A Conceptual Reference Framework for Enterprise Resilience Enhancement
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review Foundations
3. Research Methodology
- What is ER and why is it so important?
- What events negatively affect ER?
- What enterprise capabilities are necessary for a company to be resilient?
- What actions help companies to improve their ER capacity?
4. The ER Conceptual Reference Framework
4.1. Developing the Conceptual Reference Framework
4.2. Conceptual Reference Framework Elements
4.2.1. Characterization of Disruption
- Source: the origin that causes the disruption. Moreover, these authors divide the source component into two subcomponents:
- -
- Level: the level of a disruption is related to the different segments in which a disruptive event occurs. Based on the works of [1,50,53,76], three different levels are considered:
- ○
- The intra-enterprise level from which the disruption stems within the enterprise;
- ○
- The inter-enterprise level that encompasses all the supply network entities (in this case, the level of the disruption source can be any entity of the supply network);
- ○
- -
- Origin: based on the work by Sanchis and Poler [79], the conceptual reference framework involves the following origins—customers, distribution, energy, environmental, financial, inventory, legislation, production, social, supply, and technology.
- Disruptive event: disruptive events are considered situations and realities that cause a disturbance to and/or alteration in companies’ daily operations. Some authors [47,73,80] argue that a disruptive event always interrupts business activity. For these authors, a disruptive event is considered to be any alteration in the flow of materials, monetary, information, etc., that interrupts the enterprise’s normal operational conditions and thus makes it vulnerable by reducing its performance and competitiveness. However, in the present research work, a disruptive event is a foreseeable or unforeseeable event that affects an enterprise’s usual operation and stability but does not necessarily interrupt its activities. Currently, the conceptual reference framework is composed of a collection of 71 disruptive events classified according to the previous 11 origins of disruption sources.
- Consequence: any disruptive event with negative effects on the enterprise. Sheffi and Rice [5] explain that the effects of any significant disruptive event cause loss of business performance. The disruptive events effects could be of diverse natures. The Business Continuity Institute, in its annual resilience survey [56], points out that the most important consequences in order of their importance are: loss of productivity, customer complaints, increased production costs, loss of revenue, poor services prevision, stakeholder concern, reputational, image and brand damage, delays in delivering products, delays in cash flows, withdrawal of products, expected increase in regulations, scrutiny, loss of regular customers, payment of service credits, fines due to repeated breaches, and loss in share prices.
4.2.2. Constituent Capacities of ER
4.2.3. Transition Elements to Enhance ER
4.3. Global Overview of the ER Conceptual Reference Framework
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Discipline | Definition | Authors |
---|---|---|
Psychology | The ability of individuals to recover from adversity. | [12] |
Positive ability of individuals to cope with stress and catastrophic events, as well as their level of resistance to future events. | [13] | |
Material Science | A material’s tendency to return to its original form after applying a force or stress that has produced elastic deformation. | [14] |
Communication/Computational Networks | The ability of a network to defend against and maintain an acceptable level of service in the presence of such challenges. | [15] |
Sociology | Ability to recover from adversity and become stronger than before. | [16] |
Infrastructures | Ability of an infrastructure to reduce the probability of failure, the consequences of such failure, and the response and recovery time. | [17] |
Cyber | Ability to continuously deliver the intended outcome despite adverse cyber events. | [18] |
Tourism | Ability of organisms, communities, ecosystems, and populations to withstand the impacts of external forces while retaining their integrity and ability to continue functioning. | [19] |
Reference | Definition |
---|---|
[22] | Ability of an organization to strengthen the creation of robust and flexible processes in a proactive way. |
[23] | The maintenance of positive adjustment under challenging conditions such that the organization emerges from those conditions strengthened and more resourceful. |
[24] | The capability to self-renew over time through innovation. |
[25] | Resilience conveys the properties of being able to adapt to the requirements of the environment and being able to manage the environments variability. |
[26] | Enterprise capacity to absorb changes and ruptures, both internal and external, without affecting its profitability and even though developing a flexibility that, through processes of rapid adaptation, the enterprise may obtain extra benefits, whether these are pecuniary or intangible, arising from adverse and/or unforeseen circumstance. |
[27] | Resilience encompasses the actions to avoid, adsorb, adapt, and recover from disruptions. |
[28] | Ability to anticipate key events related to emerging trends, to adapt constantly to change, and to recover quickly after disasters and crises. |
