There is a version of this conversation that happens all the time in automotive procurement — and it almost always ends badly. An engineer sends drawings to a machining supplier. The supplier confirms they can produce the part. The first batch arrives. And then the dimensional report reveals that “can…
Ask any supply chain manager what keeps them up at night, and the answer is rarely a single catastrophic failure. It’s the accumulation of small ones — the tolerance that drifted somewhere between vendor two and vendor three, the delivery that slipped because two suppliers were pointing at each other,…
There’s a moment every procurement manager and plant engineer dreads. A critical component goes obsolete. The original supplier has shut down. The drawings don’t exist anymore. And production can’t stop. What happens next depends entirely on which solution you reach for — and whether you understand the difference between two…
Every procurement manager in the automotive industry knows the feeling. You’ve shortlisted three or four component manufacturers. The quotes look reasonable. The catalogues look impressive. And then — six weeks into production — the tolerances are off, the delivery slips, or you get a quality report that raises more questions…




