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Dissecting the Distributor-Supplier RelationshipAs the distribution channel has evolved, so has the value proposition it offers to suppliers and customers. Distribution serves several masters: suppliers, customers, and, for publicly traded companies, shareholders. In addition to reaching a wide variety of customers, distributors also help suppliers by providing data on the marketplace. While a typical chip supplier may handle 50 customers directly, a distributor may reach hundreds. These customers play in markets outside the chipmakers' direct reach. By reporting customer forecasts, actual sales, design information, and fulfillment data, distributors give suppliers a window into the demands of the broader market. Order histories from distribution customers help suppliers forecast demand when they are planning production. There are all kinds of complexities tied to distributor-supplier relationships, but the facts speak for themselves: On average, component makers channel about 30 percent of their products through distribution. (This can be lower or higher: FPGA companies, for example, sell a higher proportion.) Arrow Electronics Inc. (NYSE: ARW) and Avnet Inc. (NYSE: AVT), the electronics industry's leading distributors, each of which hit the $1 billion sales mark in the late 1970s or early 1980s, have reached more than $20 billion in annual sales. This wouldn't have happened without suppliers' support. However, the customer remains the driver behind all this effort. As high-tech customers changed, so did the channel's approach to the market. Distributors expanded nationally and then internationally. They figured out ways to make customers' lives easier, by breaking down component volumes into smaller lots or kits. However, research shows that securing a customer and retaining a customer is more challenging than ever. One of the major disruptors of the electronics supply chain has been the Internet, which increased the opportunities for business by creating new categories of products. At the same time, Internet buying -- what a recent report calls the "digital consumer" -- changed the game for businesses that interact directly with customers. On the retail front, customers expect to be able to find any single item online. A SCM World survey of supply chain executives across industries shows the differing impact digital buying has on various industries:
This finding may reflect a level of sophistication associated with the steeper learning curve in hi tech exemplified by the case of Motorola, which under new leadership recently installed by Google is reportedly planning to “cut the number of devices [it] makes from the 27 it introduced last year to just a few”1. Apple, whose product line-up is famously simple, seems to be able to succeed by pushing its complexity into the post-purchase content assortment rather than physical inventory. Complexity may be on the rise with digital demand, but not all businesses plan to tackle it in the same way. This data refers to the end-products electronics distributors don't typically sell. The high-tech channel deals with the components that go into these products, which represent millions of stock keeping units (SKUs). If anything, the number of SKUs that electronics distributors handle is growing. High-tech components are becoming so specialized that a single product family has dozens of iterations. Sorting through this kind of complexity is one of the ways electronics distributors have become more important to their customers. The supply chain executives survey notes:
This group (comprising 336 survey respondents) is nearly evenly split between believers in low-cost mass production and more variable mass customisation, suggesting that the end game may include significant amounts of both approaches. The implication for electronics distributors is significant as brand owners -- the channel's end-customers -- struggle to find the right mix. Although distributors serve many manufacturers of consumer items, industrial products traditionally have been the backbone of the business. Industrial supply-and-demand dynamics differ from consumer, which provides an additional challenge -- or opportunity -- for electronics distributors. |
More Blogs from Barbara Jorgensen
Electronics vendors are starting to use big-data in supply chain management, but they can do a lot more with the technology.
Electronics makers are looking to leverage the advantages of big-data in forecasting and demand planning. How successful will they be?
Like other catalogue distributors, Allied is moving beyond the catalogue model and taking the "multichannel" approach to distribution.
Manufacturers use software and data for varied purposes in supply chain management, but key goals such as visibility remain paramount.
Gartner envisions a world where tablets become the personal device of choice and PCs become a shared resource.
Webinars
Upcoming Webinars
Date: 7/9/2013 11:00 a.m. eastern
Peter Drucker famously said "Trying to predict the future is like trying to drive down a country road at night with no lights while looking out the back window." Yet in the razor's-edge world of electronics—with a lean supply chain and just-in-time demands—the need to know the future is vital.
Archived Webinars
Date: 4/30/2013
You've heard the saying "the No. 1 supply chain risk is your people." That hasn't always been the case. But today's complex global supply chain requires a new type of multitalented employee. It's one who understands, finance, marketing, economics, is savvy with technology, graceful with relationships and can think analytically.
Where are these people? Are universities properly preparing the next generation supply chain professionals? How do train your existing workforce for these new, demanding positions?
Brian Fuller, editor-in-chief of EBN, will lead a 60-minute Avnet Velocity panel discussion that will ask and answer these and other questions swirling around today's supply-chain talent challenges.
EBN Newswire
PHOENIX 1/16/2013
Avnet Embedded Opens Development Labs SAN FRANCISCO 1/8/2013
Vallee Appointed to Reserve Bank Board PHOENIX 12/13/2012
Avnet to Acquire Assets of USI Electronics PHOENIX 12/12/2012
Avnet EMA Adds Digi International SAN FRANCISCO 11/29/2012
UBM Tech Launches Partbuyer.com for Electronic Procurement PHOENIX 11/19/2012
Avnet Expert to Present at CSCO Summit 10/24/2012
Is Your Supply Chain Static or Dynamic? PHOENIX 10/22/2012
Avnet EM Holds SpeedWay Design Workshops PHOENIX 10/16/2012
Avnet EMA Launches Technical Seminars PHOENIX 9/26/2012
Avnet Express Appoints Exec PHOENIX 9/19/2012
Avnet and Triad Team Up in Americas PHOENIX 9/12/2012
Avnet Recognized by InformationWeek Avnet Video Resources
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