[13] | Enterprise ability to reduce vulnerability, ability to change and adapt as well as the ability to recover quickly against unforeseen events. |
[29] | Ability to repair, replace, patch, or otherwise reconstitute lost capability or performance (and hence effectiveness), at least in part and over time, from misfortune, damage, or a destabilizing perturbation in the environment. |
[30] | Ability not only to recover from disruptions but to avoid them completely. |
[31] | Reactive ability of the company to withstand an external event and active ability to anticipate events and therefore open new paths of development. |
Reference | Description | Conceptual Approach | Indicators | Methodology | Tool | E Or SC |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[42] | Conceptual framework based on the key attributes of ER (agility, flexibility, adaptability, interoperability, and connectivity) in the extended enterprises context. It is based on two enablers: (i) the capability of an enterprise to become more connected and responsive to the environment; (ii) the alignment of information technology with business goals. | √ | ||||
[43] | Conceptual approach for the trade-off between operational and ER objectives based on sacrifice decisions, measurement of organizational resilience, visualizing the side effects of organizational decisions on disruptions, and organizational feedback control. | √ | E | |||
[44] | Conceptual approach to assess ER based on key performance indicators (KPIs) related to the objectives defined in the enterprise’s mission. | √ | √ | E | ||
[46] | Proposal of the SC Resilience Index (in diversity, adaptability, and cohesion terms) and the SC Resilience Indicator (in terms of the amount of change that a system can undergo and the degree of self-organization). | √ | SC | |||
[3] | Methodology and definition of indicators for the evaluation and improvement of organizations’ resilience in terms of situation awareness, management of keystone vulnerabilities and adaptive capacity | √ | √ | E | ||
[35] | Quantitative approach for assessing supply chain resilience to face disasters in terms of density complexity and nodes critically. | SC | ||||
[6] | A conceptual approach to assess operational resilience by applying a multiattribute utility theory through value trees that is constructed and contains the attributes contributing to resilience management. | √ | √ | E | ||
[38,45] | Conceptual approach, tool, and implementation methodology to assess and enhance resilience in SCs through a portfolio of capabilities by balancing enterprises’ inherent pattern of vulnerabilities. | √ | √ | √ | √ | E |
[47] | Methodology to improve resilience in SCs through value stream mapping and defining the company and the SC resilience index. | √ | √ | E and SC | ||
[37] | A lean, agile, resilient, and green analytic network process model to support decision making in choosing the most appropriate practices and KPIs to be implemented by companies in an SC. | √ | E and SC | |||
[48] | Extending the definition of indicators to evaluate and improve organizations’ resilience as defined by McManus et al. | √ | E | |||
[39] | Proposal of a resilience index in terms of agility, collaboration, information sharing, sustainability, risk and revenue sharing, trust, visibility, risk management culture, adaptive capability, and structure by graph theory. | √ | SC | |||
[40] | Proposal of a metrics for operational supply chain resilience in terms of recovery, impact, performance loss, profile length, and weighted-sum. | √ | SC | |||
[41] | Proposal of a metrics for supply network resilience in terms of the total number of node/arc disruptions. | √ | SC | |||
[49] | A quantitative approach to enhance ER in terms of preparedness capability using dynamic programming (the knapsack approach). | √ | E |
# | Level of Education | Entity | Position | Knowledge Domain | Experience | Age Range |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Engineer | Large Company | SC Manager | Operations Management | >5 years | 25–35 |
2 | Engineer | Large Company | Technology Manager | Information and Communications Technology (ICT) | >20 years | 50–55 |
3 | Engineer | Small and Medium Sized Enterprise (SME) | General Manager | Human Resources | >30 years | >60 |
4 | PhD | University | Professor | Business Economics, Health, and Social Care | >15 years | 45–50 |
5 | MSc. | Research Center | Researcher | Knowledge Management | >15 years | 40–45 |
6 | PhD | University | Professor | Operations Research | >25 years | 50–55 |
7 | PhD | University | Professor | SC Management | >20 years | 45–50 |
8 | PhD | Consulting Company | Consultant | Operations Management | >20 years | 50–55 |
9 | MSc. | SME | General Manager | Financial Management | >20 years | 45–50 |
10 | MSc. | Large Company | Purchase Manager | Purchase and Stocks Management | >20 years | 45–50 |
11 | Engineer | SME | Quality Manager | Quality and Maintenance | >15 years | 40–45 |
12 | MSc. | Consulting Company | Consultant | Manufacturing Systems | >30 years | 55–60 |
Source (origin) | Disruptive Event | Consequences | |
---|---|---|---|
Supplier | Internal—Supplier’s fire | Delays in supplying components | |
Customer | External—Supplier’s fire | Delays in delivering components | Interrupting the production system |
Characterisation of Disruption | Transition Elements/Constituent Capacities | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Level | Origin | Suborigin | Disruptive Event | Consequences * | Preventive Actions/Preparedness Capacity | Knowledge Registration Actions/Recovery Capacity | |
