Cycle challenge double-header raises £230,000 for Transaid

A team of 40 riders drawn from the transport and logistics industry have completed a 505km cycle challenge across southern Malawi in soaring temperatures, pedalling through the spectacular Liwonde National Park to raise more than £205,000 towards Transaid’s projects in sub-Saharan Africa.

The remarkable sum of money adds to the £25,000 raised by the 16 riders who took on Hadrian’s Cycleway over two days in September. Combined, the non-restricted funds will be used by Transaid to focus on improving road safety and increasing access to healthcare in rural communities.

Florence Bearman, Head of Fundraising at Transaid, says: “It was incredible to complete the challenges with so many friends from across the sector who are committed to supporting Transaid’s life-saving work. To everyone who jumped in the saddle or sponsored a friend, family member or colleague, we are hugely grateful.”

Commenting on her experience in Malawi, she adds: “The anticipation ahead of Malawi was huge; for many of us it had been three years since we signed up for the original 2020 dates, and we were all eager to reach the tranquil shores of Lake Malawi. The experience didn’t disappoint – not even the longest 135km section on day three when temperatures reached 38 degrees Celsius, nor the steep climb up the Zomba Plateau on day four, dampened anyone’s enthusiasm!”

Tom Southall, Policy Director at the Cold Chain Federation, was one of the riders in Malawi and explains: “This was an incredible journey with an amazing group of people, and humbling too to experience the warmth and friendliness of the Malawians.

“The value of Transaid’s work is incalculable in these communities, building road safety awareness as well as programmes to support better standards of emergency transportation. I can’t overstate how much of an incredible experience this was and would recommend getting involved with future Transaid events and challenges!”

Cycle Malawi 2022 was backed by Gold-sponsor UKWA, and saw the riders tackle the full route over five days in the saddle. It marked a return to the country which hosted Transaid’s first ever cycle challenge in 2006.

Over the years Transaid has worked on both access to health care and driver training programmes in Malawi, the most recent of which involved bicycle ambulances, which have long proven to be a highly effective lifesaving mode of transport in rural Africa.

The riders who took part in Cycle Malawi represented 24 firms from across the industry, including ABE Ledbury, BigChange, Burton’s Biscuit Company, CAM Systems, Capex Commercial Partners, Cold Chain Federation, Clubbly, Cross Acre, Dalessi International Transport, EV Cargo, FloPlast, GRS Building Products, GXO Logistics, Hankook, Hoyer Petrolog, Innovate 360, LDH La Doria, MAN Truck & Bus, Marks & Spencer, Microlise, PF Whitehead Logistics, Problems Solved, Scala and TRS Tyres.

Last month’s Hadrian’s Cycleway saw riders taking part from companies including Alpine Travel, Backhouse Jones, Blue Cube, Boughey Distribution, Dawson Group plc, EORI (UK), Idris Logistics and Sworder Belcher Holt.

Cycle challenge double-header raises £230,000 for Transaid

A team of 40 riders drawn from the transport and logistics industry have completed a 505km cycle challenge across southern Malawi in soaring temperatures, pedalling through the spectacular Liwonde National Park to raise more than £205,000 towards Transaid’s projects in sub-Saharan Africa.

The remarkable sum of money adds to the £25,000 raised by the 16 riders who took on Hadrian’s Cycleway over two days in September. Combined, the non-restricted funds will be used by Transaid to focus on improving road safety and increasing access to healthcare in rural communities.

Florence Bearman, Head of Fundraising at Transaid, says: “It was incredible to complete the challenges with so many friends from across the sector who are committed to supporting Transaid’s life-saving work. To everyone who jumped in the saddle or sponsored a friend, family member or colleague, we are hugely grateful.”

Commenting on her experience in Malawi, she adds: “The anticipation ahead of Malawi was huge; for many of us it had been three years since we signed up for the original 2020 dates, and we were all eager to reach the tranquil shores of Lake Malawi. The experience didn’t disappoint – not even the longest 135km section on day three when temperatures reached 38 degrees Celsius, nor the steep climb up the Zomba Plateau on day four, dampened anyone’s enthusiasm!”

Tom Southall, Policy Director at the Cold Chain Federation, was one of the riders in Malawi and explains: “This was an incredible journey with an amazing group of people, and humbling too to experience the warmth and friendliness of the Malawians.

