Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

AFTERWORD

An EDGE to remember

This year’s annual conference served up inspiration and hope for the future.

I don’t know about you, but fall is my favorite season of the year. Seeing the green of summer change into gorgeous yellows, oranges, and reds; watching the late afternoon shadows grow longer as the sun sets; enjoying Saturday or Sunday afternoon football tailgates with friends; and feeling the chill of crisp mornings are some of the things I enjoy the most. But another reason I love the Fall is that it is the season for our annual CSCMP EDGE Conference. 

Like many of you, I have just returned from EDGE 2022 in Nashville, Tennessee. What an amazing event it was! EDGE always leaves me with so many feelings. For sure, exhaustion is usually one of those, but that wears off quickly! More importantly, I always leave with excitement about all that is happening in the supply chain world, admiration and pride in the quality and caliber of our CSCMP members, and above all gratitude … gratitude for having the honor of serving the organization on the board of directors and especially as this year’s board chair. What an amazing privilege!


EDGE is the embodiment of CSCMP’s mission to connect, educate, and develop. I enjoyed seeing so many of my friends and colleagues again and making some new connections in Nashville. Many of my oldest friendships started from a connection at EDGE. Perhaps COVID made us all more deeply appreciate being together in person. I know it felt extra special to me this year. 

The content and speakers in the EDGE keynotes, mega-sessions, and track sessions were just incredible. I always bring back new concepts and ideas, and this year was no exception. Every year, after sitting and listening thoughtfully to so many great EDGE sessions, I leave the conference thinking differently about some of the challenges I am facing. 

Finally, I left EDGE in Nashville feeling recharged about the future of our profession. We in supply chain have had a tough couple of years to say the least. But I am confident that the future is bright! At no time has there been this much transformation happening. New technologies—such as robotics and automation, data science, artificial intelligence, and machine learning—are rapidly reshaping our supply chains. 

But even in the face of this breathtaking technological transformation, our profession at its core is still about people. Our membership is made of the folks that have capably weathered so many unprecedented global challenges and kept businesses running through COVID. I found myself looking around the packed ballroom in the keynote sessions and thinking about that very fact with great pride. 

But perhaps the greatest source of inspiration I left EDGE with was the students and young professionals I met. They were (and are) simply amazing. The energy, curiosity, drive, and talent they possess will power CSCMP and supply chain in the decades ahead. What an exciting time to be in supply chain!

Now it’s time for all of us to jump back into holiday planning and to start looking ahead to 2023. There’s never “down” time in supply chain, but our time together at EDGE every year is always time well spent.

Recent

More Stories

For Mattel, strategy and focus reign supreme

For Mattel, strategy and focus reign supreme

We may be living in a world full of technology, but strategy and focus remain the top priorities when it comes to managing a business and its supply chains. So says Roberto Isaias, executive vice president and chief supply chain officer for toy manufacturing and entertainment company Mattel.

Isaias emphasized the point during his keynote presentation on day two of EDGE 2024, a supply chain conference sponsored by the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP), being held in Nashville this week. He described Mattel’s journey to transform its business and its supply chain amid surging demand for Barbie-branded items following the success of the Barbie movie last year.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

containers being loaded on truck at dock

Uber Freight: technology can mitigate impact of port strikes

The onset of a strike today by dockworkers at U.S. East and Gulf coast ports has left shippers in a “predicament” of choosing between different workarounds, but the latest transportation technology offers them some creative alternatives, according to Uber Freight CEO Lior Ron.

Confronted with the closed ports, most companies can either route their imports to standard East Coast destinations and wait for the strike to clear, or else re-route those containers to West Coast sites, incurring a three week delay for extra sailing time plus another week required to truck those goods back east, Ron said in an interview at the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP)’s EDGE Conference in Nashville.

Keep ReadingShow less
warehouse problem medical triage strategy

Medical triage inspires warehouse process fixes

Turning around a failing warehouse operation demands a similar methodology to how emergency room doctors triage troubled patients at the hospital, a speaker said today in a session at the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP)’s EDGE Conference in Nashville.

There are many reasons that a warehouse might start to miss its targets, such as a sudden volume increase or a new IT system implementation gone wrong, said Adri McCaskill, general manager for iPlan’s Warehouse Management business unit. But whatever the cause, the basic rescue strategy is the same: “Just like medicine, you do triage,” she said. “The most life-threatening problem we try to solve first. And only then, once we’ve stopped the bleeding, we can move on.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Preparing for the truckload market upswing

Preparing for the truckload market upswing

CSCMP EDGE attendees gathered Tuesday afternoon for an update and outlook on the truckload (TL) market, which is on the upswing following the longest down cycle in recorded history. Kevin Adamik of RXO (formerly Coyote Logistics), offered an overview of truckload market cycles, highlighting major trends from the recent freight recession and providing an update on where the TL cycle is now.

EDGE 2024, sponsored by the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP), is taking place this week in Nashville.

Keep ReadingShow less
Managing the 3PL/client relationship

Managing the 3PL/client relationship

The relationship between shippers and third-party logistics services providers (3PLs) is at the core of successful supply chain management—so getting that relationship right is vital. A panel of industry experts from both sides of the aisle weighed in on what it takes to create strong 3PL/shipper partnerships on day two of the CSCMP EDGE conference, being held this week in Nashville.

Trust, empathy, and transparency ranked high on the list of key elements required for success in all aspects of the partnership, but there are some specifics for each step of the journey. The panel recommended a handful of actions that should take place early on, including:

Keep ReadingShow less