Excerpt from Delivering the Goods: The Art of Managing Your Supply Chain (Wiley, 2002)
In 1962 management expert Peter Drucker published a landmark article about business logistics, or distribution as it was then called, in Fortune magazine. It was Drucker’s thesis that the hermetic, promotion-obsessed people who managed and directed the U.S. economy were, for all practical purposes, blind, by dint of their ignorance of and obliviousness to the logistic dimension of their jobs. Drucker noted that “almost 50 cents of each dollar the American consumer spends for goods goes for activities that occur after [my italics] the goods are made.” Distribution—or logistics, as it was then construed to mean—was half of the ball game.
Nevertheless, the writer declared, in a much-quoted passage, “We know little more about distribution today than Napoleon’s contemporaries knew about the interior of Africa. We know it is there, and we know that it is big; and that is about all.” To back his charges of logistic absent-mindedness, Drucker cited a recent NYU survey of 28 putatively modern firms and what functions and business activities their CEOs considered important or significant.
Fewer than half of the polled executives admitted to giving distribution or logistics any significant attention.
As a result, Drucker asserted, appearances to the contrary, the U.S. economy was not realizing its full potential.
According to Drucker, few companies think of their distributors when they speak of “their business.” “Their [limited] horizons are set by the legal boundaries of their corporation.”To cite one of the more glaring manifestations of corporate America logistic short-sightedness, Drucker observed that few firms either knew how large their distributors’ inventories were, or, apparently, cared. The result was, well, nearly as portentous as the Dot.Com Bubble: “This [logistic] ignorance is a major cause of the persistent inventory booms and inventory busts that beset our economy.”
Not to mention millions of dollars of lost sales from undiscovered or dissatisfied customers.
One of the problems, he noted was the vague and amorphous way by which distribution was defined, with the distributive function spread out among such in-house departments as engineering, traffic, shipping, warehousing, and accounting; not to mention the distributive function assigned to the distributors themselves. With distribution dispersed, and no one in charge of the various functions and activities that came under its amorphous head, management’s visibility of these processes—of this dark continent—was limited. Hence the CEO’s field of vision and ability to maximize profits was limited, and he couldn’t be a very good CEO, could he? Such was the essence of Drucker’s indictment.
A related problem, according to Drucker, was the difficulty of evaluating the cost of distribution. The varying nature and definition of the logistics function group, from company to company, combined with the lack of accurate or easy-to-use computational measuring tools made it difficult to find out how much these functions cost their respective companies, further blurring them.
However, for Drucker, the basic reason for American business’s logistic obtuseness continued to be, essentially, a matter of attitude, that is, the perception, both within the factory walls and from without, that anything associated with logistics—or shipping, as this complex function group was then commonly referred to—was unskilled or donkey work. Thus, Drucker charged, “because, to a technically minded man, most distribution work is donkey work, he tends to put a donkey in charge, more often than not a man of proven incompetence.”
To be sure, Drucker noted, there were exceptions to this disheartening rule. At Sears, he noted approvingly, “every buyer is expected to know as much about the making of the product—the manufacturer, his plant, his process, his materials, his people, and his costs—as he knows about selling it in Sears stores.” But that—which was still Sears, Roebuck—was only one logistic point of light, as it were.
To Drucker, the most blatant illustration of American business’s logistics obtuseness could be seen when one opened the door to the mercantile twilight zone known as the shipping department. “Even in the best-managed plant things change dramatically as soon as one goes through the door labeled ‘Finishing Room’ or ‘Shipping Department’ [where] there is suddenly a mobof people. Everybody seems to rush and no one seems to know why and where.” In short, all was pandemonium.—As indeed, I was to find during my own explorations of the dark continent three decades later.
Who knew what waste and evil lurked in the heart of the average American manufacturing firm (to paraphrase the old radio serial, “The Shadow”)?
Peter Drucker knew. And now, the readers of Fortune did, too.
The only way to assert control of this messy, neglected process, Drucker insisted, echoing the logistic visionaries of the earlier part of the century, was for businessmen to look at their business in a new holistic way—by seeing distribution, or logistics, as an integral part of the manufacturing process, rather than a boring auxiliary of it, as was so often the case.
“At a time when American business faces great competitive pressures from abroad—especially from a unified Europe whose industries can hold their own in technology, manufacturing knowledge, equipment and salesmanship,” he continued, sounding an almost eerily prescient note, “raising the effectiveness and cutting the costs of the American distributive system may be a more important and more urgent job than most managers yet realize.”