“The value of Transaid’s work is incalculable in these communities, building road safety awareness as well as programmes to support better standards of emergency transportation. I can’t overstate how much of an incredible experience this was and would recommend getting involved with future Transaid events and challenges!”

Cycle Malawi 2022 was backed by Gold-sponsor UKWA, and saw the riders tackle the full route over five days in the saddle. It marked a return to the country which hosted Transaid’s first ever cycle challenge in 2006.

Over the years Transaid has worked on both access to health care and driver training programmes in Malawi, the most recent of which involved bicycle ambulances, which have long proven to be a highly effective lifesaving mode of transport in rural Africa.

The riders who took part in Cycle Malawi represented 24 firms from across the industry, including ABE Ledbury, BigChange, Burton’s Biscuit Company, CAM Systems, Capex Commercial Partners, Cold Chain Federation, Clubbly, Cross Acre, Dalessi International Transport, EV Cargo, FloPlast, GRS Building Products, GXO Logistics, Hankook, Hoyer Petrolog, Innovate 360, LDH La Doria, MAN Truck & Bus, Marks & Spencer, Microlise, PF Whitehead Logistics, Problems Solved, Scala and TRS Tyres.

Last month’s Hadrian’s Cycleway saw riders taking part from companies including Alpine Travel, Backhouse Jones, Blue Cube, Boughey Distribution, Dawson Group plc, EORI (UK), Idris Logistics and Sworder Belcher Holt.

Latest global shipping crisis report released

Descartes Systems Group, a global leader in uniting logistics-intensive businesses in commerce, has released its October report on the ongoing global shipping crisis and analysis for logistics and supply chain professionals. The report shows that a slowing economy, retailers reducing purchases, inflation and high fuel costs are finally making an impact on US container imports. The decrease in September import volumes did not, however, have a measurable impact on port delays, especially for East and Gulf Coast ports, which continues to point to congested and challenging global supply chain performance for the rest of 2022.

Container imports into the US in September retreated 11.0% versus September 2021 to 2,215,731 TEUs, though volume was still up 9% from pre-pandemic September 2019. September 2022 volume was also down significantly versus August 2022 with a 12.4% decline (see image). China was a significant contributor to the decline as Chinese imports in September were down 18.3% to 820,329 TEUs compared to August 2022 and down 22.7% versus September 2021.

“This is the first month that US container import volumes are seeing the effects of market headwinds, but we haven’t yet seen a similar reduction in port waiting times, which would help improve global supply chain performance,” said Chris Jones, EVP Industry & Services at Descartes. “The decline in Chinese imports was the greatest driver of the overall decrease in US imports and was felt the most on West Coast ports as most East and Gulf Ports continued operating at higher overall volumes.”

Note: Descartes’ definition of port delay is the difference as measured in days between the Estimated Arrival Date, which is initially declared on the bill of lading, and the date when Descartes receives the CBP-processed bill of lading.

similar news

Tech to Navigate the Aftermath of Supply Chain Crisis

 

 

 

Latest global shipping crisis report released

Descartes Systems Group, a global leader in uniting logistics-intensive businesses in commerce, has released its October report on the ongoing global shipping crisis and analysis for logistics and supply chain professionals. The report shows that a slowing economy, retailers reducing purchases, inflation and high fuel costs are finally making an impact on US container imports. The decrease in September import volumes did not, however, have a measurable impact on port delays, especially for East and Gulf Coast ports, which continues to point to congested and challenging global supply chain performance for the rest of 2022.

Container imports into the US in September retreated 11.0% versus September 2021 to 2,215,731 TEUs, though volume was still up 9% from pre-pandemic September 2019. September 2022 volume was also down significantly versus August 2022 with a 12.4% decline (see image). China was a significant contributor to the decline as Chinese imports in September were down 18.3% to 820,329 TEUs compared to August 2022 and down 22.7% versus September 2021.

“This is the first month that US container import volumes are seeing the effects of market headwinds, but we haven’t yet seen a similar reduction in port waiting times, which would help improve global supply chain performance,” said Chris Jones, EVP Industry & Services at Descartes. “The decline in Chinese imports was the greatest driver of the overall decrease in US imports and was felt the most on West Coast ports as most East and Gulf Ports continued operating at higher overall volumes.”

