Welcome to Supply Chain now the number one voice of supply chain.
Speaker AJoin us as we share critical news, key insights and real supply chain leadership
Speaker Bfrom across the globe.
Speaker AOne conversation at a time.
Speaker BHey, good morning, good afternoon, good evening, wherever you may be.
Speaker BScott Lewton and the one and only Corinne Bursa right here with you on Supply Chain now.
Speaker BWelcome to today's live stream.
Speaker BHey, Corinne, how you doing?
Speaker CHey, I'm doing great today.
Speaker CHow are you?
Speaker BI am doing wonderful.
Speaker BThe cold weather's back here in Atlanta.
Speaker BWhat happened, Corinne?
Speaker CI don't know, but long as the sun sticks around, I'm happy.
Speaker CBut it's the wind that's so biting.
Speaker BI think at this point in time, it is, man.
Speaker BEven, even our weather has embraced uncertainty.
Speaker BWe just can't, we can't get enough of it.
Speaker BI tell you, folks, today, you know, it is the Buzz where every Monday at 12 noon Eastern time, we discuss a variety of news and developments across global supply chain and business news that matters is what we like to call it.
Speaker BNow the Buzz is powered by our friends at easypost doing some pretty cool things, making shipping easy, flexible and scalable.
Speaker BYou can learn how you can simplify your own shipping operations and delight your customers@easypost.com check that out.
Speaker BSo, Corinne, we've got a lot of stuff going on here today.
Speaker BWe got some key takeaways from a really big, big, big supply chain leadership event that you hosted last week.
Speaker BOf course, we're going to talk tariffs.
Speaker BGoodness.
Speaker BOn the heels of a big decision by the Supremes.
Speaker BYou can't hurry love.
Speaker BWhat other Supremes can we bake into that?
Speaker BAnd we're going to get into four key fashion supply chain trends to keep your eyes on.
Speaker BWe're going to be exploring a critical need for faster, smarter supply chain decisions.
Speaker BAll that and much, much more.
Speaker BAnd in about 12 minutes or so, we're bringing in two special guests, supply chain now OG Paul Noble and Nick DeSolido who's going to be sharing critical insights you got to know on ISO 25500.
Speaker BCorinne, big show here today.
Speaker BYou ready to go?
Speaker CI am.
Speaker CI am.
Speaker CThere's, there's a lot to talk about and one of these topics could take the whole time.
Speaker CSo I know you want to hit several different things.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BWe got to work cut out for us here today on the Buzz, powered by Easy Post.
Speaker BSo yes, Corinne, that's right.
Speaker BWe got four things that we're gonna knock out before we bring on Paul and Nick.
Speaker BAnd we're going to start with again, folks, I hate to keep hammering bad news, but everybody is trying to figure out what's going on with tariffs.
Speaker BOf course, we led with a few key takes on the Supreme Court ruling on tariffs and what might come.
Speaker BWe shared a big event coming up for chain leaders in November, the Supply Chain and Logistics Summit out in warm and sunny California.
Speaker BWe touch on big news from Rodney Apple.
Speaker BWe touch on our love of baseball and why she would we should think more like kids.
Speaker BAnd guest perspective from David Sheffron and many others from Ocado, Intelligent Automation, all that plus as always, our upcoming live events for the week.
Speaker BSo give it a read and let us know what you think.
Speaker BNow Corinne, did you get in a little bit of weekend reading on with that said?
Speaker CI did, I did.
Speaker CBut I've got to tell you, the lead story took all of my brain power so I skimmed the other ones.
Speaker CBut tariffs certainly as of Friday morning last week had been nothing but the top topic that we've, that we've heard and that all supply chain professionals are trying to figure out what's next.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker BAnd you know, a lot of, a lot of smart folks out there, some I know as well, predicted that Supreme Court wouldn't weigh in on tariffs.
Speaker BAnd gosh, they sure did.
Speaker BFriday, we're going to see, we're going to talk more about that here in a minute with Corinne, Nick and Paul.
