Supply Chain Optimization Consulting

P&C Global's Supply Chain Optimization Consulting Services

Operators leading supply chain optimization programs today face a sharper trade-off between landed cost, working capital, and resilience than earlier tariff and pandemic cycles required. Tariff exposure has reshaped freight economics across manufactured goods, agentic AI has moved into supplier-risk monitoring and demand sensing, and the C-suite is asking whether the network can absorb a single-source disruption without compromising service levels. P&C Global’s supply chain optimization consulting team works with COOs, CFOs, and chief supply chain officers to redesign network footprint, inventory policy, and sales and operations planning (S&OP) cadence. The goal is to make cost-to-serve, OTIF, and resilience metrics operate as instrumented KPIs—not periodic surprises.

As a supply chain optimization consultancy, P&C Global pairs a  performance diagnostic with network strategy, sourcing modeling, and S&OP-cadence work that translates a sharper network thesis into landed-cost reduction and reliable service. The work moves from baseline assessment to service-tier framework design, inventory and sourcing modeling, optimization roadmap development, S&OP and risk-governance cadence, and realized landed-cost and OTIF gains that the executive team can defend in operating reviews. Each step is owned by senior practitioners working alongside the client’s supply chain, finance, and procurement leaders, with progress tracked against an explicit KPI baseline rather than a broad resilience narrative. The intent is a network that compounds advantage through lower cost, stronger service reliability, and greater disruption tolerance.

Supply Chain Optimization Challenges Facing Senior Operators

Six recurring conditions explain why supply chain optimization programs fail to sustain performance beyond the initial reporting period: logistics inflation and tariff pressure distorting landed cost, service-level demands increasing inventory risk, supplier concentration and tier-N visibility gaps obscuring disruption exposure, capacity and quality variability eroding reliability, fragmented planning systems weakening decision quality, and sourcing compliance pressures tightening network flexibility. Each pressure below maps to a specific decision the executive team must sequence, and a supply chain optimization consulting firm is commissioned when the in-house team can no longer hold the line on more than one at a time without trading off another.

Logistics Inflation & Tariff Pressure Distorting Landed Cost

Freight rates, tariffs, and currency movements no longer move predictably or in alignment. As a result, landed cost assumptions calibrated to prior-cycle conditions quickly become obsolete, causing sourcing strategies to miss target economics. Without dynamic recalibration, landed-cost performance drifts below levels that finance and supply chain leadership can jointly validate and defend.

Service-Level Pressure Raising Inventory Risk

Customers feel delivery compression before they feel cost, and service-level pressure that raises inventory risk shows up first in OTIF slips on revenue-bearing SKUs. Experienced supply chain optimization consultants find the constraint sits not at the lane but at the four walls, where unresolved operational excellence gaps compound the inventory pressure.

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Supplier Concentration Risk Hiding Disruption

When supplier visibility does not extend beyond tier two, concentration risk remains hidden within apparently diversified spend profiles. Single-source dependencies persist undetected, and procurement cannot mitigate risks that are not visible in the supplier-risk framework. Ownership of critical categories becomes fragmented across regions, limiting coordinated response.

Capacity & Quality Variability Eroding Reliability

Throughput stalls when capacity and quality wobble in critical nodes. Executive teams see the impact as capacity variability, quality excursions, and imbalance pull OTIF below tier. The same issue surfaces in cost reduction work when rationalization leads the agenda, leaving leadership without a clear view of where standard work and capacity actually break down.

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Fragmented Planning Systems Weakening Decisions

Most supply chain organizations describe demand and supply in the abstract but cannot reconcile them in time to influence the next cycle's commitments. Fragmented planning systems and weakened inventory telemetry keep planners making conservative calls, while planning and finance read ERP, planning, and warehouse data differently because no coherent spine ties them together.

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Sourcing Compliance Pressure Tightening Networks

When trade controls and ESG disclosure converge with forced-labor and carbon-border rules, sourcing compliance becomes the reason supplier transitions wait quarters for a determination. Compliance reviewers stay outside the network-design cadence, the approval ladder loses its tiers, and approval patterns never feed back into amended policy.

