Course Content
Business Registration
Southwark Pioneers Fund: Launchpad

This lesson helps learners understand how their suppliers, partners, and service providers affect day-to-day operations, and why managing these relationships is essential for smooth and reliable business delivery.

It applies to both product-based and service-based businesses.

 

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, learners will be able to:

  • Understand what a supply chain is
  • Identify who is part of their supply chain
  • Recognise common supply chain risks
  • Understand how good supplier relationships support business operations

 

What Is a Supply Chain?

A supply chain includes everyone involved in helping your business deliver its product or service.

This may include:

  • Suppliers of materials or stock
  • Manufacturers or producers
  • Service providers or freelancers
  • Platforms, tools, or logistics partners

Even service businesses have supply chains, such as software providers, venues, or contractors.

 

Why Supply Chains Matter for Small Businesses

For small and early-stage businesses:

  • Supply chain issues can quickly disrupt operations
  • Delays or quality problems affect customer trust
  • Over-reliance on one supplier increases risk

Strong supply chains help ensure:

  • Consistent delivery
  • Better planning
  • More reliable operations

 

Understanding Your Supply Chain

Learners should be encouraged to think about:

  • How many people or businesses are involved
  • Which suppliers are critical to delivery
  • Where suppliers are based, locally or overseas
  • Which parts of the supply chain are outside their control

Understanding this helps identify where problems could occur.

 

Common Supply Chain Risks

Typical risks include:

  • Supplier delays
  • Rising costs
  • Quality issues
  • Overseas disruption
  • Communication breakdowns

These risks affect both product and service businesses.

 

Managing Supply Chain Risk

Managing supply chain risk does not require complex systems.

Good practice includes:

  • Building strong relationships with suppliers
  • Communicating clearly and regularly
  • Avoiding dependence on a single supplier where possible
  • Planning realistic timelines

Treating suppliers as partners rather than just vendors

Exercise Files
Supply Chain Activity.docx
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