Note: Descartes’ definition of port delay is the difference as measured in days between the Estimated Arrival Date, which is initially declared on the bill of lading, and the date when Descartes receives the CBP-processed bill of lading.

similar news

Tech to Navigate the Aftermath of Supply Chain Crisis

 

 

 

BlockMaster takes centre stage at BAUMA

B&B Attachments and partner KAUP are exhibiting together at the 33rd edition of the world’s leading construction trade fair BAUMA 2022. The globally renown exhibition will be held at the Messe München convention centre from the 24th – 30th October.

The show has yet again sold out, booking 200,000 sq m of indoor space and 400,000 sq m outdoor to more than 3,000 exhibitors from 60 countries.

The two material handling specialists will be on stand B5 304 exhibiting a range of attachments designed specially to improve material handing in the construction industry.

KAUP and B&B Attachments have worked together in attachment development since 1980. Together, their shared knowledge and expertise continue to advance the material handling industry. Bauma is the perfect platform for both industry giants to show their latest innovations. This includes the K320, which is part of B&B’s BlockMaster range (pictured), made uniquely for specialist applications within the construction industry. The range is designed to assist with the complex task of safely moving bricks, blocks and tiles.

B&B Attachments will also exhibit its Beam Grab. This attachment has been manufactured by B&B to assist in the unloading process of pre-cast concrete floor beams. Designed to fit crane delivery vehicles, the beam grab can lift varying sized beams and profiles and handle up to six beams in one single lift.

KAUP will be exhibiting its T413 heavy duty bale clamp. This attachment can be used to handle waste bales in the recycling industry. It is an example of how KAUP attachments can easily be fitted to many different types and styles of vehicles throughout many different industry sectors. The variety and range of attachments ensure that the correct handling solution can be offered for many different applications.

“We are delighted to be exhibiting at this year’s Bauma. The exhibition is the construction industry’s largest event, and its return has created quite a buzz. The team are looking forward to meeting with customers and showing our products to a global audience,” comments Mike Barton, Managing Director at B&B Attachments.

BlockMaster takes centre stage at BAUMA

B&B Attachments and partner KAUP are exhibiting together at the 33rd edition of the world’s leading construction trade fair BAUMA 2022. The globally renown exhibition will be held at the Messe München convention centre from the 24th – 30th October.

The show has yet again sold out, booking 200,000 sq m of indoor space and 400,000 sq m outdoor to more than 3,000 exhibitors from 60 countries.

The two material handling specialists will be on stand B5 304 exhibiting a range of attachments designed specially to improve material handing in the construction industry.

KAUP and B&B Attachments have worked together in attachment development since 1980. Together, their shared knowledge and expertise continue to advance the material handling industry. Bauma is the perfect platform for both industry giants to show their latest innovations. This includes the K320, which is part of B&B’s BlockMaster range (pictured), made uniquely for specialist applications within the construction industry. The range is designed to assist with the complex task of safely moving bricks, blocks and tiles.

B&B Attachments will also exhibit its Beam Grab. This attachment has been manufactured by B&B to assist in the unloading process of pre-cast concrete floor beams. Designed to fit crane delivery vehicles, the beam grab can lift varying sized beams and profiles and handle up to six beams in one single lift.

KAUP will be exhibiting its T413 heavy duty bale clamp. This attachment can be used to handle waste bales in the recycling industry. It is an example of how KAUP attachments can easily be fitted to many different types and styles of vehicles throughout many different industry sectors. The variety and range of attachments ensure that the correct handling solution can be offered for many different applications.

“We are delighted to be exhibiting at this year’s Bauma. The exhibition is the construction industry’s largest event, and its return has created quite a buzz. The team are looking forward to meeting with customers and showing our products to a global audience,” comments Mike Barton, Managing Director at B&B Attachments.

Operational resilience through supply chain and business process mapping

Over the last two years, ongoing disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic to supply chain disruptions caused by the Suez Canal blockage to ransomware attacks on critical infrastructure (as seen in the Colonial Pipeline attack) have disrupted the daily operations of businesses across the globe. It became apparent that it was no longer a case of “if” the next disruption would occur but rather “when.” As a result, the need for robust operational resilience has never been more critical, writes Bogdana Sardak, Senior Director of Risk & Resiliency, Fusion Risk Management.