Speaker BAll right, so we're going to drop the link to with that said, you're one click away, folks, from subscribing and downloading and giving us your take on everything we covered.
Speaker BSo number two, Corinne, of these four appetizers, you led a terrific edition of our very popular Never Normal series which started last September.
Speaker BI think you led a conversation with three or four CSCOs this time around.
Speaker BWe had Douglas and Corey and Shay and Eduardo, all big time supply chain leaders doing big things at a variety of companies we all know and love.
Speaker BAnd Corinne, I gotta ask you, what were some of your we didn't be here for the whole hour on this question alone, but what are some of your quick key takeaways from that conversation?
Speaker CYeah, it was a great opportunity just to, you know, spend some time with four great leaders that are doing impressive things in their organizations.
Speaker CAnd it reinforced for me, Scott, that it is in fact a great time to be in supply chain and these business leaders are making an impact every single day.
Speaker CWe explored everything from some of their career defining moments to where they see artificial impact or excuse me, artificial intelligence having an impact on their operations.
Speaker CWhat excites them about it and even some advice that they would give their younger selves.
Speaker CSo I always love to hear how people respond to that.
Speaker CBut four fantastic points of view.
Speaker COne thing that stuck with me is that Shay Nestler, who's the VP of logistics at Danone, he kept coming back to, we are striving to be boringly consistent.
Speaker CSo in this time of volatility, one of the things that's his mantra is, we're working hard to be boringly consistent.
Speaker CAnd so I thought that was an interesting countermeasure to all the volatility, the opportunity, the changes that we're seeing in supply chain.
Speaker BIt's so true.
Speaker BKey takeaways is I was in the.
Speaker BThe cheap seats with my popcorn and Diet Coke, and it was a.
Speaker BIt was such a real and genuine conversation, but two things.
Speaker BPeople were in the golden age of supply chain tech.
Speaker BWe talk about it all the time because it's important.
Speaker DRight?
Speaker BBut the love for people, the appreciation for people was so alive and well in that conversation.
Speaker BAnd then that leads me to my second key takeaway.
Speaker BI love the anecdote.
Speaker BI think it was Douglas that shared an earlier moment in his career where he saw the CEO stop in the hallway and asked the janitor named Maria about.
Speaker BAbout how her kids were doing.
Speaker CIt was fantastic.
Speaker BYes, it was.
Speaker BAnd it really.
Speaker BWe should all strive to be more like that.
Speaker BCorinne, huh?
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CAnd Shay, Back to Shay for a second.
Speaker CHe talked about that same kind of empathy and connection with the team in very difficult times.
Speaker CHe shared a story about needing to close a manufacturing operation and what a learning experience that was for him as well.
Speaker CSo I think those two, between Doug and Shay, talking about that connection and knowing people's names and knowing, you know, the impact on them personally and professionally in good days and bad days, was really something that hit home.
Speaker BSo, folks, the good news is, all this is good news from Krin here today.
Speaker BBut the good news is you can check out this great panel and.
Speaker BAnd two previous installments on Demand.
Speaker BBig thanks to Amanda and Trisha making things happen behind the scenes here today.
Speaker BWe'll drop the link right there in the chat and let us know your take.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker BThey may agree.
Speaker BYou may agree with what we took away.
Speaker BYou may.
Speaker BYou may disagree.
Speaker BWe welcome all of it.
Speaker BOkay, so on a quick aside, we checked in with a couple of team members who are based in Mexico.
Speaker BWe've all been monitoring some developments there over the weekend.
Speaker BI'm glad to say they're safe and sound.
Speaker BAnd of course, we pray for lots of simmering down of the violence and hopefully no one else gets hurt.
Speaker BOkay, so up next folks, mark your calendar.
Speaker BJust that time of the year again, I should say April 29, national supply chain Day.
Speaker BFolks, mark your calendars whether they're digital or they're old fashioned like I've got hanging on my wall right behind me.
