IBM launches blockchain solution for supplier identification, information sharing for buyers

IBM has launched a new blockchain solution named Trust Your Supplier (TYS), which aims at improving supplier validation, onboarding and life cycle information management.

Update: 2019-08-06 12:24 GMT
By using blockchain, data sharing is permission-based, which IBM said should help reduce the time and cost associated with qualifying, validating and managing new suppliers.

August 06, 2019: IBM has launched a new blockchain solution named Trust Your Supplier (TYS), which aims at improving supplier validation, onboarding, and life cycle information management. Together with Chainyard, IBM with some major shippers, including GlaxoSmithKline, Lenovo, and Vodafone, have already signed up to it.

"Blockchain has the ability to completely transform how companies onboard and manage their supplier network. Through TYS, both buyers and suppliers will the see the procurement benefits of blockchain through reductions in cost, complexity, and speed," noted Renee Ure, chief supply chain officer for Lenovo's Data Centre Group.

TYS creates a 'digital passport' for supplier identity on the blockchain network that allows suppliers to share information with any permitted buyer on the network.

By using blockchain, data sharing is permission-based, which IBM said should help reduce the time and cost associated with qualifying, validating and managing new suppliers.

"Traditional methods of managing suppliers often involve cumbersome manual processes, which make it difficult to verify identities and track," IBM stated. "By using a decentralised approach and an immutable blockchain audit trail, TYS is designed to eliminate manual time-consuming processes and help reduce risks of fraud and errors."

Research firm Gartner recently claimed blockchain would track $2 trillion worth of goods a year by 2023, with IBM keen to onboard 4,000 of its own suppliers this year.

Vice president of procurement at Nokia, which has also signed up to TYS, Sanjay Mehta said, "This blockchain initiative represents a great opportunity for us. Using the latest technology to address a classical challenge will be of benefit for everyone, and further increase the speed of using innovative solutions."

This is not the IT giant's first venture in supply chain blockchain technology, having jointly launched its TradeLens platform some 20 months ago with Maersk. 

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