Supply Chain - Unfiltered

Hyper Agility

28 min · 13 de may de 2026
portada del episodio Hyper Agility

Descripción

Disruption isn’t a phase you “get through” anymore. It’s the environment, and it’s forcing supply chains and organizations to evolve beyond classic agility into something bigger: hyper agility. We sit down with Dr. Charlotte de Brabandt [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-charlotte-anabelle-de-brabandt-digital-futurist-4492961b/] to unpack what hyper agility really means and why she sees it as a true superpower for teams that need to sense change early, respond fast, and still stay grounded in purpose.  We get specific about what makes hyper-agile organizations work: flexible structures that reconfigure around skills, communication that stays transparent across time zones, inclusive decision-making loops that move quickly without turning into bureaucracy, and rapid learning that favors short bursts of upskilling over slow programs. The thread running through it all is people. Charlotte explains why diversity isn’t optional in volatile conditions and how psychological safety turns diverse perspectives into better outcomes instead of silent disagreement.  We also explore how hyper agility reshapes talent management and workforce planning, from static roles to dynamic capability maps and from “perfect resumes” to learning agility, curiosity, and resilience. Then we connect hyper agility to innovation, technology, and measurement: empowering frontline microinnovation, using cloud tools, AI, and automation to enable collaboration, and updating KPIs to track outcomes like learning velocity, adaptability, inclusion metrics, and innovation flow. If you’re leading procurement, operations, or a cross-functional supply chain team, this conversation offers a practical way to move faster without creating chaos.  Subscribe for more, share this with a leader who needs it, and leave a review if the ideas help you rethink how your team can bend without breaking.

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65 episodios

episode Data Management Is a Dirty Job But Everyone Has to Do It artwork

Data Management Is a Dirty Job But Everyone Has to Do It

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Ayer23 min
episode Hyper Agility artwork

Hyper Agility

Disruption isn’t a phase you “get through” anymore. It’s the environment, and it’s forcing supply chains and organizations to evolve beyond classic agility into something bigger: hyper agility. We sit down with Dr. Charlotte de Brabandt [https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-charlotte-anabelle-de-brabandt-digital-futurist-4492961b/] to unpack what hyper agility really means and why she sees it as a true superpower for teams that need to sense change early, respond fast, and still stay grounded in purpose.  We get specific about what makes hyper-agile organizations work: flexible structures that reconfigure around skills, communication that stays transparent across time zones, inclusive decision-making loops that move quickly without turning into bureaucracy, and rapid learning that favors short bursts of upskilling over slow programs. The thread running through it all is people. Charlotte explains why diversity isn’t optional in volatile conditions and how psychological safety turns diverse perspectives into better outcomes instead of silent disagreement.  We also explore how hyper agility reshapes talent management and workforce planning, from static roles to dynamic capability maps and from “perfect resumes” to learning agility, curiosity, and resilience. Then we connect hyper agility to innovation, technology, and measurement: empowering frontline microinnovation, using cloud tools, AI, and automation to enable collaboration, and updating KPIs to track outcomes like learning velocity, adaptability, inclusion metrics, and innovation flow. If you’re leading procurement, operations, or a cross-functional supply chain team, this conversation offers a practical way to move faster without creating chaos.  Subscribe for more, share this with a leader who needs it, and leave a review if the ideas help you rethink how your team can bend without breaking.

13 de may de 202628 min
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Scaling globally is exhilarating right up until the “how fast can we hire” question meets reality. A new client award or a winning bid can force a rapid ramp in a country where you have no entity, no local payroll, and no clear view of employment law. That’s when opportunity turns into internal panic, and the clock starts ticking on delivery dates, revenue, and credibility. We sit down with Rebecca Croucher [https://www.linkedin.com/in/rebeccacroucher/], Chief Growth Officer at Atlas, to map the real path from plan to headcount. We talk through what it takes to open a new country the traditional way, including legal entity setup timelines that can stretch from weeks to 12 to 18 months, plus the added layers of local contracts, statutory benefits, insurance requirements, pensions, and employer liability. Then we contrast that with the employer of record model and why companies use EOR services to hire quickly and stay compliant while they validate a market.  We also dig into the details that most global expansion plans miss: visa delays that can stall a build by six to nine months, cultural expectations that shape retention and day to day work, and the hard truth that there’s no single compliance tool that replaces local expertise. We close with practical planning guidance for near term market expansion, including role type, industry regulations, and how data protection typically works when teams operate inside your infrastructure.  If you found this helpful, subscribe, share the episode with a teammate planning global hiring, and leave us a review.

29 de abr de 202625 min
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Trillions in new factories are coming, supply chains are shifting closer to home, and yet the biggest constraint is not equipment or real estate, it’s people. We sit down with Isaac Hagan [https://www.linkedin.com/in/isaachagen/], Senior VP of Emerging Verticals at ManpowerGroup, to unpack what “emerging talent markets” really mean right now and why they often look like familiar industries under extreme transformation: manufacturing, semiconductors, energy, automotive, and materials. We dig into industrial sovereignty, reshoring, and the new demand for predictability across both physical supply chains and talent supply chains. Isaac shares why the talent gap is becoming the defining risk for growth, what it means when millions of manufacturing roles could go unfilled, and why workforce planning has to start far earlier than most teams expect. We also talk about what actually scales: apprenticeships, skills-based hiring, reskilling in new geographies, and stronger partnerships between industry and government to build the volume of capability these investments require. Then we zoom in on AI and the future of work. Data analytics and AI fluency are rising fast, but the most in-demand skill remains collaboration and other human strengths like EQ and empathy. We also address the strain showing up in longer workdays and stressed middle managers, and why culture and development become the “trust currency” that helps organizations survive rapid change. If you work in supply chain management, procurement, manufacturing, or operations, this conversation is a practical map of where jobs are going, which skills travel, and how to stay relevant as the pace of change accelerates.  Subscribe, share this with a colleague, and leave a review with the skill you think will matter most over the next five years.

15 de abr de 202623 min
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Your supply chain decisions can feel like you’re parked in the middle of a busy intersection with traffic coming from every direction: operational pressure, ethical expectations, AI disruption, and the constant demand for profitability. We sit down with Burkhard Schemmel [https://www.linkedin.com/in/burkardschemmel/], senior sales leader at Maersk and founder of the Research Institute of Alterocentric Business Ethics, to make that chaos workable and to turn “ethics” into something you can actually use. We talk about what business ethics really means beyond ESG and compliance, including why his team built a practical framework with 120 criteria that can be applied across industries and geographies. You’ll hear why ethics has global common ground but also local nuance, especially in sales behavior, negotiations, and pricing. Burkhard shares how different operating models, from large standardized enterprises to long-horizon family-owned businesses, can change the way ethical decisions show up in the real world. Then we get specific about the messiest moments: tariffs, capacity shortages, and unpredictable trade conditions. Burkhard makes the case for transparency and open-book pricing as a trust builder with customers and third-party partners, and we explore how de-risking strategies like local sourcing and multi-sourcing are reshaping supply chain resilience. Finally, we look at AI agents and what they could automate in procurement and logistics, plus what stays human when software starts making recommendations at scale. If you want a clearer way to prioritize ethics, resilience, AI, and profit without treating them as enemies, this conversation will help. Subscribe, share the show with a supply chain leader you respect, and leave a review so more people can find Supply Chain - Unfiltered.

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