Remove Detroit Remove Sourcing Remove Supply Chain Disruption Remove Transportation
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How To Overcome Supply Chain Disruption

GlobalTranz

Supply chain disruption is a fact of life for every company that moves any type of product. There won’t be a new normal, just new sources of disruption, from weather to government policies to industry conditions. Preparing your supply chain for resiliency begins with risk management and a proactive strategy.

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Supply Chain Disruptions Are Here to Stay with Steve Elwell

The Logistics of Logistics

Steve Elwell and Joe Lynch discuss why supply chain disruptions are here to stay. Steve is he Managing Director of Haxlar , an integrated manufacturing solutions provider, delivering design, manufacturing, sourcing, supply chain, and product management services for a wide range of industries. About Haxlar.

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What is Supply Chain Resiliency?

Logistics Viewpoints

If your company’s supply chain survived 2020 and the disruptions of early 2021, it’s safe to say it has passed the supply chain resiliency test. Supply chain disruption has many sources: tariffs and trade disputes, natural disasters, pandemics, economic uncertainty and cybersecurity attacks.

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Auto Supply Chain Prophets Podcast Wrap-up: Eps. 37-40

QAD

As we move from the leisurely days of summer to fall and peak demand season, I’m reminded that the automotive supply chain is changing just as rapidly as the seasons do. The way we source materials and manufacture and transport products is changing, and nobody knows these challenges quite like your frontline workers.

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Supply Chain Lessons Learned during the Pandemic

Enterra Insights

Ken Heydon, a Visiting Fellow at the London School of Economics, explains, “Well before the COVID-19 pandemic, global value chains (GVCs) were losing their impetus as drivers of world growth.”[2] ” Because supply chains are unique for each company, lessons learned also vary by economic sector.

Modeling 169
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Supply Chain Management in a VUCA World

Enterra Insights

.”[2] He goes on to note, “The phrase ‘Supply Chain Management’ was originally coined by Keith Oliver in 1982 and subsequently gained increasing popularity as its usage was proliferated in books and language.” To make that point, Mortson lists ten different definitions for the term from various sources.