•   Exclusive

Management lessons from the U.S. dairy sector’s pandemic response

There’s an old adage that you discover true character when faced with adversity. Based on that, what the dairy industry demonstrated during COVID-19 is a remarkable flexibility that allowed it to break away from old practices no longer valuable to its supply chain. That is no easy feat.

Subscriber: Log Out

Sorry, but your login has failed. Please recheck your login information and resubmit. If your subscription has expired, renew here.

This is an excerpt of the original article. It was written for the September-October 2021 edition of Supply Chain Management Review. The full article is available to current subscribers.

September-October 2021

This time every year, we publish Gartner’s Top 25 supply chains, the annual list of the supply chains that have made it to the top, a list that now also includes 5 Masters, or companies that have consistently outperformed year after year. You can read the article in this issue, along with the web exclusive material we publish on scmr.com, to find out what it takes to become a supply chain leader.
Browse this issue archive.
Already a subscriber? Access full edition now.

Need Help?
Contact customer service
847-559-7581   More options
Not a subscriber? Start your magazine subscription.

There’s an old adage that you discover true character when faced with adversity. Based on that, what the dairy industry demonstrated during COVID-19 is a remarkable flexibility that allowed it to break away from old practices no longer valuable to its supply chain. That is no easy feat.

While we have made enormous strides in fighting the pandemic it is much more difficult to assess progress mitigating COVID-19’s effects on the supply chain.

For instance, Intel said this summer that the chip shortage may not be fully resolved until 2023. Upholstered furniture ordered mid-year may not appear in your living room until early 2022 due to polyurethane cushioning shortages. And in June, a Bloomberg article suggested that the Fourth of July was a good time to wrap up your holiday shopping. Seriously?

While those are inconveniences, we do emotionally feel the impact of these supply chain disruptions. And we don’t like any of it. That makes it imperative to figure out what’s going on here. It would be even more helpful to fully understand how COVID-19 has changed supply chains and established practices. And it would be best if we could find ways to use those shifts to our advantage rather than being disadvantaged by them going forward.

Probably no supply chain is more vulnerable yet foundational to how we live than food. Who doesn’t remember going to the grocer last year to find meat cases and refrigerated dairy sections severely depleted for extended periods of time? This is far beyond an inconvenience.

Quite simply, the food supply chain is no small potatoes, to coin a phrase. It has an obvious importance for meeting basic human needs but also constitutes a key economic activity.

This complete article is available to subscribers only. Log in now for full access or start your PLUS+ subscription for instant access.

SC
MR

Sorry, but your login has failed. Please recheck your login information and resubmit. If your subscription has expired, renew here.

From the September-October 2021 edition of Supply Chain Management Review.

September-October 2021

This time every year, we publish Gartner’s Top 25 supply chains, the annual list of the supply chains that have made it to the top, a list that now also includes 5 Masters, or companies that have consistently…
Browse this issue archive.
Access your online digital edition.
Download a PDF file of the September-October 2021 issue.

There’s an old adage that you discover true character when faced with adversity. Based on that, what the dairy industry demonstrated during COVID-19 is a remarkable flexibility that allowed it to break away from old practices no longer valuable to its supply chain. That is no easy feat.

While we have made enormous strides in fighting the pandemic it is much more difficult to assess progress mitigating COVID-19’s effects on the supply chain.

For instance, Intel said this summer that the chip shortage may not be fully resolved until 2023. Upholstered furniture ordered mid-year may not appear in your living room until early 2022 due to polyurethane cushioning shortages. And in June, a Bloomberg article suggested that the Fourth of July was a good time to wrap up your holiday shopping. Seriously?

While those are inconveniences, we do emotionally feel the impact of these supply chain disruptions. And we don’t like any of it. That makes it imperative to figure out what’s going on here. It would be even more helpful to fully understand how COVID-19 has changed supply chains and established practices. And it would be best if we could find ways to use those shifts to our advantage rather than being disadvantaged by them going forward.

Probably no supply chain is more vulnerable yet foundational to how we live than food. Who doesn’t remember going to the grocer last year to find meat cases and refrigerated dairy sections severely depleted for extended periods of time? This is far beyond an inconvenience.

Quite simply, the food supply chain is no small potatoes, to coin a phrase. It has an obvious importance for meeting basic human needs but also constitutes a key economic activity.

SC
MR

Latest Podcast
Talking Supply Chain: 2025 trends with Abe Eshkenazi
ASCM CEO Abe Eshkenazi joins the Talking Supply Chain podcast to talk which trends will continue in 2025, and what they mean for supply chain…
Listen in

Subscribe

Supply Chain Management Review delivers the best industry content.
Subscribe today and get full access to all of Supply Chain Management Review’s exclusive content, email newsletters, premium resources and in-depth, comprehensive feature articles written by the industry's top experts on the subjects that matter most to supply chain professionals.
×

Search

Search

Sourcing & Procurement

Inventory Management Risk Management Global Trade Ports & Shipping

Business Management

Supply Chain TMS WMS 3PL Government & Regulation Sustainability Finance

Software & Technology

Artificial Intelligence Automation Cloud IoT Robotics Software

The Academy

Executive Education Associations Institutions Universities & Colleges

Resources

Podcasts Webcasts Companies Visionaries White Papers Special Reports Premiums Magazine Archive

Subscribe

SCMR Magazine Newsletters Magazine Archives Customer Service

Press Releases

Press Releases Submit Press Release