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The Information Squeeze

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_hm
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Supply Network Guru
Employ Contract Manufacturer
_hm   7/25/2012 7:21:59 PM
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Thease are reasons, why many organization prefer CM for their production. Once full manufacturing responicibility is given to CM, it is easy for orginzation to not get involved with so much of extra paper work and legal liability. For small size company, these are major overheads. 

WaqasAltaf
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Employ Contract Manufacturer
WaqasAltaf   7/25/2012 10:32:15 PM
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@ _hm

Are you sure that by outsourcing the production to a contract manufacturer, the company is exempt from filing reports and data to comply with regulations. I doubt that. In my opinion, the organization is to be held fully responsible for the product it sells and makes profit out of, if the regulations are to be implemented in their full spirit.

_hm
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Employ Contract Manufacturer
_hm   7/26/2012 7:17:12 PM
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@Altaf: Process becomes much more simplfied. In place of few thousands of items, it becomes few products or assemblies.

WaqasAltaf
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Supply Network Guru
Reporting counterfeit
WaqasAltaf   7/25/2012 10:36:51 PM
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An organization that is involved in selling products built from counterfeit part, are the regulations expecting that organization to report on those counterfeit parts honestly?

Obviously, the truth may never come out. The regulations, if they are to be successful, should, besides requiring companies to file reports, include intense audit as well to capture any non-compliance and fraudulent reporting.

elctrnx_lyf
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Reporting counterfeit
elctrnx_lyf   7/26/2012 12:31:04 AM
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These new regulations could definitely put lot of pressure on many electronic OEMs and the over head could result in price increase. How the companies will actually compete with other low cost alternatives who doesn't follow all these regulations effectively?

WaqasAltaf
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Reporting counterfeit
WaqasAltaf   7/26/2012 10:19:43 AM
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@ elctrnyx_lyf

"How the companies will actually compete with other low cost alternatives who doesn't follow all these regulations effectively?"

That certainly is a wide concern of all organizations that follow regulations and are also competing in intense competition markets where price-war exists. The organizations that dont comply however take a big risk of bearing penalties and sanction if being caught as the non-compliance means being involved in counterfeiting and certainly, if caught, there wont be tolerable penalties.

 

syedzunair
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Reporting counterfeit
syedzunair   7/26/2012 11:01:13 PM
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Waqas, 

The concern is you mention is genuine as manufacturing without compliance leads to some bad after effects for the firm. Sanctions and fines are just one part of the equation. The bad will that such a case might bring to a manufacturer is unimaginable. 

WaqasAltaf
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Reporting counterfeit
WaqasAltaf   7/28/2012 2:04:15 AM
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@ syedzunair

True. My concern, however, is more about how to capture the companies that report fraudulent information. It demands actions on the part of regulator to catch through audit or other techniques.

Once, the manufacturer is caught, then obviously the damages will be, rather should be, unimaginable, if the law is to be kept in existence in spirit.

syedzunair
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Supply Network Guru
Re: Reporting counterfeit
syedzunair   7/28/2012 8:30:52 AM
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@WaqasAltaf, I think your concern can only be overcome by more stringent compliance rules and random compliance audits. If a manufacturer is reporting false information about a product to the authorities, I an audit report should be able to highlight the anomalies. Once, the fraud has been established the authorities may penalize the concerned accordingly. 

FLYINGSCOT
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Supply Network Guru
ignorance is no defense
FLYINGSCOT   7/26/2012 11:19:19 AM
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I imagine a company will need to keep strict tabs on all its suppliers and contract manufacturers to make sure the end product complies.

Tam Harbert
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Blogger
CMs not exempt
Tam Harbert   7/26/2012 12:07:17 PM
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I'm not sure that any of these regulations expressly mention contract manufacturers, but they do hold the OEM liable for ensuring that their products meet the regulations. That means pushing the requirements back through the supply chain, to subcontractors and to parts suppliers. That's what's happening in the case of the conflict minerals and counterfeits, at least. Defense contractors, for example, are putting new language in their contracts to hold partners liable.

WaqasAltaf
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Supply Network Guru
Re: CMs not exempt
WaqasAltaf   7/28/2012 1:59:00 AM
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@ Tam

"Defense contractors, for example, are putting new language in their contracts to hold partners liable."

If there is a lacuna in law to hold responsible the actual supplier and not the finished good manufacturer, regulatory authorities will find it hard to chase down the actual culprit. There should be a law which holds liable the finished good manufacturer to ensure that parts being used are fulfilling all legal requirements.



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