Supply Chain and Procurement Leaders Anticipate Seismic Post-Pandemic Strategy Shifts as Executives Brace for Peak of Impact

New report from Procurious reveals confidence levels remain high, despite widespread disruption

Released by Procurious, the world’s leading online business network for supply chain and procurement leaders, the How Now? Supply Chain Confidence Index reveals that nearly all (97%) of the 600+ professionals surveyed experienced a supply chain disruption related to COVID-19. In response, the majority (73%) of organizations are now planning major shifts in supply chain and procurement strategy post-pandemic, including supply base expansion (38%), reductions in supply chain globalization (34%) and increases to inventory levels (21%).

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“We expect to see seismic strategy changes in the months ahead that fundamentally alter the makeup of global supply chains,” @procurious_ CEO @taniaseary on post-pandemic plans for #procurement and #supply chain teams.

When asked where COVID-19 had the biggest single impact on their supply chains:

  • 31%: Decreased demand for products and services
  • 26%: Lack of available supply due to production downtime and shutdowns
  • 21%: Logistics and transportation slowdowns and delays

“We expect to see seismic strategy changes in the months ahead that fundamentally alter the makeup of global supply chains,” said Tania Seary, founding chairman and CEO of Procurious. “For decades, low-cost country sourcing and offshoring was the foundation of global supply chains. The pandemic has many executives considering reducing globalization—and for good reason. But these changes won’t come easy.”

Reflecting on lessons learned, 39% of those surveyed said they were blinded by a lack of supplier and geographic risk and 29% said they didn’t understand the upstream supply chains of their suppliers. Fifty-nine percent of respondents believe the Fortune 500 should reduce globalization by localizing supply chains and bringing manufacturing back home.

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