Most recently, the geopolitical crisis in Ukraine demonstrates the need for agile, resilient businesses that can make data-driven decisions. The situation in Ukraine displays the multilateral effects of disruption: we have already seen the crisis affect personnel safety, the economy, supply chains, and vendors. As an ongoing crisis, the impact is still evolving, and businesses need to assess the current and potential future effects on their organisation.

Operational resilience is a crucial component of ensuring your business is prepared to respond to disruptions in an instance. True operational resilience gives organisations the tools to understand operational data points and locations, empowering critical decisions at a moment’s notice. This enables businesses to pivot and adapt as needed to minimise or eliminate the effects of disruption on business as usual.

Mapping Business Processes

Fully understanding how your business operates is the first step to ensuring resilience. Mapping business processes allows complete visibility into the inputs, outputs, and dependencies within your organisation. Business processes do not exist in silos; they often rely on people, technology, facilities, third parties, and other supporting resources. Fully understanding, mapping, and compiling data on these intertwined dependencies can help your organisation better comprehend the potential impact of events. Further, it can help make the required decisions to minimise impact and continue business as usual in times of disruption or change. But where should you begin?

Identifying your end goal from the start is vital. You must understand what you want to achieve by mapping business processes – you do not want to simply go through the motions and check a box. Some may wish to map business processes to maximise efficiency, to ensure adequate resource distribution, or as a proactive step for resilience. During the operational resilience journey, mapping allows you to identify gaps and vulnerabilities in your organisation, applications, or vendors which support critical products or services of your organisation. Once you have identified the weak links within your organisation, you can mitigate identified risks to strengthen your business, services, and products.

Once you identify why you want to map business processes, begin gathering data and information to construct your approach roadmap. Mid-size and larger enterprise organisations likely have in-house business continuity or resilience teams tasked with performing a business impact analysis (BIA); a process excellence team; or an IT business partner group which might have solid data to leverage for process identification. Smaller organisations may have part-time personnel who are tasked with performing process mapping. Another good resource to use to start the resilience journey is to ask for an org chart from HR and start looking at team structure as well as performing interviews with functional leaders.

It is also critical to look at the big picture. Before speaking to different business functions and departments, it is helpful to identify your organisational services and products that are being delivered to the customer. In a smaller organisation, this can be a single product. In larger organisations like a bank, there are numerous services and products, including the process of cash withdrawals, wealth management, lending, payments, and more. The size of your business does not matter. Identifying the products and services that you deliver to customers allows you to be able to map the end products first and then work your way down through the organisation to know how each independent process plays a role in delivering the end products or services to customers.

You can start from the top or bottom of your organisation to begin the mapping process. The top-bottom approach would start at C-level executives whereas the bottom-up approach may begin at individual departments/teams. Throughout each level of your business, you will map business processes to the service or product it contributes to. Once you start to map processes, you will also want to map dependencies such as applications. When engaging with teams, ask them what applications or programs are needed to perform their tasks, what teams they interact with, and if there are any cross-organisational dependencies required to fulfil their inputs and outputs. This will enable the mapping of dependencies across vendors, sites, and people that support a specific process and, therefore, support the product or service to customers. Visualising in this manner allows you to see what would occur if a business process broke or an application went down. You can see the escalating effect on the process and how it plays into service delivery to customers.

Mapping business processes in this organised manner can enable swift action when long- or short-term disruptions hit an organisation. A thorough understanding of how your business processes work gives you the tools to put the pieces back together in the event of a disruption. While business process mapping starts within your organisation, it extends to external dependencies, including vendors, supply chain, applications, and physical sites that support your daily business functions.

Supply Chain Mapping

Once you have mapped out your business processes, you can determine exactly which processes are vital to your ability to deliver on your customer promise. You can also identify what vendor dependencies exist for these critical processes to function. These vendor dependencies are the first stage of mapping your supply chain.

In today’s highly globalised society, no organisation exists in a vacuum – we rely on vendors and providers to preform business processes. It does not need to take a disruption directly affecting your organisation for your business to feel the impact. Disruptions that affect your vendors can cause a ripple effect down the supply chain and indirectly impact your business, hindering the applications that your internal teams require to fulfil their needed business function.

