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Supply Chain & Logistics News April 7th- 10th 2025
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1 an agoon
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Here’s your supply chain & logistics news for the week. Some key developments in supply chain and logistics include Vertex Pharmaceuticals’ successful integration of a human-centric digital strategy, leveraging technologies like Continuous Manufacturing and MES to boost agility and workforce adoption. At Kinexions 2025, the spotlight was on navigating AI disruption and trade wars through solutions like the Kinaxis-Databricks data fabric and new AI Agents. Unilever acquired the eco-conscious brand Wild to strengthen its sustainable product portfolio, while President Trump’s tariff policy shift caused supply chain volatility and forced companies to revise risk and compliance strategies. Meanwhile, Base Power raised $200M to scale its home battery business, supporting grid resilience and clean energy goals across the U.S.
Biggest Headlines of the Week:
Vertex Pharmaceuticals Successfully Integrates a Human-Centric Digital Strategy
Vertex Pharmaceuticals has successfully integrated a human-centric digital strategy to enhance supply chain agility. At the ARC Forum 2025, Rachelle Howard highlighted how Vertex combines advanced technologies like Continuous Manufacturing (CM), Process Analytical Technology (PAT), Warehouse Barcoding, and Manufacturing Execution Systems (MES) with a strong people-focused culture. These innovations have significantly reduced production cycles and improved logistics efficiency, cutting warehouse batch processing time and line changeovers. Vertex’s approach also emphasizes building a robust internal data culture and upskilling teams, ensuring digital systems are fully adopted across supply chain functions. This balanced strategy has given Vertex a competitive edge, enabling faster product launches, better compliance, and greater market responsiveness.
Kinexions 2025: AI Agents and Data Fabrics Empower Supply Chain Heroes Amidst Trade and AI Wars
ARC analyst Colin Mason shares his professional outlook on the current state of the supply chain market following his attendance at Kinexions 2025. Currently, there are dual disruptions of trade wars and the rapid advancements in artificial intelligence (AI), which are creating unprecedented volatility and complexity in global supply chains. Trade wars introduce barriers like tariffs and trade restrictions, affecting raw material sourcing, manufacturing, and the flow of goods. Concurrently, the AI revolution drives intense competition and technological innovation, necessitating new strategies for supply chain management. The Kinexions 2025 conference highlighted these challenges and introduced solutions such as the Kinaxis-Databricks partnership, which aims to create a robust Supply Chain Data Fabric. This partnership enhances data integration and AI capabilities, enabling better decision-making and resilience. Additionally, Kinaxis announced AI Agents within its Maestro platform to automate tasks and manage disruptions proactively. Overall, the importance of data quality and sophisticated AI should be a core strategy for companies to navigate these complex challenges effectively.
Unilever Acquires Eco-Friendly Personal Care Brand Wild
Unilever has acquired the eco-friendly personal care brand Wild, which is known for its mission to eliminate single-use plastic from bathrooms. Wild offers natural, refillable alternatives to traditional personal care products, such as deodorants, lip balms, body washes, and hand washes. The acquisition aligns with Unilever’s Growth Action Plan 2030, which focuses on optimizing its portfolio towards premium and high-growth spaces, including sustainable products. Wild’s innovative approach to formulations and packaging, combined with its strong digital and retail presence, has made it the UK’s No. 1 refillable deodorant brand. This move is expected to strengthen Wild’s mission by leveraging Unilever’s expertise, scale, and reach, further promoting sustainability in the personal care industry. The acquisition also highlights the growing consumer demand for sustainable and refillable products, which are seen as key areas for future growth in the market.
ProMat 2025: Robotics Steps Up to Tackle the Warehouse Labor Crisis
Alex Chatha, ARC analyst attended ProMat 2025, held at McCormick Place in Chicago from March 17th to 20th. The 3-day trade show showcased the latest innovations in manufacturing and supply chain technology, with a strong focus on robotics to address the ongoing labor shortage in warehousing and logistics. The event highlighted various robotic solutions, including dense storage systems, autonomous mobile robots (AMRs), aerial inventory management drones, and robotic picking systems. These technologies aim to maximize efficiency, reduce labor requirements, and improve overall productivity. Key exhibitors like Quicktron, XYZ Robotics, Universal Robots, and others demonstrated their advanced robotic systems, emphasizing versatility, AI-driven capabilities, and seamless integration with existing warehouse operations. The exhibition underscored the industry’s commitment to automation as a crucial strategy for overcoming labor challenges and enhancing supply chain resilience.
