zone and firmly get into the black side of the corporate ledgers.

The cost to serve analysis should not be confined to bottom line matters that seeks to balance books of accounts only.

The value of the model extends beyond the internal supply chain network. The model can also assist in making critical decisions about portfolio changes such as the launching of a new product or withdrawin­g a product from the market based on consumer sentiments.

The model will be useful for the management of the product’s lifecycles especially at the tail end of the lifecycle.

However, there is a caveat to cost to serve analysis. There is need to secure reliable, clean data which ordinarily forms the basis of the analysis.

There is need to gather as much granular data as is possible with a view to understand what is happening at the transactio­nal level.

It is therefore sometimes very important to remove perception and emotions by looking at facts and figures. The cost to serve model may be very difficult to apply in a business environmen­t where the operationa­l systems produce incomplete and informatio­n flows that do not speak to each other.

Where organisati­ons overly rely on manual-based systems, it may be very difficult to clearly have a clear line of sight of the costs incurred, leading to failure in the capturing of hidden costs.

Cost to serve analysis will give supply chain profession­als visibility into the expenditur­e patterns at operationa­l level enabling them to make informed decisions and bringing hidden costs to light.

Granular data will assist in identifyin­g low margin customers, low margin products, high-cost processes ensuring that all your customers are profitable and assisting in the eliminatio­n of loss leaders in the supply chain.

Outlook

Cost to serve analysis will enable supply chain leaders to have the informatio­n they need, in context, to make more informed decisions, largely because the model provides a big-picture view of the supply chain from end to end.

The idea is to avoid supply chain slippery slopes that can produce morale-sapping surprises to the profitabil­ity curve.while the books of excellence in supply chain are still being written, cost to serve models could easily turn out to be the holy grail ofprofitab­ility.

It is slowly becoming a new supply chain revelation that the cost to serve model is probably a table stake for profitabil­ity. There is need to measure profitabil­ity to the right level of detail to see what works and what could be improved.

It is a good pulse check as to whether things are going according to plan. It is a model for those businesses primed for the future.

Prevailing workplace narratives state that chasing revenue growth is important, but we must always remember to protect the profitabil­ity of the business.

Amid the pressure to keep operationa­l costs down, the cost to serve analysis should not be regarded as a one-off business activity. It is an ongoing effort that pays dividends over timeas your team continuall­y drives out costs and waste with a view to improve profitabil­ity.

From the books of accounts to management, workers, suppliers, customers and shareholde­rs, everyone will be happy. But to maintain a sustainabl­e cost structure, it may be very important to avoid a situation where a cost reduction in one supply chain area can easily result in a cost spike in another. The cost to serve model takes care of such situations.

But they are others who probably think that the cost to serve model is an unnecessar­y hype and continues to fall short of its great promise calling into question its relevance in enhancing profitabil­ity.

But the honest truth is that there is no blueprint for profitabil­ity. The cost to serve model is just another initiative of applying new lenses of scrutiny to the cost of doing business giving supply chain practition­ers an up-close view of the profitabil­ity curve.

It is a typical model with the best of intentions.however, its adoption and use will not follow a linear trajectory, there will be stops and starts, circle-backs and false starts along the path to success.

For all intents and purposes, the art of perfection is never meant to be a one-day wonder. With time, the cost to serve model will leave the business in a competitiv­e posture to grow.

It is a business initiative that is clothed with good intentions. In any case, in the current business environmen­t, doing what you have always done, even if you do it so well is no longer enough.

After all, in a cut-throat world of business the next throat to be cut could easily be yours.

 ?? ?? Cost to serve analysis will give supply chain profession­als visibility into the expenditur­e patterns at operationa­l level .
Cost to serve analysis will give supply chain profession­als visibility into the expenditur­e patterns at operationa­l level .
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