When mapping business processes, it is essential to determine the criticality level of each vendor to its associated business process. From there, look to your internal organisation and assess the current maturity level of your supply chain and vendor management program. If you have already determined your critical third-party vendors, see if your organisation has mapped out its fourth- and fifth-party suppliers. While your business may not engage with these suppliers regularly, any disruption that affects the vendors can have an indirect negative effect on your ability to deliver products and services to customers. Mapping fourth- or fifth-party suppliers may be slightly more complicated than mapping your third-party vendors, so be sure to engage with your third-party vendors and ask questions. This will enable your organisation to visualise gaps and vulnerabilities throughout your third-party vendors’ supply chains.

During the mapping process, there are several key points to look out for. Ask yourself: “Do many of our third parties rely heavily on one fourth-party vendor?” and “Do all of our third parties exist in the same geographic location?” These questions can allow you to select third parties that enable risk diversification. If many of your third parties rely on the same fourth-party vendor, a disruption that affects that singular vendor can halt services to your third-party vendor, thus inhibiting your business’s ability to perform critical processes. Diversifying your vendor risk, even if that means using numerous providers, can mitigate the effects of a single pain point that causes the dominos to topple and affect your business.

While it is good to diversify your vendors to reduce risk, you must also know how to diversify effectively. Location can play a significant role in diversification. Some localities may be more susceptible to natural disasters or political volatility, whereas (in less extreme circumstances) a wide blackout or internet outage can halt services in a specific locality for some time. It is in your best interest to diversify vendors across wide geographic regions and establish the same expectations for your fourth- and fifth-party vendors. This can ensure that a predictable or unpredictable disruption will not cause an outage to many of your critical vendors, thus inhibiting your ability to deliver services.

No matter how diversified or prepared your third-party supply chain is to handle disruptions, unpredictable situations can happen at a moment’s notice, which is why it is critical to have recovery strategies and business continuity plans for when business as usual halts. This can come as having an additional provider on retainer or a list of providers who can quickly adapt to meet your business needs if your primary supplier experiences an outage.

Achieving Resilience

True resilience includes having the data on hand to respond in any situation. No matter what industry or market you operate within, having your business processes and supply chain data points mapped out prepares your business to respond seamlessly. Gathering the data points and maps proactively before disruption hits your organisation allows for planning and preapproval of the necessary precautions if the worst-case scenario occurs.

Understanding business processes and supply chain maps is the first step to achieving resilience. Once you have identified critical processes and critical vendors, you must proactively plan for when business as usual comes to a halt. Critical processes require people, applications, sites, and suppliers that enable an organisation to fulfil its brand promise to customers under normal conditions. Unfortunately, normal conditions are not guaranteed, but achieving resilience can eliminate a single point of failure for your business.

Beyond the data, you must also aim to instil a culture of resilience within your organisation. Building a culture of resilience means that everyone understands their role within the organisation and can prioritise resilient decisions in their daily business operations. When working with your coworkers throughout the process of mapping business processes and supply chains, it is an excellent time to begin engaging people across departments and teams on the journey toward resilience.

As you engage with people throughout the process, ask questions and help them understand the more significant role they play in the brand’s ability to deliver products and services. Within your business, people may not be aware of precisely what risks they have control over; therefore, it is critical to explain risk at all levels of the organisation (from the C-suite down to the associates) using the maps you created. This can allow people to see how disruptions caused within their business processes can cascade down and cause an effect in other areas of the business, ultimately creating a business-wide impact. Therefore, data collection is integral to being both a resilience leader, advisor, and educator within your business to ensure resilient operations.

Looking Ahead: Prepare to Pivot and Adapt

Over the last two years, we have experienced wide-ranging crises that have affected almost every organisation in some way. We should recognise that disruptions are here to stay, and it’s no longer a question of “if” another crisis will occur but rather a matter of “when.” Never has it been more critical for a business to be able to pivot and adapt to any disruption.

Mapping business processes and your supply chain as well as educating employees offers your organisation the ability to achieve resilience. When a disruption does occur, there is no need to panic because you took the time to proactively gather data points and plan for future disruption. Creating a culture of resilience can minimise the impact of disruption on your business and give your employees the knowledge they need to make informed decisions in the face of crisis.

