History is written by the victors. This article, however, is written for the victors…of the first round of implementing tariff mitigation strategies in supply chains. A little less catchy. When President Trump imposed tariffs in his first term, companies that moved quickly to develop alternative supplier ecosystems and build multi-sourcing trade relationships, among other strategies, quickly outpaced competitors. “There were other companies that chose to not move as quickly, and I think they’re paying for it and playing catch-up now,” Andrew Rader, managing director of Maine Pointe, a global supply chain and operations consulting firm, told CFO Brew. “Early movers are now structurally advantaged. Companies that relocated production during the first Trump term didn’t just ‘avoid tariffs,’” Ted Stank, co-executive director of the Global Supply Chain Institute at the University of Tennessee Knoxville’s Haslam College of Business, told us over email. “When trade policy shifts again, they don’t have to react; they just execute their plan.” It’s not that late movers are hopeless cases, though. What better way to catch up than, oh, I don’t know, reading this article? Keep reading.—NP |