According to www.ivalua.com, supply chain risk management (SCRM) has become a core priority for global organizations amid escalating geopolitical, environmental, and cyber threats — with 70% of organizations now prioritizing supply chain visibility and resilience as key areas for technological investment.
What Is SCRM — And Why It’s Distinct from SCM
Supply chain risk management refers to the structured process of identifying, assessing, mitigating, and monitoring risks that can disrupt the flow of goods, services, information, and finances across a supply network. Unlike supply chain management (SCM), which focuses on coordinating efficient sourcing, production, and distribution to achieve cost-effective flow and service reliability, SCRM centers on uncertainty and threat mitigation — addressing vulnerabilities across suppliers, logistics networks, and internal processes. The two disciplines are complementary: SCM delivers stability and efficiency; SCRM safeguards continuity and long-term resilience.
Why SCRM Is Strategic, Not Tactical
A single breakdown in the supply chain can hinder product and service delivery, erode customer trust, and damage reputation. Proactive planning — not reactive firefighting — is now essential. According to KPMG,
“Risk management is no longer a back-office function — it’s now central to business strategy, with more than 70% of companies prioritizing risk resilience as a top investment.”
Key Risk Categories Facing Supply Chains
- Internal Risks: Include operational inefficiencies, financial volatility (e.g., fluctuating demand or cash flow issues), manufacturing delays or labor shortages, and contract/compliance failures — such as breaches of right-to-audit clauses or regulatory non-compliance.
- External Risks: Encompass reputational exposure from supplier misconduct; cybersecurity threats — exemplified by the 2021 Colonial Pipeline ransomware incident that triggered widespread fuel shortages; geopolitical disruptions like the U.S.-China trade war, which imposed tariffs on $380 billion worth of Chinese goods; and environmental hazards — including the 18 separate billion-dollar climate and weather disasters reported by NOAA in the U.S. in 2022 alone.
Strategic Imperatives for Practitioners
For supply chain professionals, the shift demands cross-functional collaboration, continuous supplier engagement, and adoption of digital platforms delivering predictive risk intelligence. Structured frameworks — rather than ad hoc responses — enable proactive disruption management. As volatility intensifies, integrating SCRM into procurement, sourcing, and supplier management workflows is no longer optional: it’s foundational to operational agility, financial protection, and regulatory compliance. Ivalua’s recognition as a Leader in the 2026 Gartner Magic Quadrant™ for Source-to-Pay Suites underscores the convergence of source-to-pay digitization and resilient risk management capabilities.
Source: www.ivalua.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