As we continue to realise, crises evolve by the minute. The landscape an organisation exists in today may change by tomorrow. Times of crisis elevate the need for operational resilience as businesses must flex and adapt to new developments. Over the last two years, ongoing disruptions have shown that if you have not yet begun your journey toward operational resilience, the best time to start is now. With the adequate and accurate data and plans in hand from business process mapping, supply chain mapping, and proactive programs, businesses can focus on the health and safety of their employees.

Operational resilience through supply chain and business process mapping

Over the last two years, ongoing disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic to supply chain disruptions caused by the Suez Canal blockage to ransomware attacks on critical infrastructure (as seen in the Colonial Pipeline attack) have disrupted the daily operations of businesses across the globe. It became apparent that it was no longer a case of “if” the next disruption would occur but rather “when.” As a result, the need for robust operational resilience has never been more critical, writes Bogdana Sardak, Senior Director of Risk & Resiliency, Fusion Risk Management.

Most recently, the geopolitical crisis in Ukraine demonstrates the need for agile, resilient businesses that can make data-driven decisions. The situation in Ukraine displays the multilateral effects of disruption: we have already seen the crisis affect personnel safety, the economy, supply chains, and vendors. As an ongoing crisis, the impact is still evolving, and businesses need to assess the current and potential future effects on their organisation.

Operational resilience is a crucial component of ensuring your business is prepared to respond to disruptions in an instance. True operational resilience gives organisations the tools to understand operational data points and locations, empowering critical decisions at a moment’s notice. This enables businesses to pivot and adapt as needed to minimise or eliminate the effects of disruption on business as usual.

Mapping Business Processes

Fully understanding how your business operates is the first step to ensuring resilience. Mapping business processes allows complete visibility into the inputs, outputs, and dependencies within your organisation. Business processes do not exist in silos; they often rely on people, technology, facilities, third parties, and other supporting resources. Fully understanding, mapping, and compiling data on these intertwined dependencies can help your organisation better comprehend the potential impact of events. Further, it can help make the required decisions to minimise impact and continue business as usual in times of disruption or change. But where should you begin?

Identifying your end goal from the start is vital. You must understand what you want to achieve by mapping business processes – you do not want to simply go through the motions and check a box. Some may wish to map business processes to maximise efficiency, to ensure adequate resource distribution, or as a proactive step for resilience. During the operational resilience journey, mapping allows you to identify gaps and vulnerabilities in your organisation, applications, or vendors which support critical products or services of your organisation. Once you have identified the weak links within your organisation, you can mitigate identified risks to strengthen your business, services, and products.

Once you identify why you want to map business processes, begin gathering data and information to construct your approach roadmap. Mid-size and larger enterprise organisations likely have in-house business continuity or resilience teams tasked with performing a business impact analysis (BIA); a process excellence team; or an IT business partner group which might have solid data to leverage for process identification. Smaller organisations may have part-time personnel who are tasked with performing process mapping. Another good resource to use to start the resilience journey is to ask for an org chart from HR and start looking at team structure as well as performing interviews with functional leaders.

It is also critical to look at the big picture. Before speaking to different business functions and departments, it is helpful to identify your organisational services and products that are being delivered to the customer. In a smaller organisation, this can be a single product. In larger organisations like a bank, there are numerous services and products, including the process of cash withdrawals, wealth management, lending, payments, and more. The size of your business does not matter. Identifying the products and services that you deliver to customers allows you to be able to map the end products first and then work your way down through the organisation to know how each independent process plays a role in delivering the end products or services to customers.

You can start from the top or bottom of your organisation to begin the mapping process. The top-bottom approach would start at C-level executives whereas the bottom-up approach may begin at individual departments/teams. Throughout each level of your business, you will map business processes to the service or product it contributes to. Once you start to map processes, you will also want to map dependencies such as applications. When engaging with teams, ask them what applications or programs are needed to perform their tasks, what teams they interact with, and if there are any cross-organisational dependencies required to fulfil their inputs and outputs. This will enable the mapping of dependencies across vendors, sites, and people that support a specific process and, therefore, support the product or service to customers. Visualising in this manner allows you to see what would occur if a business process broke or an application went down. You can see the escalating effect on the process and how it plays into service delivery to customers.

