Building a Smarter Supply Chain

1. Procurement
Procurement is where every great product begins — with the sourcing of ingredients, materials, and packaging that make up the final good.
For brand owners, procurement means building trusted supplier relationships and balancing cost with quality.
For manufacturers, it’s about maintaining consistent availability and traceability of raw materials, while meeting each client’s specifications and regulatory needs.

Topics and Tools to Explore:
  • Pack Expo: Learn about packaging innovation, automation, and material advances that reduce cost and waste.
  • Ingredient Managers: Understand how ingredient sourcing decisions influence formulation, shelf life, and food safety.
  • Packaging Managers: Stay current on sustainable packaging, labeling regulations, and shelf presentation trends.
Procurement is the first handshake in the supply chain — setting the tone for everything that follows.
2. Contract Manufacturing (CoMan) Contract Manufacturing allows brand owners to scale fast without the heavy capital investment of building their own plant. The key to success lies in clarity — precise product specifications, strong NDAs, and ongoing communication between both parties. At Contract Manufacturing Alliance (ContractMFG.org), we help brands find, vet, and work effectively with co-mans — and help manufacturers present their capabilities in the best possible light in relation to their clients.

For Brand Owners:

  • Learn how to evaluate a co-man’s capacity, certifications, and cultural fit.
  • Understand trial production steps, MOQs, and cost models before signing agreements.

For Manufacturers:

  • Discover how to position your operation for premium clients.
  • Join our alliance to connect with brands seeking production partners across food, beverage, nutraceutical, and pet sectors.

Co-manufacturing works best when trust, transparency, and technical capability align.

3. Demand Planning

Demand Planning helps predict what your customers will need — and when they’ll need it.
For brands, it’s about using data, not guesswork to plan product runs and avoid stockouts or overstocks.
For co-mans, accurate demand signals from clients prevent last-minute emergencies, labor overtime, and material shortages.

* We offer Demand Planning training through our internal industry partners

Best Practices:
Use sales history, seasonality, and promotion calendars to guide forecasts.
Align with your co-man monthly or quarterly to review updated demand plans.
Build flexibility for supply disruptions or sudden spikes in demand.
Forecasting together avoids firefighting later.

4. Supply Planning Supply Planning converts forecasts into action — determining how materials, equipment, and production time will be allocated. It’s the bridge between demand and actual operations. For co-mans, this means scheduling runs efficiently, coordinating ingredient lead times, and managing warehouse space. For brand owners, it means understanding your co-man’s production windows and capacity constraints before committing to orders.
Educational Focus: Capacity planning and utilization tracking. Vendor-managed inventory and ingredient staging. Synchronizing inbound ingredients with outbound finished goods. Smart supply planning keeps products moving without bottlenecks.
5. Sales, Inventory, and Operations Planning (SIOP) SIOP — sometimes called S&OP — is where the entire business comes together. It aligns sales goals, inventory targets, and operations capacity into one shared roadmap. For brands, it ensures marketing campaigns and production capacity stay in sync. For manufacturers, it aligns purchasing, scheduling, and labor planning to meet client commitments with precision. It also fosters cross-departmental accountability, ensuring every team understands its role in balancing demand, supply, and profitability.
What to Implement: Monthly SIOP meetings between sales, operations, and finance teams. Shared KPIs that track forecast accuracy, fill rates, and inventory turns. Scenario planning tools to model “what if” changes in demand or cost. SIOP is the heartbeat of a balanced supply chain — turning data into decisions.