And so, by building upon the basic vision of modern American marketing set forth by Archie Shaw in 1916, a vision based on seeing distribution as the reverse side of marketing—as well as a set of interrelatedactivities unto itself comprising transportation, warehousing, traffic, finished goods, inventory controls, packaging and materials handling—Drucker helped set the stage for and helped usher in the brave new world of what came to be called integratedlogistics management, and the intellectual basis of what we today consider modern logistics.
“Within the last few years,” said Drucker, ending on a more optimistic note than the Cassandra-like Reese, and noting the rapidly accelerating and improving state of logistic thought, “people have gained both the [logistical] perception and the tools to see the job. They have gained the perception to see systems which essentially people did not have 30 years ago, or even 20 years ago.”
To be sure, Drucker’s optimism about the future of distribution was well-founded, at least in part. Galvanized by his incisive analysis—as well as empowered by the new data-processing technology, which arrived in the latter part of the 1960s and which allowed them to quantify and cost their formerly “wild” (i.e., distributive) side—an increasing number of American business managers became disciples of Drucker. The onset of systems analysis helped further the idea that trade-offs between distribution activities could be achieved, which would lower operating costs without necessarily sacrificing product availability. Logistics was a funny art managers found. For example, they discovered, lower distribution costs could often be achieved via the most palpably expensive method—air freight, rather than by truck or rail. Perhaps there was more to this logistics thing than met the eye, after all . . .
Nonetheless, because of the persistence of the sales-fixated marketing philosophy and mentality, both within industry and in leading U.S. business schools—a problem that now two generations of business writers had identified and criticized—sadly, such logistically enlightened firms continued to be in the minority.
The root problem behind this nasty recrudescence of antilogisticianism (to coin an expression) during the 1960s—as it had proven during the 1920s, which mirrored that decade in its optimism and perception of the world as an ever-expanding universe with America at its center—was, one could say, the spirit of the Swinging Sixties itself, which, in its own memorable way, was as frothy and as superficial as was the age of Babbitt, the original, slogan-touting salesman conjured up by Sinclair Lewis in his famed 1927 novel of the same name. In the 1960s, Babbitt had morphed into the Man in the Grey Flannel Suit, as the equally famous novel about the archetypal, postwar—and, in this case, heroic—advertising man was called. In the booming, consumer goods-happy 1950s and 1960s Madison Avenue ruled.
In the world of American manufacturing this spirit translated itself into a continuing focus on sales, sales, sales. Like the 1920s, the 1960s were a fertile time for slick advertising campaigns and catchy jingles, some of which remain embedded in the American consciousness. Perhaps you remember some of them: “See the USA in a Chevrolet!” (Chevrolet); “Better Living Through Chemistry” (Dupont); “Mmm Good!” (Campbell’s Soup); and so forth. Unsurprisingly, some of the most memorable jingles were associated with soft drinks: “Things Go Better With Coke” (Coca-Cola); “You Like It It Likes You” (7 Up); and so forth. Most of them have never been topped.
All well and good. Some of these products became brand names on the strength and resonance of these phrases. However, they didn’t do much to promote sound business thinking or practice, and they certainlydidn’t do much to promote or enhance either the intrafirm or extra firm image or popularity of logistics or logisticians, who continued to remain in the shadow, and, more often than not, in the charge of their sales-obsessed, jingleminded managerial overlords and colleagues.
Alas, there was nothing sexy about either the idea or even the sound of logistics; just the opposite. Do you remember any brilliant ad campaign of the 1960s mentioning anything about reliable delivery?
And so, to paraphrase Rodney Dangerfield, logistics continued to get no respect.
This disrespect for logistics in the civilian sector corresponded with a similar attitude in the military one. Witness the difficulty that Joe Heiser, the Army’s top logistician during the Vietnam War had in Vietnam in getting respect from his immediate commander, who preferred a “fighting man” for his front-line logistics post, rather than a veteran logistician.
And so, as in the equally logistically retarded Army, and despite the manifest value and pivotal importance of logistics to the whole corporate battlefield, business logistics continued to be seen as the domain of the Shipping Room Mob, as Drucker put it. And so the big disconnect, as I call it, namely, the resistance of mainstream marketing thinking to sound, integrated logistics, and the subsequent gap between logistical thought and practice continued.
As a recent dissertation on the history of the evolution of logistics noted, this gap, bolstered by the perception that distribution work was “too applied and trade-schoolish to be part of the science and art of marketing,” would continue for at least another twenty years. Indeed, as I saw during my studies at Stanford University, where, even at that enlightened campus, logistics was relegated to a dusty corner of the Industrial Engineering curriculum, that gap would continue well into the 1990s.