The semiconductor supply chain crunch
Thinking like a tech company can have benefits, however. Most are now aware of the supply shortage of semiconductors that has been impacting manufacturing across sectors and regions since the start of 2021.
Particularly hard hit has been the automotive sector. Like any product with digital capabilities, cars require several small semiconductor chips. These chips are not an expensive component in the car, there are only two to three dozen in each, but they are essential and without them production is halted, with stoppages that are continuing to impact every major car manufacturer.
Tesla has managed to avoid the brunt of the crisis in semiconductor supply, and how the manufacturer has done it should be of interest to every supply chain manager.
Just as Tesla insisted on controlling its battery supply chain when it built the Gigafactory in Nevada, the company built in-house capability to write the software code that runs its cars, whereas its competitors relied on suppliers for this expertise. Though it stretched the core competency scope and was more expensive, this decision gave Tesla the ability to rewrite its software code to accommodate and work with whatever semiconductors the company was able to procure.