Tariff Whiplash
In the last 24 hours, President Trump announced a 90-day pause on all tariffs keeping the 10% baseline on all countries as well as the additional Chinese tariffs.
President Trump’s newly implemented tariffs, reaching up to 104% on imports from countries like China, Japan, Vietnam, and India, have triggered significant disruptions in global supply chains. These tariffs affect a wide range of products, including electronics, automotive parts, textiles, and industrial machinery. The immediate impact includes market volatility, with stock futures plunging before partially recovering, and early signs of supply reallocation efforts by importers. Freight forwarders and procurement managers are rerouting orders through lower-tariff regions, while U.S. ports report increased inquiries about customs reclassification and bonded warehousing strategies. The drop in crude oil prices below $60 per barrel adds mixed signals for logistics, potentially easing transportation fuel costs but also indicating deteriorating trade health. Supply chain leaders are advised to revise risk assessments, and trade compliance strategies, and prepare for potential delayed retaliation from affected countries.
Base Power Lands $200M for Rapidly Growing Home-Battery Business
Base Power, a Texas-based startup, has secured $200 million in funding to expand its home battery business. The company, which provides large home batteries for minimal upfront costs and a commitment to buy retail power from Base, plans to use the funds to build a domestic factory and expand beyond Texas. Base Power’s model involves installing batteries in homes, which can be dispatched into Texas’ energy markets managed by ERCOT, providing cheaper and more reliable power for homeowners while stabilizing the grid. The company has seen rapid growth, with in-house teams installing 20 home battery systems per day, and aims to reach 100 megawatt-hours of installed capacity by mid-summer. This approach not only supports clean energy goals but also offers a scalable solution to the challenges of distributed energy resources. The new funding will help Base Power navigate regulatory differences across states and partner with utilities to expand its market presence.
Song of the week:
The post Supply Chain & Logistics News April 7th- 10th 2025 appeared first on Logistics Viewpoints.
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Warehouse Orchestration: Solving the Daily Breakdown Between Plan and Execution
Published
22 heures agoon
14 mai 2026By
In most warehouses today, the problem is not whether work gets done; it is how much effort it takes to keep everything aligned and on track. Every day, there is a breakdown between the plan and executing the plan. Labor plans, inbound schedules, picking priorities, and automation all operate from valid assumptions, but not always the same ones. The gaps between them are filled in real time by supervisors and teams, making constant adjustments. That is what keeps operations running, but it is also what makes them fragile.
It is a challenge many operations recognize. Even with modern systems in place, execution still depends heavily on human coordination. Warehouse orchestration is the shift from managing tasks independently to coordinating the entire operation and ensuring decisions across the system stay aligned as conditions change. The best way to understand what that means in practice is not through a system diagram, but through the lens and experience of the people running the floor.
Consider Maria, a warehouse supervisor responsible for keeping a high-volume operation on track. She is experienced, practical, and steady under pressure, but what she is really managing is not just work; it is complexity.
At any given moment, she balances labor availability, work queues, inbound variability, equipment status, and shifting order priorities. Those inputs are not wrong. They are just not aligned. It is her job to bridge that gap in real time.
A shift that starts “normal” … until it does not
Maria arrives before the floor fully wakes up. Her first stop is not the dock or the pick module; it is yesterday’s reality. What shipped? What did not? Where did the backlog form? Which waves did not behave as the plan assumed? She is not looking for blame; she is looking for drift. Drift is what turns into firefighting later.
Demand shifted over the weekend, but the pick face still reflects last week’s reality. One area is short-staffed; another has idle labor. When the team built the labor plan, it made sense, but the day had already moved on. The team scheduled inbound; however, it is not predictable. Every ETA is a best guess, and how trailers show up rarely matches how they appear on a screen.
Individually, nothing here is catastrophic, but warehouses do not fail all at once. They gradually lose alignment between plan and execution. The team compensates in real time by moving people, reprioritizing work, working around automation delays, and making judgment calls. And the shift “works,” but there is a cost:
Overtime, which did not need to happen.
Detention fees, which show up later.
Service misses, driven by wrong priorities rather than a lack of effort.
Leaders who spend more time reacting than improving.
These challenges are the reality across many operations. Execution is strong, but coordination is fragile.