Our Approach to Supply Chain Optimization Consulting

P&C Global’s supply chain optimization consultancy follows an execution model that integrates strategic clarity with operating cadence—moving from a supply chain performance diagnostic through service-tier framework choices, inventory and sourcing modeling, an optimization roadmap, an S&OP and risk cadence, and realized landed-cost and OTIF gains the executive team can defend in operating reviews. Each stage is led by a senior practitioner team embedded alongside supply chain, finance, procurement, and trade compliance leaders, and anchored against an explicit KPI baseline, ensuring progress is quantified rather than described. The sequence is designed to ensure network decisions align with the cadence of cost-to-serve and service commitments, rather than being deferred to periodic planning cycles.

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Supply Chain Performance Diagnostic & Cost-to-Serve Baseline

The diagnostic produces a cost-to-serve baseline across SKUs, lanes, and nodes—identifying landed-cost dispersion, service variance, working-capital lock-up, and the choices that lock cost-to-serve into the operating model. It often surfaces an edge computing question when resilience is gated by node-level work.

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Network Strategy & Service Tiering

The strategy step converts the diagnostic into a network strategy, segmentation model, and service-tier framework—defining the segments the network will lead in, the service tiers each earns, and the inventory and sourcing posture required per tier. Supply chain optimization forces the trade-offs early: which lanes are sized for sustained capital, which segments need narrower coverage, and which require an operating-model change.

Inventory & Sourcing Modeling

The design phase builds the inventory, sourcing, and network design modeling that translates the framework into an operable rule set—safety-stock policies, supplier mixes, and capacity profiles. The supply chain optimization consulting services team pairs modeling with digital product work for control-tower capabilities.

Optimization Roadmap

Strategy and modeling only matter if the network and planning organization can absorb the work, which is why our supply chain consultants build an optimization roadmap and initiative sequencing plan that names the wave ordering, regional and lane sequencing, and the readiness gates each initiative must clear. Network leaders get lane plans, supplier transition runbooks, and data to operate against targets.

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Network, Sourcing & S&OP Execution Cadence

Execution covers end-to-end network, sourcing, and S&OP improvements, including network bring-up at new nodes, supplier transitions sequenced against committed volumes, and weekly S&OP stand-ups. The risk management layer feeds supplier-risk signals into the same exception ladder, so resilience telemetry moves on one clock.

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Service Level, Working Capital & Cost Outcome Tracking

Supply chain optimization consulting closes the loop on service level, working capital, and cost outcomes against the diagnostic baseline, so the network thesis converts into landed-cost and OTIF gains the executive team sustains under live operating pressure. OTIF reads on revenue-bearing SKUs, working-capital release by class, and landed-cost variance by lane are tracked with named owners and a periodic readout for the COO and CFO.

Outcomes Clients Can Expect

  • Working-capital release and landed-cost reduction across categories and lanes against a defined baseline
  • Service-level reliability on revenue-bearing SKUs, with variance compressed across lanes and channels
  • OTIF improvement on strategic accounts, with gains held by S&OP cadence rather than single events
  • Lead-time compression and forecast accuracy improvement, instrumented at the planning and supplier level
  • Resilient sourcing posture against tariff, geopolitical, and single-source disruption, with mitigation owned by named leaders

Why Supply Chain Optimization Matters Now

The current environment for supply chain optimization has shifted materially in three ways. Tariff and trade policy changes have reset landed-cost structures across most manufactured goods, network resilience through multi-shoring, dual sourcing, and regional redundancy has become a standing executive priority, and agentic AI is reshaping S&OP cadence, demand sensing, and supplier-risk monitoring. C-suite leaders engaging supply chain optimization consultants are testing whether the program is calibrated to tariff exposure, AI-driven visibility, and resilience rather than last cycle’s unit-cost assumptions, and the operating-cadence question is moving from periodic review to live signal. The cost of maintaining the existing network for another cycle now compounds directly against future budget commitments and margin expectations.

Advance Supply Chain Optimization with P&C Global

C-suite leaders engage P&C Global for supply chain optimization consulting that designs and leads the work through to realized landed-cost and OTIF gains, holding the S&OP and risk cadence with planning and procurement leaders rather than handing it off.

Frequently Asked Questions — Supply Chain Optimization Advisory

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