Speaker BJoin us April 29th at 12 noon Eastern Time for a virtual event that's going to feature a wide range of supply chain leaders and supply chain topics.
Speaker BBut I promise you, big theme will be our love and celebration for what people do across global supply chain every single day.
Speaker BAll right, Corinne, is that, is that circled on your calendar?
Speaker CIt is indeed.
Speaker CI mean I love this celebration around National Supply Chain Day.
Speaker CI mean it's all about our community here.
Speaker CEverybody who's with us today and as a part of the supply chain now, family around the world, this is our chance to celebrate what they do every day.
Speaker BThat is right.
Speaker BSo come join us folks.
Speaker BApril 29th.
Speaker BOkay, so and then lastly, we're all about sharing resources, folks with our as Corinne mentioned, our SC and global fam.
Speaker BIf you're still relying on GPS or beacons or expensive hardware to track assets or personnel, you just might be overpaying for a bunch of bulky hardware.
Speaker BJuxta delivers sub meter indoor and outdoor visibility anywhere.
Speaker BWithout those beacons and cameras and gps, that means no new infrastructure, no complex installs and deployment in under an hour.
Speaker BMan, using the devices you already have, you can track shipments, equipment, personnel in real time across warehouses, yards and facilities at a fraction of the cost of traditional systems.
Speaker BFolks, stop guessing and start seeing everything.
Speaker BBook a demo with our friends at Juxta here today.
Speaker BWe're gonna drop a link to that right there in the comments.
Speaker BCorinne.
Speaker BMan, that's no nonsense.
Speaker BI'd love to stop guessing about lots of things, including what the Braves are gonna do in the season coming up, Corinne, are they gonna make the playoffs?
Speaker BQuick question before we bring on I'm
Speaker Cjust hoping for a better season than last year all the way around.
Speaker BOh man, that makes two of us, folks.
Speaker BThat aside though, we're seeing a spring.
Speaker BHope springs eternal, I think is how the saying goes.
Speaker BAnd Major League Baseball is getting started and we're gonna see how that unfolds for everybody.
Speaker BBut in the meantime, here on the Buzz, powered by Easy Post, we're delighted to have a couple of terrific guests join us, including one who we have deemed of course an OG here at supply chain.
Speaker BNow, Paul Noble has made dozens appearances on our programs over the years.
Speaker BHe's been driving big innovative gains in global supply chain for a long time.
Speaker BHe's also a popular Forge contributor.
Speaker BHe's co founder at Verison AI and many, many other things.
Speaker BNow joining Paul today, Corinne, he's bringing Nick Depolito.
Speaker BNow Nick has spent almost 20 years driving transformation at Accenture and has now co founded VDSI where he serves as chief operating officer.
Speaker BNow folks, BDSI AI is the operational layer that makes the industrial Internet globally accessible.
Speaker BYou can learn more@vdsai.net now let's welcome in Paul Noble and Nick DiPolito.
Speaker BHey, Paul, welcome back.
Speaker BHow you doing?
Speaker EI'm great.
Speaker EGood to be here.
Speaker BFantastic.
Speaker BLive from Tech Square and in downtown Atlanta, Ga. And Nick, welcome to the Buzz.
Speaker DHey Scott, thanks for having me.
Speaker BGreat to see you.
Speaker BTuned in from Pennsylvania, right?
Speaker BEastern or Western?
Speaker DEastern.
Speaker BEastern.
Speaker DThe, the Philadelphia.
Speaker DSo still in the same baseball division.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker BYou're a Phillies fan.
Speaker BOh, yeah.
Speaker ENick gets mad.
Speaker ENick gets mad when I'm sporting my Braves hat.
Speaker BOkay, Paul, we're gonna have to team up on Nick and get him converted, me and you and Corinne.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker BSo Corinne, Nick and Paul, great to have everybody as we move into the B block.
Speaker BAnd we're going to start with some great news, folks.
Speaker BI tell you what the fun warm up question.
Speaker BLook at this, gang.
