5.2 Information and supply chain integration
We have already stressed that the new and emerging business models are based on inter-firm collaboration and integration. And in today's competitive marketplace, with increasing consumer power, it is competition between supply chains which matters. This understanding calls for an integrated approach towards management of critical supply chain functions and information is key to this integration. Information transparency is a prerequisite for optimum performance of the supply chain, because it enables firms to take decisions which are aimed at superior supply chain performance.
One major obstacle to integration is the way in which firms are traditionally managed and owned. Traditionally, firms are inward looking, with business processes aligned towards the corporate goal of profit maximisation or greater market share. Additionally, as firms grow in size, the organisational structure gets complicated with different functional silos, often in the forms of departments, developing within the firm. The usual consequence is a very fragmented organisational structure with very little inter-functional communication or synergy. The case of Barilla Spa in your text provides a good example of a firm with high growth rate and associated problems.
In your text
Case Barilla Spa (A), pp. 91-100. (Do not read the remaining parts at this stage.)
Supply chain integration requires firms to build bridges within the firm between different departments and across to other firms in the supply chain. Such bridge building is not particularly easy to achieve because it requires a fundamental shift in customary ways of thinking.
Pause and think about Barilla's problems. You will observe that there is considerable organisational resistance towards change. Many of the solutions which Barilla would eventually implement require the adoption of a changed business culture. Consider the questions raised at the end of Barilla Spa (A) on page 100. The answers require considerable brainstorming, and we can begin with the role of information in supply chain management to see how information can help answer some of these questions.
Many of the problems faced by Barilla can be attributed to a particular phenomenon, known as the 'bullwhip effect', which has been recognised as one of the main sources of inefficiencies associated with supply chains. This effect has received considerable attention from academics and industry experts in recent years.