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Three Areas Driving Performance for Manufacturing and Distribution Companies

Jun 19, 2026

Manufacturing and distribution companies are operating in a period defined by complexity. Margins remain under pressure, supply chains continue to evolve, labor constraints persist, and technology is advancing faster than many companies can absorb.

While leaders are managing a wide range of challenges amid this operational, financial, and strategic uncertainty, three issues consistently emerge as the most critical drivers of performance:

  1. Inventory and cost visibility
  2. Risk and control failures
  3. Strategic investment decisions

Companies that understand and actively manage these areas are better positioned to protect margins, preserve cash flow, and create long-term value. Let’s look at each challenge and best practices to help improve results.

1. Inventory and Cost Visibility: The Core Element of Profitability

Inventory is at the center of nearly every manufacturing and distribution business. It’s often the largest asset on a company’s balance sheet and one of the most significant factors in profitability and liquidity. Yet many manufacturing and distribution companies struggle to fully understand its complexities. 

Moving Beyond Basic Inventory Tracking

Companies often believe they have a strong grasp on inventory because they maintain system records and perform periodic counts. However, inventory visibility requires more than just knowing quantities on hand.

To truly understand inventory, you need confidence in three critical areas:

  • The accuracy of physical counts
  • The completeness of cost capture
  • A realistic assessment of usability and demand

Inaccuracy in any of these areas can negatively impact decision-making.

The Hidden Risk in Costing

Cost accounting remains a persistent challenge. While raw material costs are typically well tracked, indirect costs such as labor allocation, overhead absorption, and production inefficiencies are often less precise.

Inaccurate cost allocations can lead companies to underprice goods in competitive markets and miss opportunities to improve margins. Over time, these misalignments can materially affect financial performance.

The Cost of Excess Inventory

In the wake of recent supply chain volatility, many companies increased their inventory levels to safeguard production. That strategy provided short-term stability but created longer-term challenges.

Excess and slow-moving inventory now:

  • Increases storage costs
  • Ties up working capital
  • Creates a risk of obsolescence 

Financial statements may reflect strong asset levels, but the underlying economic value of the inventory may be significantly lower.

What Leading Companies Are Doing Differently

Top-performing manufacturers and distributors are moving from reactive to proactive inventory management by:

  • Implementing more frequent cycle counts instead of relying on annual physicals
  • Enhancing cost accounting methodologies to better reflect true production costs
  • Monitoring inventory turnover and SKU-level profitability
  • Aligning purchasing decisions with demand forecasting and sales data

This proactive approach marks a shift from looking backward to actively managing forward.

2. Risk and Control Failures: The Quiet Threat to Financial Stability

Not all risks are visible in day-to-day operations or financial reports. Some of the most damaging issues build quietly over time until they surface as significant financial or operational events.

The Prevalence of “Quiet” Fraud Risk

Fraud within manufacturing and distribution companies rarely begins as a large-scale scheme. Instead, it typically starts with small, seemingly insignificant actions that go undetected due to oversight gaps.

Common exposure areas include:

  • Corporate credit cards and expense reimbursements
  • Payroll systems and employee records
  • Vendor relationships and payment processing

Control Weaknesses: Execution vs. Design

In many cases, the issue isn’t that controls don’t exist. Rather, it’s that they aren’t consistently executed. Breakdowns often occur due to:

  • Lack of timely review and approval
  • Too much access concentrated in too few individuals
  • Over-reliance on trust instead of verification

This creates opportunities for both intentional fraud and unintentional errors.

Cybersecurity as a Business Risk

Cybersecurity has evolved from an IT concern to a core operational risk. For manufacturers and distributors, system downtime can halt production, disrupt shipments, and damage customer relationships.

Even companies that outsource IT functions remain exposed if they don’t:

  • Properly monitor service providers
  • Test and validate backup systems
  • Train employees to recognize cyber threats

Many cyber incidents originate from simple human error, such as clicking on a malicious link, responding to a fraudulent email, or unintentionally disclosing credentials.

Strengthening the Control Environment

Companies that effectively manage risk are taking a disciplined approach. This includes:

  • Segregating duties across financial processes
  • Requiring an independent review of key transactions
  • Monitoring access to critical systems and data
  • Conducting periodic fraud and cybersecurity risk assessments
  • Investing in employee awareness and training

Effective risk management involves implementing and enforcing robust controls that perform as intended.

3. Strategic Investment Decisions: Navigating Uncertainty with Discipline

Manufacturing and distribution leaders must make critical investment decisions in a volatile environment. Technological advancements, labor constraints, and external economic factors are all influencing where and how companies allocate capital.

Balancing AI and Automation Opportunity and Execution

Artificial intelligence is rapidly becoming part of the strategic conversation. While the potential benefits are significant—including increased efficiency, improved decision-making, and enhanced quality—most companies are still in the early stages of adoption.

The primary challenge is effectively executing AI solutions. Common pitfalls include:

  • Investing in technology without clearly defined use cases
  • Underestimating the time and cost of implementation
  • Failing to train employees or integrate systems into existing workflows

As a result, many companies underutilize the tools they invest in.

Managing Workforce Constraints Through Change

As labor shortages continue to impact production capacity and cost structures, manufacturing and distribution companies are rethinking how work gets done. That’s leading companies to:

  • Leverage automation to reduce reliance on manual labor
  • Redesign processes to improve efficiency
  • Shift employee roles toward higher-value activities
  • Explore offshoring or outsourcing where appropriate

It’s about optimizing human capital, not just replacing labor.

Navigating External Pressures

Several external forces are also shaping strategic planning:

A More Disciplined Approach to Investment

Successful manufacturers and distributors are prioritizing investments that align with their long-term strategy and deliver measurable returns by:

  • Conducting rigorous cost-benefit analyses
  • Aligning technology investments with operational needs
  • Integrating financial, tax, and operational planning
  • Maintaining the flexibility to adapt as conditions change

These companies invest wisely rather than reactively chasing every opportunity.

Why Execution Makes the Difference

These three issuesinventory visibility, risk management, and strategic investment—are deeply interconnected. Weaknesses in one area can amplify challenges in the others.

For example, poor inventory visibility can mask fraud or inefficiencies. Weak controls can undermine investment returns. And bad investment decisions can strain working capital.

The most successful manufacturing and distribution companies aren’t necessarily doing more. They are executing better by:

  • Understanding what’s really driving their financial performance
  • Proactively identifying and mitigating risk
  • Making disciplined, well-informed strategic decisions

In an environment defined by uncertainty, clarity and execution are the true competitive advantages. If you’re seeing gaps in visibility, questioning whether your controls are effective, or evaluating where to invest next, contact your CRI advisor. We can work with you to assess your current position, pinpoint opportunities for improvement, and help you create a practical plan for success.

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