Speaker BDid you watch that historic Olympic ho hockey match between the US And Canada tell you was incredible.
Speaker BEven if you're like me, not really a fan of hockey, as y' all probably heard a thousand times over the weekend, it's the first time that Team USA has won a gold in men's hockey since that 1980 classic.
Speaker BSo that begs the question, and Paul, I'm g start with you.
Speaker BWhat is one of your most memorable Olympics moments?
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker EI think if I'm thinking Olympics and diverting away from the ice hockey discussion, you know, I think to me one of the the biggest transitions was in the in the basketball arena with the Dream Team.
Speaker EYeah.
Speaker EBig basketball enthusiast.
Speaker EAnd that first team that went in with professional players moving on from amateur just really set a great global tone for the game.
Speaker EAnd something I'll always remember watching growing
Speaker Bup Paul as Next.
Speaker BThat was 1992.
Speaker BAnd the best part about that and lesson we can learn from supply chain.
Speaker BNow a supply chain standpoint is all those ego, all those hall of Famers.
Speaker EYeah.
Speaker BAnd they all set aside playing to set aside all that stuff to, you know, make an incredible memorable run.
Speaker BThere's certainly something to be said there for global leadership so good stuff, Paul.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker BSo, Nick, that's gonna be tough one to beat.
Speaker BWhat about you favorite Olympics moment?
Speaker DThat is a tough one to be.
Speaker DThat was almost mine, but.
Speaker DSo that's good.
Speaker DHey, I'm glad Paul and I are on the same wavelength.
Speaker DThat's important.
Speaker DRight?
Speaker DSo I. I would probably say most memorable being my first memory of the Olymp.
Speaker DProbably the mary lou retton 1984.
Speaker DI just remember my mom having it on, and that was probably my first.
Speaker DOh, wow.
Speaker DThis is the Olympics.
Speaker DThis is.
Speaker DYou know, this seems really important.
Speaker DMaybe I should pay attention.
Speaker DSo that's probably most memorable being my first memorable moment of the Olympics.
Speaker BNick.
Speaker BThat's a great one, because, Corinne, I can still see Mary Lou Retton's massive smile.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BMegawatt smile.
Speaker BBut, Corinne, how about you?
Speaker BWhat one of your favorite moments?
Speaker CWell, I love.
Speaker CI love both the moments that they've mentioned.
Speaker CAnd I saw the end of the hockey game, which was just phenomenal.
Speaker CAmazing.
Speaker CBut I have to say, overall, if you open it up to Olympics in general, the 1996 Olympics were hosted here in Atlanta, and it was so cool to live here in the Atlanta area and just be able to experience all that.
Speaker CWe had several friends who came and stayed with us and went to different venues and different events and saw live sports that we'd never seen in person before.
Speaker CAnd it was just a lot of fun.
Speaker CJust the.
Speaker EThe.
Speaker CThe visitors, the fans, the athletes.
Speaker CIt was.
Speaker CIt was amazing.
Speaker BYou know, and it really.
Speaker BI wasn't here at the time, but it really changed the course of Atlanta as a city.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd really as a region.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker CPreparing for it.
Speaker CAnd, you know, technology was a big part of it.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker CSo it was.
Speaker CIt was very exciting.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker EIt was such a catalyst.
Speaker EI was not here either, but, you know, talking to people that were here, just what it did to prepare Atlanta for where it's at now and, you know, the development of Tech Square and, you know, and just everything that goes on here, it's great for the city and a testament of why we're where we're at and why we're the global supply chain capital in the world.
Speaker BThat's right, Paul.
Speaker BThat's right.
Speaker BNow, Nick, did you hear that?
Speaker BBecause Philadelphia is not.
Speaker BI'm kidding.
Speaker BJust kidding.
Speaker BJust kidding.
Speaker BSo, all right, so, Corinne, Nick and Paul, good stuff.
Speaker BGood stuff.
Speaker BOn as it relates to all things Olympics and beyond.