Mapping business processes in this organised manner can enable swift action when long- or short-term disruptions hit an organisation. A thorough understanding of how your business processes work gives you the tools to put the pieces back together in the event of a disruption. While business process mapping starts within your organisation, it extends to external dependencies, including vendors, supply chain, applications, and physical sites that support your daily business functions.

Supply Chain Mapping

Once you have mapped out your business processes, you can determine exactly which processes are vital to your ability to deliver on your customer promise. You can also identify what vendor dependencies exist for these critical processes to function. These vendor dependencies are the first stage of mapping your supply chain.

In today’s highly globalised society, no organisation exists in a vacuum – we rely on vendors and providers to preform business processes. It does not need to take a disruption directly affecting your organisation for your business to feel the impact. Disruptions that affect your vendors can cause a ripple effect down the supply chain and indirectly impact your business, hindering the applications that your internal teams require to fulfil their needed business function.

When mapping business processes, it is essential to determine the criticality level of each vendor to its associated business process. From there, look to your internal organisation and assess the current maturity level of your supply chain and vendor management program. If you have already determined your critical third-party vendors, see if your organisation has mapped out its fourth- and fifth-party suppliers. While your business may not engage with these suppliers regularly, any disruption that affects the vendors can have an indirect negative effect on your ability to deliver products and services to customers. Mapping fourth- or fifth-party suppliers may be slightly more complicated than mapping your third-party vendors, so be sure to engage with your third-party vendors and ask questions. This will enable your organisation to visualise gaps and vulnerabilities throughout your third-party vendors’ supply chains.

During the mapping process, there are several key points to look out for. Ask yourself: “Do many of our third parties rely heavily on one fourth-party vendor?” and “Do all of our third parties exist in the same geographic location?” These questions can allow you to select third parties that enable risk diversification. If many of your third parties rely on the same fourth-party vendor, a disruption that affects that singular vendor can halt services to your third-party vendor, thus inhibiting your business’s ability to perform critical processes. Diversifying your vendor risk, even if that means using numerous providers, can mitigate the effects of a single pain point that causes the dominos to topple and affect your business.

While it is good to diversify your vendors to reduce risk, you must also know how to diversify effectively. Location can play a significant role in diversification. Some localities may be more susceptible to natural disasters or political volatility, whereas (in less extreme circumstances) a wide blackout or internet outage can halt services in a specific locality for some time. It is in your best interest to diversify vendors across wide geographic regions and establish the same expectations for your fourth- and fifth-party vendors. This can ensure that a predictable or unpredictable disruption will not cause an outage to many of your critical vendors, thus inhibiting your ability to deliver services.

No matter how diversified or prepared your third-party supply chain is to handle disruptions, unpredictable situations can happen at a moment’s notice, which is why it is critical to have recovery strategies and business continuity plans for when business as usual halts. This can come as having an additional provider on retainer or a list of providers who can quickly adapt to meet your business needs if your primary supplier experiences an outage.

Achieving Resilience

True resilience includes having the data on hand to respond in any situation. No matter what industry or market you operate within, having your business processes and supply chain data points mapped out prepares your business to respond seamlessly. Gathering the data points and maps proactively before disruption hits your organisation allows for planning and preapproval of the necessary precautions if the worst-case scenario occurs.

Understanding business processes and supply chain maps is the first step to achieving resilience. Once you have identified critical processes and critical vendors, you must proactively plan for when business as usual comes to a halt. Critical processes require people, applications, sites, and suppliers that enable an organisation to fulfil its brand promise to customers under normal conditions. Unfortunately, normal conditions are not guaranteed, but achieving resilience can eliminate a single point of failure for your business.

Beyond the data, you must also aim to instil a culture of resilience within your organisation. Building a culture of resilience means that everyone understands their role within the organisation and can prioritise resilient decisions in their daily business operations. When working with your coworkers throughout the process of mapping business processes and supply chains, it is an excellent time to begin engaging people across departments and teams on the journey toward resilience.

As you engage with people throughout the process, ask questions and help them understand the more significant role they play in the brand’s ability to deliver products and services. Within your business, people may not be aware of precisely what risks they have control over; therefore, it is critical to explain risk at all levels of the organisation (from the C-suite down to the associates) using the maps you created. This can allow people to see how disruptions caused within their business processes can cascade down and cause an effect in other areas of the business, ultimately creating a business-wide impact. Therefore, data collection is integral to being both a resilience leader, advisor, and educator within your business to ensure resilient operations.

