Managing Downstream Traceability to Prevent Grey Market Diversion An Exploratory Case Study of Distribution Control in a Global Medtech Company
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Examensarbete för masterexamen
Master's Thesis
Master's Thesis
Modellbyggare
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Sammanfattning
Grey market diversion, meaning the redistribution of genuine products through
unauthorised channels, represents a growing challenge for medical technology
companies operating in global multi-tiered distribution networks. This study
investigates how downstream traceability solutions and organisational practices can
help detect and prevent product diversion using an antiseptic product from Mölnlycke
Healthcare in the US market as a case.
The study adopts an exploratory qualitative approach where semi-structured
interviews with both internal stakeholders and external industry experts serves as the
main data collection method. The findings show that the primary challenge is not the
availability of traceability tools but rather maintaining visibility in complex
distribution networks. Batch-level identification, combined with strong economic
incentives in the US market landscape, creates conditions where unauthorised resale is
difficult to prevent.
Item-level serialisation emerges as a potential near-term technical solution, enabling
targeted buybacks and deterrence without requiring full supply chain participation.
Artificial intelligence could complement this by automating the detection of data
anomalies and patterns in existing systems. Organisational and commercial practices
are equally as important since without clear ownership, cross-functional coordination
and enforcement mandate, enhanced traceability risks becoming an investment
without meaningful results. The thesis concludes that downstream traceability should
be understood as a strategic capability rather than just an operational tool, requiring
engagement from all parts of an organisation.
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Ämne/nyckelord
Downstream traceability, Grey market, Parallel trade, Product diversion, Supply chain visibility, Serialisation, Medical technology, Distribution control, Channel governance