Speaker BBut we got to get into a lot of news related to supply chain, and I hate to start with this topic Again, but we got to, it impacts a lot of stuff, right?
Speaker BWe got to talk tariffs.
Speaker BThe Supreme Court ruled last Friday for maybe three people out there that don't know that the White House improperly relied on the International Emergency Economic Powers act, that's the ieepa, you may have heard about all of that, to impose broad tariffs on countries around the world.
Speaker BThe decision doesn't necessarily eliminate all tariffs.
Speaker BAnd of course the White House is already looking at other measures over the weekend.
Speaker BPresident Trump has already announced a new 15% global tariff on all imports, citing an alternative legal basis for the measure.
Speaker BNow, as reported here by cnbc, the European Union is already balking at the new move, potential move and are asking for clarity from the White House.
Speaker BAren't we all?
Speaker BSo with that in mind, Paul.
Speaker BWith that in mind, Paul, tell us your thoughts on the latest related to tariffs.
Speaker EJust when you think things are somewhat running smoothly in global supply chains, we get another thrust of uncertainty.
Speaker EYeah, I think it's, everyone's kind of consuming a lot of information.
Speaker EIt's certainly gonna, I would assume, be wrapped up in appeals and, and a bunch of, a bunch of different other activities trying to get everyone wrapping their arms around it.
Speaker EThere's big discussion around refunds for those that paid in.
Speaker EAnd so, you know, again, I'm no expert on the tariffs, but I think we get what about 150 days of this temporary 15%, that's, that's going.
Speaker EAnd I think everyone's going to be closely looking at how can they take advantage of lower tariffs while they can if they were at some of the higher thresholds.
Speaker EBut overall, you know, it's keeping people on their toes as it pertains to how they're going to do long term business and what will come of that as the, the ruling and the appeals progress.
Speaker BYes, and all the more reason to look to a better forward looking approach at running your supply chains, including technology, of course.
Speaker BNick, your thoughts on the latest in with Terastal?
Speaker DYeah, I'll probably tap into my former experience consulting on a lot of this, more in the indirect space, but I think we always tell companies, be prepared, know your exposure before things happen.
Speaker DSo having good segmentation and understanding your exposure to whatever happens quickly then can help you kind of react.
Speaker DI think the do nothing scenario and understanding if you do nothing, what, what is that costing you or what are your risks is definitely important.
Speaker DAnd then I think we've always said, you know, have clear executive triggers that you can say, hey, if this happens, we're making this decision no regrets, right?
Speaker DWe all agree that if this trigger happens, this is what we're going to do.
Speaker DNot necessarily, you know, translating that and here's exactly what you need to do today.
Speaker DBut I think being prepared and saying, look, if these triggers happen, no regrets, we all agree we're gonna, we're gonna do this.
Speaker BI'm hearing a little bit of a theme of facts, not feelings in Nick's response.
Speaker BCorinne, what are your, your thoughts?
Speaker CFacts, not feelings is exactly what I would say.
Speaker CHowever, I cannot imagine.
Speaker CAnd one thing that, that Nick mentioned, you know, is having a playbook of if, if A happens, then we're going to do, you know, B or B1.
Speaker CBut I think what, what is mind boggling to me is that this is extremely difficult for the best run supply chains in the world.
Speaker CI cannot imagine how businesses that are struggling with their supply chain processes, efficiency overall or they are planning their businesses on spreadsheet.
Speaker CI don't know how they keep up.
Speaker CThere's just too much volatility and variability right now that makes a huge impact.
Speaker CAnd something like tariff tariffs that are swinging so dramatically.
Speaker CThese are big, big changes.
Speaker CSo, you know, I hope we can step away from the gambling table and come at it like problem solvers, that we are the supply chain and be able to, to really develop a playbook, as Nick said.
Speaker CBecause I think that these tariff type changes from the US or from other countries in the future are going to be a part of our futures going forward.
Speaker BYes, well said, Corinne and Nick and Paul and folks, what do you think?
