DoD Adopts New Business Practices to Manage
Supply Chain
Blackanthem.com,
WASHINGTON, D.C., September 22, 2005
The Defense Department is adopting a more customer-focused approach to
acquisitions, technology and logistics, the department's top AT&L official
told a group of more than 300 industry leaders at the National Defense
Industrial Association's September luncheon here today.
"The customers . . . expect us to prepare and provide the capabilities
they will need to defend America and her interests, not just today, but
into the future," Kenneth J. Krieg told the group.
He identified AT&L's customers, or stakeholders, as the secretary of
defense, Congress and the taxpayers, who "wisely invest their hard-earned
money in their nation's common defense. "
To serve all of these stakeholders well, Krieg said, AT&L must adhere to
some basic principles, including making decision based on facts, aligning
authority and responsibility, balancing the costs of various choices and
building processes that have both agile performance and strong oversight.
"As we incorporate these basic principles into our daily routine, we also
are mindful of how business in the Department of Defense is changing," he
said. "And it is changing very dramatically. Our job is less about moving
paperwork and more about moving knowledge. It is less about bending metal
and more about integrating systems. It is about joint and integrated
endeavors. "
To meet the challenge, he said, AT&L is developing a new set of business
practices affecting five broad areas: supply chain, medical readiness and
performance, acquisition, ordinary and strategic process integration, and
DoD corporate governments.
In the review of these areas, Krieg said, three overarching guidelines are
being applied: being responsive to customers, ensuring decisions are made
based on facts and at the appropriate level, and redirecting work efforts.
All of these are geared toward achieving effectiveness and efficiency, he
said.
For example, he noted, technology such as item-unique identification and
radio frequency identification that allow the tracking of both products
and procedures will help to attain those goals. "The key to future success
lies in working smarter, not just harder," Krieg said.
He cited performance-based logistics, or PBL, as one way to give DoD's
stakeholders the best value on the roughly $80 billion the department
spends annually on supply-chain activity.
"PBL helps us to work more efficiently and gather data and facts we need
to measure success and uncover roadblocks to achieving our goals," he
said. "Even more importantly, we're able to factually report those
successes to our stakeholders and work together to remove those
roadblocks. "
Also, Krieg said, he intends to introduce Lean Six Sigma techniques, a
widely used business strategy, to further streamline AT&L's practices.
Lean Six Sigma emphasizes speed and efficiency in improving business
processes and transactions.
"I intend to use its principles to consider the effectiveness and
efficiency of the administrative processes of acquisition documentation,"
he said, "allowing our staff to streamline their procedures and free their
time to focus on other customer needs. " He added that AT&L will seek to
apply Lean Six Sigma techniques to its business activities.
"In an era where people are devoting more and more hours to their work,"
Krieg said, "it's not sensible to further increase the time . . . we
spend. Instead, we must increase the efficiency of our business products.
"
By Samantha L. Quigley
American Forces Press Service
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