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Reshoring Isn’t Just a Supply Chain Problem; It’s also an Engineering One
Blog | October 29th, 2025

Reshoring Isn’t Just a Supply Chain Problem; It’s also an Engineering One

A Conversation on Reshoring: Two Perspectives from Manufacturing

It’s a bustling afternoon at an industry conference organized by Salesforce in Atlanta. Between back-to-back panels, two supply chain leaders – one from a machine tools manufacturing company and the other from an auto components manufacturer find themselves standing by the coffee station, comparing notes.

SCM Head – Machine Tools Manufacturer:

“We’ve committed to reshoring nearly 30% of our precision parts. Honestly, I thought this was going to be a logistics challenge, finding local suppliers, cutting transit time, and stabilizing costs. But the real issues popped up elsewhere.”

SCM Head – Auto Components Manufacturer:

“Let me guess, you ran into engineering roadblocks?”

SCM Head – Machine Tools Manufacturer (laughs):

“Exactly. Our engineers had to redesign assemblies because local suppliers couldn’t machine the exact same tolerances as our offshore partners. In some cases, we had to switch to different alloys available domestically, which meant revalidation and fresh compliance documentation.”

SCM Head – Auto Components Manufacturer:

“That’s familiar. We thought we were just shifting suppliers, but suddenly, engineering was in the thick of it, reworking CAD models, updating process controls, even re-testing for IATF 16949 compliance. It wasn’t just the supply chain. It was design, quality, compliance, all moving parts at once.”

SCM Head – Machine Tools Manufacturer:

“So if engineering isn’t leading side-by-side with supply chain, reshoring turns into a nightmare.”

SCM Head – Auto Components Manufacturer:

“Exactly. Reshoring is a joint mission; engineering, quality, and supply chain all have to move in lockstep.”

This coffee-break exchange highlights a reality across industries: reshoring isn’t only a supply chain problem; it’s also an engineering one.

Why Reshoring is an Engineering Problem Too

  • Product Redesign and Localization
  • Reshoring often demands modifications to product design. Materials abundant overseas may not be easily sourced domestically. Components may need redesign for manufacturability with local suppliers. Engineering teams must collaborate with suppliers early to ensure designs remain compliant, manufacturable, and cost-effective in the new geography.
  • Regulatory and Compliance Adaptation
  • In regulated sectors like automotive and industrial equipment, reshoring requires reevaluating supplier qualifications and ensuring compliance with standards such as IATF 16949, ISO 9001, or regional safety regulations. Engineering plays a central role in validating new suppliers, conducting risk assessments, and ensuring compliance is embedded into design and production workflows.
  • Technology and Process Alignment
  • Reshored suppliers may use different machining technologies, automation levels, or quality control systems. Engineering must adapt processes, sometimes revalidating equipment, methods, and inspection criteria, to ensure consistency and traceability across the product lifecycle.
  • Continuous Collaboration Across Functions
  • Reshoring is not a one-time move. It’s an ongoing process of supplier evaluation, qualification, and monitoring. Engineering must remain tightly integrated with supply chain and quality teams to maintain resilience while continuing to drive innovation.

The Role of CQ PartnerQuest (Supplier Relationship Management Solution) in Driving Reshoring Success

Reshoring isn’t just about finding new suppliers. It’s about building strategic partnerships with critical suppliers, with engineering, quality, and supply chain teams all aligned.

This is where PartnerQuest, ComplianceQuest’s next-gen Supplier Relationship Management (SRM) solution, comes in:

  • Centralized Supplier Collaboration: A single portal where supply chain, engineering, and quality teams can co-manage suppliers, documents, and communication.
  • End-to-End Supplier Qualification: Automates onboarding, qualification, and audit processes, ensuring that new local suppliers are compliant from day one.
  • Integrated Risk Management: Tracks supplier risk continuously, linking it to corrective actions, quality events, and engineering change requests.
  • Design & Quality Integration: Direct integration with PLM and QMS systems means supplier quality data flows seamlessly into engineering change management. If a design needs to be updated for local manufacturability, PartnerQuest ensures all stakeholders stay in sync.
  • Performance Management: Dashboards for cost, delivery, capacity, and quality performance help leaders compare offshore vs. reshored suppliers in real time.
  • Collaboration History: Every supplier interaction, negotiation, corrective action, and design feedback is captured and accessible for future decision-making.

With PartnerQuest, reshoring becomes less about firefighting and more about building long-term engineering-supply partnerships that drive resilience and innovation.

Final Thoughts: Engineering + Supply Chain = True Reshoring Resilience

Reshoring is no longer optional; it’s essential for reducing risk, ensuring compliance, and securing business continuity. But manufacturers that treat it only as a supply chain initiative will face costly redesigns, delays, and compliance challenges.

The companies that win will be those that recognize reshoring as both a supply chain and engineering challenge and build systems to align both functions.

With PartnerQuest, organizations can close the gap, enabling engineering, supply chain, and quality leaders to co-manage supplier qualification, risk, compliance, and design integration. The result: faster supplier onboarding, compliant local production, and resilient supply networks built for the future.

Reshoring challenges in supply chain and engineering

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

  • Engineering challenges in reshoring include redesigning components for local manufacturability, adapting to new material availability, revalidating parts and processes, and ensuring compliance with regional standards such as IATF 16949 or ISO 9001. Without close collaboration between engineering, supply chain, and quality teams, reshoring can lead to delays, higher costs, and compliance risks.

  • An SRM solution like PartnerQuest enables manufacturers to qualify new local suppliers faster, track supplier risks in real time, and integrate supplier performance data into engineering and quality systems. This reduces the time and complexity of supplier onboarding, ensures compliance from day one, and helps companies build more resilient supply networks when reshoring.

  • While supply chain teams handle sourcing and logistics, engineering must adapt designs, validate processes, and ensure regulatory compliance when moving production closer to home. Reshoring requires simultaneous alignment of supply chain, quality, and engineering functions, making it both a logistical and technical challenge.

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