Inter- | Customers | Demand | Unpredictable changes in demand | (ii), (iii), (v), (vi), (xv), (xvii) | Study of changes in the demand pattern | Disruptive Event: ID, Name, Date, Time, Description, Functional areas or departments involved, Staff Involved, Causes identified (if any), Legislative/regulatory aspects, Short-term consequences, Long-term consequences Registration: Date, User Historical Registration: Protocol number (if available), Number of times the disruptive event has already happened, Preventive actions that have already been implemented (if any), Previous experiences in the recovery of this disruptive event | Recovery actions: Description, Steps, People involved, Responsible, Time, Duration, Remarks, Actions Suitability |
Study of demand historical outliers | |||||||
Study of the prospective forecast | |||||||
Implementation of demand forecasting systems | |||||||
Search for additional production capacity | |||||||
Search for alternative providers | |||||||
Implementation of adequate commercial management | |||||||
Implementation of marketing and sales practices that minimize changes in demand | |||||||
Implementation of flexible production systems | |||||||
Intra- | Production | Equipment/Machinery | Breakdown /failure of machines and/or key equipment | (i), (iii), (v), (ix), (xvii) | Definition of alternative routes and flexible equipment purchases | ||
Establishment of product-service systems contracts with equipment suppliers | |||||||
Backward vertical integration of the technical service | |||||||
Total preventive maintenance | |||||||
Modernization of the technical service through technology | |||||||
Negotiation with competitors (orders to competitors) | |||||||
Nearest technical service | |||||||
Utilization of the maximum capacity of other similar machines | |||||||
Extra- | Distribution | Prices | Increase in fuel prices | (v), (viii), (ix), (xv) | Agreements with Third Party Logistics (3PL) and 4PL operators | Disruptive Event: ID, Name, Date, Time, Description, Functional areas or departments involved, Staff Involved, Causes identified (if any), Legislative/regulatory aspects, Short-term consequences, Long-term consequences Registration: Date, User Historical Registration: Protocol number (if available), Number of times the disruptive event has already happened, Preventive actions that have already been implemented (if any), Previous experiences in the recovery of this disruptive event | Recovery actions: Description, Steps, People involved, Responsible, Time, Duration, Remarks, Actions Suitability |
Monitor oil prices evolution constantly | |||||||
Definition and implementation of the costs range that the enterprise would like to bear | |||||||
Definition and implementation of a protocol to negotiate prices of finished products | |||||||
Extra- | Energetic | Supply | Interruption in the supply of water, gas, electricity, etc. | (i), (ii), (iii), (v), (x), (xvii) | Definition and implementation of formal protocols to proceed when supply interruptions occur | ||
Viability study and implementation of redundant systems (electric generators, etc.) to keep the enterprise running | |||||||
Implementation of real-time communication systems with energy supply providers | |||||||
Vertical backward integration (especially for electrical energy, e.g., solar panels) | |||||||
Negotiation with energy suppliers about penalty clauses if the energy supply is interrupted | |||||||
Extra- | Environ- mental | Nature | Enterprise facilities are exposed to natural disasters | (i), (ii), (iii), (v), (x), (xvii) (xi), (xiii), (xiv), (xv), (xvii) | Definition of business continuity plans | ||
Definition of emergency evacuation protocols | |||||||
Train human capital in security measures for fire protection | |||||||
Periodic drills | |||||||
Simulation of different disaster scenarios and establishment of specific measures based on simulation results | |||||||
Extra- | Financial | Credit | Restricted access to credit | (ii), (viii), (xv) | Create a reserve fund and define policies that maintain a percentage of the monetary reserve | Disruptive Event: ID, Name, Date, Time, Description, Functional areas or departments involved, Staff Involved, Causes identified (if any), Legislative/regulatory aspects, Short-term consequences, Long-term consequences Registration: Date, User Historical Registration: Protocol number (if available), Number of times the disruptive event has already happened, Preventive actions that have already been implemented (if any), Previous experiences in the recovery of this disruptive event | Recovery actions: Description, Steps, People involved, Responsible, Time, Duration, Remarks, Actions Suitability |
Study on the viability of turning to supply chain financing instruments | |||||||
Study and analyze policies supported by public institutions to fund companies: e.g., ICO – Instituto Crédito Oficial de and Enisa in Spain | |||||||
Outsourcing and change of strategy to focus on those activities that provide added value | |||||||
Request for credit through reciprocal guarantee companies that act as guarantors of financing, assuming credit risks | |||||||
Intra- | Inventory | Inefficiency | Reiteration of movements in the picking process | (iii), (vi), (viii), (xvii) | Human capital training related to picking and movement aspects | ||
Study the time spent on the routes to perform picking | |||||||
Study and evaluate the storage pattern of products for picking | |||||||
