SMT Blog

Supply Chain Transparency - What OEMs Should Expect from Their Partner

Written by Brian Lamers | May 18, 2026

 

In today's environment, uncertainty is the only constant.  Component shortages, fluctuating lead times, and global disruptions are no longer exceptions - they are operational realities. 

That's why supply chain transparency is no longer optional in an EMS partnership.  It's foundational.

 

What Transparency Actually Means

Transparency isn't just sending a BOM cost spreadsheet.  It mean proactive, real-time communication that allows OEMs to make informed decisions.

OEMs should expect:

Clear Component Status Reporting

  • Current lead times
  • Allocation risks
  • Lifecycle flags
  • Pricing shifts

 

Forecast Collaboration

EMS partner should actively review demand projections and communicate risk exposure before it becomes a production issue.

Early Risk Identification

Proactive notification when:

  • A part becomes NRND
  • Lead times extend beyond build schedules
  • Suppliers announce capacity constriants

Open Communication on Alternatives

When substitutions are required, OEMs should recieve:

  • Technical impact assessment
  • Cost implications
  • Lead time comparison
  • Documentation updates

 

Why Transparency Reduces Risk

Without visibility, OEMs operate reactively.

With transparency:

  • Production schedules remain predictable
  • Engineering can evaluate alternatives early
  • Finance can manage cost fluctuations
  • Procurement can adjust forecasting

An EMS partner should function as an extension of your supply chain team - not just a purchasing agent.

Strong transparency builds trust.  And trust lowers risk.