Looking Ahead: Prepare to Pivot and Adapt

Over the last two years, we have experienced wide-ranging crises that have affected almost every organisation in some way. We should recognise that disruptions are here to stay, and it’s no longer a question of “if” another crisis will occur but rather a matter of “when.” Never has it been more critical for a business to be able to pivot and adapt to any disruption.

Mapping business processes and your supply chain as well as educating employees offers your organisation the ability to achieve resilience. When a disruption does occur, there is no need to panic because you took the time to proactively gather data points and plan for future disruption. Creating a culture of resilience can minimise the impact of disruption on your business and give your employees the knowledge they need to make informed decisions in the face of crisis.

As we continue to realise, crises evolve by the minute. The landscape an organisation exists in today may change by tomorrow. Times of crisis elevate the need for operational resilience as businesses must flex and adapt to new developments. Over the last two years, ongoing disruptions have shown that if you have not yet begun your journey toward operational resilience, the best time to start is now. With the adequate and accurate data and plans in hand from business process mapping, supply chain mapping, and proactive programs, businesses can focus on the health and safety of their employees.

St. Modwen acquires Midlands cold storage facility

St. Modwen, one of the UK’s leading logistics developers and managers, has continued its expansion in the UK’s Midlands with the acquisition of a 56,760 sq ft cold storage distribution facility in Alfreton, Derbyshire.

The modern, two-chamber cold storage distribution facility is located on the Clover Nook Industrial Estate in Alfreton, adjacent to the A38 and Junction 28 of the M1 motorway and on the major North-South distribution corridor.

The site spans 5.31 acres with low site coverage of 25% and currently provides 161 car parking spaces and a further 30 dedicated HGV bays with the capacity to accommodate the installation of EV charging points.

Alfreton, by virtue of its central location equidistant from Nottingham and Derby, has become one of the UK’s major submarkets for distribution and logistics companies. There is strong local demand for high-quality mid box distribution centres with strong transport connectivity, seeing high levels of take-up among occupiers seeking urban depots to serve surrounding towns and cities. Supply of suitable mid box schemes within the Midlands is limited, with low levels of available stock and significant competition between occupiers for best-in-class units.

Polly Troughton, Managing Director, St Modwen Logistics, commented: “The acquisition of this high-quality, modern facility allows us to further expand our footprint in one of the UK’s most competitive logistics locations.

“Our continued acquisition and development of high-quality logistics space within undersupplied regional submarkets across the UK fuels the growth of regional economies. Our schemes create high-quality jobs for local people of all ages and all education levels, directly supporting the government’s levelling up agenda.”

St. Modwen acquires Midlands cold storage facility

St. Modwen, one of the UK’s leading logistics developers and managers, has continued its expansion in the UK’s Midlands with the acquisition of a 56,760 sq ft cold storage distribution facility in Alfreton, Derbyshire.

The modern, two-chamber cold storage distribution facility is located on the Clover Nook Industrial Estate in Alfreton, adjacent to the A38 and Junction 28 of the M1 motorway and on the major North-South distribution corridor.

The site spans 5.31 acres with low site coverage of 25% and currently provides 161 car parking spaces and a further 30 dedicated HGV bays with the capacity to accommodate the installation of EV charging points.

Alfreton, by virtue of its central location equidistant from Nottingham and Derby, has become one of the UK’s major submarkets for distribution and logistics companies. There is strong local demand for high-quality mid box distribution centres with strong transport connectivity, seeing high levels of take-up among occupiers seeking urban depots to serve surrounding towns and cities. Supply of suitable mid box schemes within the Midlands is limited, with low levels of available stock and significant competition between occupiers for best-in-class units.

Polly Troughton, Managing Director, St Modwen Logistics, commented: “The acquisition of this high-quality, modern facility allows us to further expand our footprint in one of the UK’s most competitive logistics locations.

“Our continued acquisition and development of high-quality logistics space within undersupplied regional submarkets across the UK fuels the growth of regional economies. Our schemes create high-quality jobs for local people of all ages and all education levels, directly supporting the government’s levelling up agenda.”

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