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The Power of Resilience
Book

The Power of Resilience

How the Best Companies Manage the Unexpected

MIT Press, 2015 more...


Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Applicable

Recommendation

Interdependencies within and between national economies make global and national systems – like financial networks or the world’s food chain – increasingly susceptible to disruption. A factory fire in one corner of the globe might create a supply chain domino effect – halting production of finished goods worldwide. MIT engineering instructor Yossi Sheffi warns that a breach of environmental standards by an obscure, deep-tier supplier might threaten the reputation of firms further up the chain. getAbstract recommends his forward-looking overview to leaders and risk managers – especially in large firms – who are building the response capability to deal quickly and effectively with disasters and disruptions.

Take-Aways

  • Increasing supply chain complexity and leaner inventories cut costs but increase risks.
  • When disaster hits your suppliers, the effects cascade quickly, threatening your reputation and your business.
  • Highly exposed, multinational firms should expect a major disaster somewhere in any given year.

About the Author

Yossi Sheffi teaches engineering systems at MIT and advises firms and governments on risk and supply chain management.


Comment on this summary or Start Discussion

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    A. U. 4 years ago
    Think out of box
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    M. J. 4 years ago
    Very well explained.
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    G. Y. 4 years ago
    Learned a new aspect of risk management & why preparedness is necessary for future.

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