4 . Supply chain, orders & logistics
When component lead times stretch from weeks to months, passive order management results in missed shipments. The Customer Success team acts as the primary buffer between global supply chain volatility and the customer’s time-to-market.
We specify the protocols for managing customer orders against material availability. This includes processing forecast updates, mitigating component allocations through strategic buffering, and aligning outbound logistics to meet hard delivery dates.
- 4.1 Rolling forecast: horizon rules & capacity reservation
Manufacturing is a momentum machine; it cannot turn on a dime. The Rolling Forecast is the steering mechanism. It bridges the gap between the customer’s immediate sales reality and the factory’s physi...
- 4.2 Materials ownership model & liability
Inventory is not an asset; it is cash trapped in a physical form that degrades over time. Ambiguity regarding who owns that cash—and who pays when it becomes worthless—is the primary cause of commerci...
- 4.3 E&o prevention & disposition rules
Excess and Obsolete (E&O) inventory is financial cancer. It occupies warehouse space, consumes working capital, and eventually requires a write-down that destroys net profit. E&O is rarely a surprise;...
- 4.4 Order acceptance rules: PO validation & promise logic
A Purchase Order (PO) is not a suggestion; it is a binding legal contract. Once accepted, the factory commits capital, capacity, and liability. Accepting a "dirty" PO (incorrect price, ambiguous revis...
- 4.5 Fulfillment & logistics: incoterms, OTIF & claims
Logistics is the final step of the manufacturing process, not an afterthought. A product that is technically perfect but arrives damaged or late is a commercial failure. The shipping container is trea...