Global sourcing
Global sourcing extends procurement activities across international markets to access capabilities, pricing, or materials not available domestically. This strategy can unlock significant cost advantages, specialized expertise, and supply options but introduces complexity around logistics, quality management, communication, and risk factors unique to cross-border trade.
Examples
Cost-driven global sourcing: A furniture manufacturer sources wood components from Southeast Asian suppliers, achieving 40% cost reduction compared to domestic sources. The savings justify the longer lead times and logistics complexity involved in international shipping.
Capability-driven global sourcing: A technology company sources precision optics from specialized German manufacturers because no domestic suppliers offer equivalent technical capability. Cost is secondary to accessing world-class expertise in this specialized field.
Diversification-driven global sourcing: An electronics manufacturer adds Asian suppliers to complement domestic sources, reducing concentration risk and providing options to shift production based on trade policy, currency movements, or regional disruptions.
Definition
Global sourcing grew dramatically as trade liberalization, container shipping, and communication technology made international supply chains practical. Many industries now rely on global supply networks that span multiple continents, with different production stages occurring where capabilities and economics are most favorable.
Successful global sourcing requires managing challenges absent in domestic procurement: longer lead times, shipping and customs logistics, currency risk, communication across time zones and languages, intellectual property protection, ethical sourcing compliance, and country-specific risks from politics, natural disasters, or infrastructure.
Total landed cost analysis is essential for evaluating global sourcing opportunities. Low unit prices can be offset by freight, duties, insurance, inventory carrying costs for longer lead times, quality costs from difficulty managing distant suppliers, and travel expenses for supplier management. What looks attractive on unit price may not pencil out when all costs are included.
Global sourcing maturity develops over time. Organizations often start with simple buy-and-ship transactions, then develop capabilities for more complex global supply chains including local personnel, logistics partnerships, and supplier development programs in key sourcing regions.
Related Terms
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