L’Oréal’s ACD supply chain puzzle: Diagnosing the root causes of underperformance
This case depicts an actual, real sequence of events in L’Oreal’s Active Cosmetics Supply Chain. The case provides an illustration of the challenges facing large, multi-national organizations in aligning their supply chain planning along several dimensions. The span of the planning is from customers in several markets to the centralized production at the single source factory. The framework for laying out the facts of the case is the senior operations management request to conduct a supply chain planning audit on the Active Cosmetics planning process. The audit request was a direct response to complaints regarding customer service levels by general management. The case begins by setting the narrative that sets the audit in motion. Key actors across the supply chain speak their voices through testimony to the auditor, who serves as protagonist in the story of the case. This vehicle permits the case to express different points of view with objectivity, allowing the reader to consider the validity of each actor’s behaviour using that actor’s perspective. The case ends with a challenge to the reader to finish what the narrator has started. Having seen the case through his eyes, the reader must now experience the rest of the story as the narrator experienced, and prepare their own analysis and presentation for senior management.
- To illustrate the organizational challenges in large, multinational teams, where information is difficult to disseminate, alignment is difficult to obtain and incentives can distort good intentions.
- To deepen understanding of the technical and managerial challenges of supply chain planning in a complex, multinational configuration.
- To learn how to transform an analysis into a coherent presentation for senior management.
L'Oréal, Consumer Goods
Cranfield University
Wharley End Beds MK43 0JR, UK
Tel +44 (0)1234 750903
Email [email protected]
Harvard Business School Publishing
60 Harvard Way, Boston MA 02163, USA
Tel (800) 545-7685 Tel (617)-783-7600
Fax (617) 783-7666
Email [email protected]
NUCB Business School
1-3-1 Nishiki Naka
Nagoya Aichi, Japan 460-0003
Tel +81 52 20 38 111
Email [email protected]
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Presented at: European Winter Meeting of the Econometric Society (EWMES), 16-18 December 2024, Palma de Majorca, Spain
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Case reference: IMD-7-2633 ©2024
Research Information & Knowledge Hub for additional information on IMD publications
To stay ahead of competitors, DBS knew it needed to continue to innovate and improve customer centricity. To do so, it decided to move to a horizontal organizational structure, an approach it named Managing Through Journeys (MtJs). This involved b...
Case reference: IMD-7-2634 ©2024
Research Information & Knowledge Hub for additional information on IMD publications
Since becoming DBS Bank’s CEO in 2009, Piyush Gupta led its transformation to become a standard setter globally for digitalization and customer centricity in financial services. This transformation started with fixing the basics (2009-2014), in wh...
in I by IMD
Research Information & Knowledge Hub for additional information on IMD publications
in I by IMD
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