Supply Chain Visualization and Reporting

Find out what you know - and what you don’t know - about your supply chain in seconds. Secure and cloud-based, discover any supplier, any site, any material, at the click of a button.

 

The First Visualization Developed Specifically for Supply Chains

Award-winning geo-visualizations and network diagrams are only the surface: Sourcemap's supply chain visualization engine makes sense of incredibly big datasets covering every tier from raw material to distribution, every SKU, every single transaction, for complete assurance: if you don't see it, it's not there (or you aren't measuring it).

See what you know - and don't know - about your supply chain in seconds

Secure and cloud-based, Sourcemap's supply chain visualization lets you gather supply network data from across your organization and store it in one place, allowing you to quickly see what you know and what you don't.

Gain Rapid Insight into Supply Risk Exposure

If you haven't mapped your supply network, you don't know which suppliers and shipping lanes present the greatest risk. And when something happens, you'll be happy you mapped your supply chain in Sourcemap: you can find any supplier, any site, any material, at the click of a button.

Plan for a Better Supply Chain

Need to reduce inventory? Revise pricing? Replace distribution centers? Make a plan and follow through using Sourcemap's instant visualizations: create unlimited scenarios, visualize any KPI's, and present the results to leadership, all in minutes.

Enjoy World-Class Support

Our customers love us, and the reason is simple: Sourcemap specialists will be there every step of the way to train you, suggest advanced strategies, and make the best of your supply chain visualizations. Get started within 24 hours of requesting a demo.

 

FAQs

  • People have been mapping supply chains as long as they’ve been making maps. But traditional maps only provide a summary view - they don't show how supply chains change in real time. Modern supply chain mapping is the process of engaging across companies and suppliers to document the exact source of every material, every process and every shipment involved in bringing goods to market. Accurate supply chain mapping only became possible with the rise of online maps and the social web. The first online supply chain mapping platform was developed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2008 (the underlying open source technology is the basis for Sourcemap). Read More

  • The concept of supply chain transparency was virtually unknown 15 years ago, yet today it commands the attention of mid- and senior-level managers across a broad spectrum of companies and industries.

    The reasons for this increased interest are clear: Companies are under pressure from governments, consumers, NGOs, and other stakeholders to divulge more information about their supply chains, and the reputational cost of failing to meet these demands can be high. For example, food companies are facing more demand for supply-chain-related information about ingredients, food fraud, animal welfare, and child labor. Less clear, however, is how to define transparency in a supply chain context and the extent to which companies should pursue it: an MIT study that mapped definitions of supply chain transparency related to labor practices in the apparel industry found vastly different definitions across organizations.

  • Companies are under increased pressure from governments and regulators to ensure that their products are compliant with human rights and environmental standards. The only way for companies to ensure their supply chains are "clean" is by mapping their supply chains down the raw materials using auditable, verifiable data.

  • Downstream is logistics. Where are the pair of sneakers that I ordered, and when will they arrive from the warehouse to the store? Sourcemap is not a logistics solution provider.

    Sourcemap maps the end to end upstream supply chain. Where was the leather sourced that was used to make that pair of sneakers, and how many suppliers did that pair of sneakers have to go through as it was being made?