Supply Chain Risk and Failures in the age of COVID-19

Recorded Webinar | Dr. John Ryan | From: Aug 11, 2020 - To: Dec 31, 2020

Training Options & Pricing

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Recording     $229
DVD     $249
Recording + DVD     $379
Transcript (Pdf)     $229
Recording & Transcript (Pdf)     $369
DVD & Transcript (Pdf)     $379


Description

One of the three most critical food safety issues facing the food industry today is supply chain failures.  With the U.S. initiated tariff wars activated, many types of food shipments are being and are likely to be impacted.  Then along comes Covid-19.
Supply chain failures can impact many aspects of a business’s functioning.  Both incoming products and ingredients and outgoing final delays or failures can cause ripples throughout the supply chain that can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to companies and their clients.  
As the supply chain continues to become more and more complex, poor planning and the lack of defense systems against supply chain failures can cause losses in reputation, poor quality, failing food safety protection, substandard product delivery, share price decline, product recalls, and many other problems.

Objectives of the Session:- 

  • Understand the risks associated with supply chain failures
  • Review common occurrences
  • Understand FDA supply chain and transportation rules with regard to supply chain controls
  • Understand how cargo theft and food fraud can impact your supply chain
  • Review traceability and recall requirements and technology
  • Understand how even packaging can impact deliveries
  • Learn to eliminate and control purchasing based primarily on pricing

Areas Covered in the Session:-

  • Covid-19
  • Tariffs
  • Costs involved – inventory turns/cycle times
  • Liability
  • Global Food Markets drive new import food safety requirements
  • Review how the FDA’s Food Safety and Modernization Act (FSMA) are changing things
  • Food safety hazards
  • Identifying key suppliers
  • Recalls
  • Planning around areas where nature can disrupt the supply chain
  • Foreign suppliers
  • Preventive concepts
  • Basic planning mechanisms
  • Other resources available to help you

Why Should You Attend?

There can be no doubt that the food industry and the country’s security are currently at risk.  With pork, beef, and poultry production problems hitting the news headlines, now is the time to take supply chain risk assessment practices off of the back shelf and get to work on these serious issues.
This webinar will review the issues surrounding the Covid-19, trade war, and other types of disruptions that impact supply chain failures. Risks, rules, foreseeable events, exposure, social media, and other critical issues will be covered.  Lost productivity, revenue, and reputation along with the panic that results should cause all companies to understand, plan for, and do all they can to prevent supply chain failures.  
These issues are increasingly critical for the food supply chain.  Suppliers and receivers must recognize potential problems, assess risks, and work alternative opportunities in order to survive these turbulent times.
No food supply company can afford late or poor quality or food safety failures at any point in their process, but when incoming supplies are not where they should be or when they should be all downstream the consuming public may be detrimentally impacted, and many supply chain members are set to fail.
Food suppliers cannot afford supply chain failures, especially with regard to food safety and quality, but such failures occur on a daily basis throughout the industry.  Companies need to begin to understand the risks involved and establish effective management approaches that help them to prevent and respond quickly to potential supply failures. 

Who Will Benefit?

  • Procurement Officers
  • Food Transportation Managers
  • Sustainability Officers
  • U.S. food processors, distributors, retailers and restaurant chains importing food from foreign countries
  • Food and other buyers
  • Foreign food producers, importers, and exporters
  • International food carriers
  • Import and export logistics personnel
  • Food safety and quality specialists