Systematic study and evaluation of the method used for picking to minimize the operator’s movements, among others | |||||||
Implementation of the Internet of Things technology (e.g., Radio Frequency Identification—RFID, Global Positioning System—GPS, etc.) to support storage and picking activities | |||||||
Implementation of intelligent systems to optimize the picking process (guided to operators, movement of stacker cranes, etc.) | |||||||
Maintenance of handling equipment to effectively manipulate products | |||||||
Extra- | Legislation | Regulation /Product | Changes in legislation involving enterprise’s products | (i), (ii), (iii), (v), (xv), (xvii) | Train company’s employees in legal issues | Disruptive Event: ID, Name, Date, Time, Description, Functional areas or departments involved, Staff Involved, Causes identified (if any), Legislative/regulatory aspects, Short-term consequences, Long-term consequences Registration: Date, User Historical Registration: Protocol number (if available), Number of times the disruptive event has already happened, Preventive actions that have already been implemented (if any), Previous experiences in the recovery of this disruptive event | Recovery actions: Description, Steps, People involved, Responsible, Time, Duration, Remarks, Actions Suitability |
Definition and implementation of publicizing activities among customers about potential changes in the focal company’s products from a positive viewpoint: better security, etc. | |||||||
Definition and implementation of formal protocols to deal with new legislation that concerns the company’s products | |||||||
Design and development of easily adaptable products that meet the most stringent requirements of new regulations (weight, composition, presentation, identification, labeling, etc.) | |||||||
Implementation of efficient communication systems among different functional units, such as quality, research, innovation, legislation, new products development, etc. | |||||||
Implementation of continuous monitoring systems to control new or existent regulations/laws that could have effects on products | |||||||
Intra- | Social | Personnel | Key personnel leaving the enterprise | (iv), (xii), (xvi) | Definition of policies for employment promotion | ||
Definition of performance indicators to monitor their fulfilment | |||||||
Definition of tasks, roles, responsibilities and performance and monitoring indicators to achieve such a definition | |||||||
Implementation of emphasis policies for recruiting and retaining outstanding employees | |||||||
Implementation of policies to promote social events | |||||||
Registration of human capital know-how | |||||||
Intra- | Supply | Quality | Poor quality of the raw materials or components supplied | (i), (iii), (v), (x), (xvii) | Search for alternative raw materials or components | Disruptive Event: ID, Name, Date, Time, Description, Functional areas or departments involved, Staff Involved, Causes identified (if any), Legislative/regulatory aspects, Short-term consequences, Long-term consequences Registration: Date, User Historical Registration: Protocol number (if available), Number of times the disruptive event has already happened, Preventive actions that have already been implemented (if any), Previous experiences in the recovery of this disruptive event | Recovery actions: Description, Steps, People involved, Responsible, Time, Duration, Remarks, Actions Suitability |
Search for alternative suppliers | |||||||
Certification (audits) of quality in suppliers | |||||||
Implementation of quality systems agreed with our suppliers | |||||||
Implementation of systems to constantly monitor suppliers/materials | |||||||
Pre-production inspection | |||||||
Safety stock of raw materials and/or components | |||||||
Extra-Inter-Intra- | Technology | Crime | Cybercrime (hacking, viruses, malicious code | (iii), (xii), (xiii), (xvii) | User training in computer security issues to prevent attacks in which the user would unwittingly give authorization | ||
Definition of standards, protocols, methods, and rules to minimize potential risks of computers or the information infrastructure | |||||||
Definition of users’ access rights to avoid oversized rights | |||||||
Definition of actions to be taken when computer vulnerability is detected and selection of human resources to be contacted | |||||||
Definition of maintenance policies of the enterprise’s IT infrastructure | |||||||
Implementation of anti-virus software and firewalls systems | |||||||
Make regular backups | |||||||
Constantly monitor different and current types of computer threats: viruses, computer worms, trojans, logic bombs or spyware | |||||||
Total | 11 | 71 | 403 |
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Sanchis, R.; Canetta, L.; Poler, R. A Conceptual Reference Framework for Enterprise Resilience Enhancement. Sustainability 2020, 12, 1464. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041464
Sanchis R, Canetta L, Poler R. A Conceptual Reference Framework for Enterprise Resilience Enhancement. Sustainability. 2020; 12(4):1464. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041464
Chicago/Turabian StyleSanchis, Raquel, Luca Canetta, and Raúl Poler. 2020. "A Conceptual Reference Framework for Enterprise Resilience Enhancement" Sustainability 12, no. 4: 1464. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041464
APA StyleSanchis, R., Canetta, L., & Poler, R. (2020). A Conceptual Reference Framework for Enterprise Resilience Enhancement. Sustainability, 12(4), 1464. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12041464