Resilience Imperatives Prompt Strategies Optimizing Off-Shore, Near-Shore and Re-Shored Value Chains

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Eric Rutter, Mavsotech

Eric Rutter, Mavsotech

SILVER SPRING, Md.Aug. 3, 2023PRLog — The global entertainment technology community is redefining how it develops, organizes and deploys value chains to ensure long-term viability in today’s increasingly volatile and complex digital economy. As a result, executives are placing more importance on consistency and resiliency, de-emphasizing their singular reliance on lean-and-mean just-in-time strategies, according to Eric Rutter, founder and CEO of Mavsotech, a technology consulting company based in Philadelphia, PA, in a podcast interview for journalists.

“The result is a far more nuanced and sophisticated go-to-market strategy that is creating real opportunities for differentiation in an economic sector that includes video and broadband network service providers, automotive audio and visual media developers, advertising technology players and personal device manufacturers,” he says.

Making the Cultural Transition from JIT to CART

Pressure to revisit and revamp global value chains in this sector is mounting as the long-term ramifications of disruptions caused by the COVID-19 crisis become clear. That said, executing major operational shifts involving dozens of organizations across multiple geographies is easier said than done. Moreover, it is turning out to be especially difficult to abandon decades of reverence for JIT principles.

“For years, people relied on just-in-time manufacturing to reduce costs, optimize profits and accelerate time-to-market. However, in the wake of the pandemic, executives across the entertainment technology community have had to pivot off this familiar and comfortable paradigm to build robustness in their supply chain,” says Rutter.

As global health, economic and geopolitical developments continue to introduce uncertainty into the marketplace, JIT is simply proving too brittle to support the sector’s short-, mid-, and long-term interests.

“That is why a growing number of leaders are looking at strategies that can assure value-chain continuity, accountability, resilience, and transparency — or CART. The notion of having zero inventory just doesn’t fly anymore in markets constantly being disrupted,” he explains.

The new calculus for maximizing value-chain performance requires organizations to strengthen their ability to ensure product availability, support and ongoing development while improving their ability to adjust to constantly changing circumstances.

With CART principles redefining relationships across ecosystems, the variables determining return on investment (ROI) are also changing dramatically. New efforts to harden supply chains are at once altering partner selection and the terms that govern their relationships.

“We are already seeing players across the segment rebalance resources and reevaluate who they need to work with. We are also seeing organizations reassess risks associated with off-shore exposure while contemplating the benefits of near-shoring and re-shoring value chains,” says Rutter.

Executives, he adds, are pursuing this analysis because there is a new appreciation for how continuity and resilience enhance brand value, customer satisfaction and the overall value equation.

“One of the biggest lessons of the pandemic is that companies enjoying proximity-of-resource advantage won the day because they could provide continuity. They were able to resolve problems and recover from disruptions more quickly. While it is clear to me that off-shoring will not stop altogether, I think you will see it done more strategically,” he says.

Editor’s Note: To read the full report and listen to the interview with Eric Rutter, Mavsotech CEO, visit: https://www.biztechreports.com/news-archive/2023/8/3/resi….