The real bottleneck: decisions are fragmented
Most warehouses are not short on tools. They have WMS, robotics systems, labor tools, and planning solutions. Each one does its job well, but they do not make decisions together. Each system optimizes its scope based on different priorities or timings. The gaps between them are filled manually by people like Maria. In an environment with less variability, that might work, but in most cases:
Demand changes faster and more frequently.
Labor is less predictable.
Automation introduces new dependencies.
Customer expectations continue to rise.
Under these conditions, static plans, especially labor plans and wave structures, can drift out of sync before the shift is halfway through. That is when the operation starts relying on “manual heroics.” Experienced supervisors keep things running. It is hard to scale, and even harder to sustain.
AI-driven warehouse orchestration: keeping the operation aligned
Warehouse orchestration and the power of AI address this gap. Because it is not just about executing tasks, it is about coordinating decisions across the operation and using intelligence to see, analyze, and recommend actions with full visibility to all the variables. Instead of managing isolated activities, intelligent orchestration continuously aligns:
Labor to demand.
Inbound and outbound priorities.
Work sequencing across zones.
Automation with human workflows.
It does this in real time, as conditions change. Variability is constant, and it is not realistic to eliminate. The goal is to see the risk earlier, respond faster and more consistently, and prevent disruption.
Back to Maria: when the system helps carry the load
Now imagine Maria running that same Monday, but operations now behave like a connected ecosystem, not a collection of islands. Before the shift even starts, she is not just reviewing what happened yesterday. She is looking at a forward-facing view that is already adjusting based on incoming signals. She is getting visibility into risk early before it is a problem. Inbound appointments are not just a schedule; they are a ranked set of trade-offs that balance urgency, detention risk, inventory needs, and outbound commitments. Her decisions are clearer because the system prioritizes them, reflecting business impact. Slotting does not rely on disruptive, periodic re-slot projects that leave the pick face to decay. Instead, optimization and learning continuously shape placement, folding the highest value moves into natural replenishment windows and explaining the “why” in business language.
And during the shift, when one area starts falling behind, Maria does not have to guess the best move. She can see the impact of her options:
Shifting labor.
Reprioritizing tasks.
Adjusting sequencing.
Instead of relying on instinct and experience alone, she has visibility into how decisions affect the entire operation. She is still in control, but the system is helping her avoid problems instead of chasing them. And that changes how the shift feels. It is not static; it is dynamic, but stable.
The key ingredients: unified data, SaaS, AI & ML, connected systems
Behind the scenes, this comes down to unified data, SaaS, AI, ML, and systems that work together. When you connect your warehouse systems, add real-time operational signals and visibility to systems outside of the warehouse, and apply AI and ML for speed and precision, you are working from a single source of truth and an interconnected ecosystem of systems. As a result, users make decisions with a broader context. Then the operation starts to learn; outcomes inform future decisions, improving how the system responds over time. And now, humans are not the only thing holding the performance together.
Why this matters right now
For supply chain leaders, this is not only about efficiency. It is about operating in a world where volatility is constant. Across industries, the specifics vary, but the challenges are consistent:
Handling demand swings without inflating labor costs
Scaling operations without scaling complexity
Maintaining service levels under pressure
The operations that succeed are the ones that do not just react faster; they are the ones that operate in alignment.
The shift ahead
A single, modern technology will not define the future of warehouse management. It will be defined by how well operations coordinate across people, systems, and workflows in real time. That is what intelligent warehouse orchestration enables. It turns the warehouse from a collection of well-run processes into a connected system that can adjust continuously. Because in the end, the goal is not just to execute the plan. It is to keep the plan from breaking when the shift starts.
By Tammy Kulesa
Senior Director, Solution & Industry Marketing, Blue Yonder
Tammy is the Senior Director of Solution and Industry Marketing, leading go-to-market strategy and thought leadership for Blue Yonder Cognitive Solutions for Execution, and the LSP Industry. With over 20 years of experience in technology marketing and nearly a decade focused on retail, logistics, and supply chain, Tammy brings a deep understanding of the operational and strategic challenges facing today’s supply chain leaders. A passionate advocate for innovation and collaboration, Tammy has a proven track record of connecting market needs with transformative solutions.
The post Warehouse Orchestration: Solving the Daily Breakdown Between Plan and Execution appeared first on Logistics Viewpoints.
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How Operational AI Turns Supply Chain Recommendations into Action
Published
24 heures agoon
14 mai 2026By
Supply chain AI cannot stop at better insight. To create operational value, AI recommendations must connect to workflows, execution systems, approval paths, and measurable outcomes.
Artificial intelligence is quickly becoming part of the supply chain technology conversation. Vendors are adding copilots, recommendation engines, autonomous agents, and predictive analytics to planning, transportation, warehousing, procurement, and visibility applications. The promise is clear: better decisions, faster responses, and more adaptive operations.
But there is a critical distinction that supply chain leaders need to keep in view. An AI system that identifies a problem is not the same as an AI system that helps solve it.
A demand-planning model may identify a likely stockout. A transportation model may flag a lane disruption. A supplier-risk model may detect a deteriorating delivery pattern. Those are useful insights. But unless the system can connect that insight to an action pathway, the burden still falls on the planner, transportation manager, procurement team, or customer service group to decide what happens next.
That is where many AI deployments will either create real value or stall out.
For a deeper look at the architecture behind operational AI, including A2A, MCP, RAG, Graph RAG, and connected decision systems, download the full white paper: AI in the Supply Chain: From Architecture to Execution.
Insight Is Not Execution
Supply chains do not run on insight alone. They run on orders, shipments, purchase orders, inventory moves, carrier tenders, production schedules, warehouse labor plans, customer commitments, and exception workflows.
A recommendation that remains in a dashboard is not yet operational AI. It is decision support. Decision support can be valuable, but it does not fundamentally change the operating model unless it becomes part of the execution process.
The question is not simply, “Can the AI make a recommendation?” The better question is, “Can the organization act on that recommendation in a controlled, auditable, and timely way?”
For example, if an AI system predicts that a regional distribution center will run short of inventory, several action pathways may be available. The company might expedite inbound supply, rebalance inventory from another facility, substitute a product, modify customer allocation rules, or adjust promised delivery dates.
Each action has a cost, a service implication, and a governance requirement.
Operational AI must understand those pathways. It must also know which actions it can recommend, which it can execute automatically, and which require human approval.
The Execution Layer Matters
This is why integration with core execution systems is so important. AI cannot operate effectively if it sits outside the systems where work is actually performed.
For supply chain AI to become operational, it must connect to transportation management systems, warehouse management systems, order management systems, ERP, procurement platforms, supplier portals, customer service workflows, and control tower environments.
Without these connections, AI may diagnose problems faster, but it will not necessarily resolve them faster.
The difference is material. An AI assistant that says, “This shipment is likely to miss its delivery appointment,” is useful. An AI-enabled workflow that identifies the delay, calculates downstream service risk, recommends a carrier alternative, checks cost thresholds, initiates an approval workflow, and updates customer service is much more powerful.
That is the move from analytics to operational intelligence.
Human-in-the-Loop Still Matters
This does not mean every AI recommendation should become an automated action. Supply chain decisions often involve tradeoffs among cost, service, risk, inventory, and customer relationships. Many require judgment.
The more practical model is tiered autonomy.
Low-risk, high-frequency actions may be automated. Moderate-risk decisions may require planner approval. High-impact exceptions may require escalation to a manager or executive.
This is not a weakness. It is a design requirement.
A well-architected operational AI system should know when to act, when to recommend, and when to escalate. It should also capture the outcome so the system can learn whether the decision improved performance.
Closed-Loop Learning Is the Real Prize
The most important capability may not be the first recommendation. It may be the feedback loop that follows.
Did the expedited shipment prevent the stockout? Did the alternate supplier meet the delivery date? Did the inventory transfer protect service without creating a shortage elsewhere? Did the customer accept the revised promise date?
These outcomes should not disappear into operational noise. They should feed back into the intelligence layer.
That is how AI becomes more than a static recommendation tool. It becomes a learning system embedded in the daily operating rhythm of the supply chain.
What This Means for Buyers
Supply chain leaders evaluating AI-enabled software should press vendors on action pathways. The relevant questions are straightforward.
Can the system connect recommendations to execution workflows? Can it distinguish between automated, approved, and escalated actions? Can it operate across functions, not just inside one application? Can it create an audit trail? Can it learn from outcomes?
The vendors that answer these questions well will move beyond AI features. They will become part of the operating architecture.
The next phase of supply chain AI will not be won by the tool that produces the most impressive recommendation. It will be won by the systems that help companies act faster, with more control, better context, and measurable outcomes.
The post How Operational AI Turns Supply Chain Recommendations into Action appeared first on Logistics Viewpoints.
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Warehouse Orchestration: Solving the Daily Breakdown Between Plan and Execution
How Operational AI Turns Supply Chain Recommendations into Action
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