Speaker BAnd what do you think?
Speaker BWeigh in, Let us know what your organization may be doing different or maybe one thing you're glad your organization implemented kind of to the panel's point here, early months, months ago to better deal with this new layer of uncertainty.
Speaker BWe'll see.
Speaker BTara.
Speaker BPing pong continues though.
Speaker BPaul, Nick and Corinne.
Speaker BOkay, so I want to shift over to what Corinne, we talk about this all the time, fashion supply chains.
Speaker BThere's so much going on.
Speaker BWe can learn from some incredible constraints that the fashion supply chain industry has.
Speaker BHere's a great read from our friends at Supply Chain Dive.
Speaker BIt highlights major risks and shifts shaping fashion supply chains in 2026.
Speaker BSo I'm going to share a couple of key points and then I'm going to get Paul, Nick and Corinne to weigh in too.
Speaker BSo of course, persistent.
Speaker BThis is going to read like Groundhog Day, the movie, folks, right?
Speaker BPersistent trade volatility and evolving tariff policies are all forcing brands to rethink sourcing strategies and cost structures.
Speaker BCompanies are working really hard to protect the margins through things like supplier diversification, near shoring and tighter inventory controls.
Speaker BAgility and resilience.
Speaker BHeard those two words before.
Speaker BAre becoming competitive differentiators as disruptions remain constant.
Speaker BAt the same time, AI is playing a much larger role in forecasting, sourcing, optimization and logistics visibility.
Speaker BAll of this and more helps brands improve traceability, reduce waste, respond faster and more successfully to shifting consumer demand.
Speaker BNow folks, I promise you it's going to read like, and sound like Groundhog Day, right?
Speaker BI'll get Paul.
Speaker BPaul, your thoughts on what we're seeing here in the fashion industry and maybe
Speaker Eelsewhere overall, the tariff conversation, things that are changing, you know, the risks are high.
Speaker ESo Karin made a great point of, you know, being ahead of those things.
Speaker EAnd so many organizations have a lot of great tools, but there's still a lot of uncertainty and risk in the data and how they're communicating with their supply base to, to secure and stay ahead of things.
Speaker ESo I think this, this speaks much to those same elements of, you know, balancing finance and risk across your supply chain is a constant struggle and, and kind of sets the tone for what we'll be talking on the back half of areas where you can, you know, you can have more validated data for AI to be using and, and put, put yourself in a, in a more trust worthy position to make decisions that will affect your business greatly.
Speaker BGood stuff.
Speaker BAnd really quick note before I get Nick to weigh in because it's something Corinne and I've talked about going back a ways.
Speaker BUnlike chocolate or gold or video games, those are constantly in demand, right?
Speaker BTimelessly.
Speaker BBut fashions, gosh, they change all the time and you gotta be on the front end to be able to make money in a profit.
Speaker BIt adds that layer of extra complexity.
Speaker BNick, what do you see when it comes to fashion supply chains and how they're trying to navigate?
Speaker BWhat'd you hear there?
Speaker DWhat I heard was need to be able to react faster.
Speaker DAnd you couple that with being able to react to everything and being able to react fast.
Speaker DThat's, you know, coupling the complexity that you have to face.
Speaker DAnd I think that complexity leads to more risk and uncertainty.
Speaker DHey, I'm reacting faster, but I'm really not so sure if I'm reacting the right way to certain trends, as you said.
Speaker DSo I think that's all the more important that you have the right information, you know, if you're going to react quickly and be able to react to everything.
Speaker DThere's a whole lot more data and a whole lot More trust that you need to have in those decisions.
Speaker BYou know, good stuff.
Speaker BNick, Corinne, Amanda said I was the least person qualified to talk about fashion, anything here today.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut Corinne, your thoughts on what the fashion industry is doing and maybe what we can learn from it?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CWell, I think you hit on one of the key themes and that is that fashion in particular is one and done.
Speaker CSo one season and done, they may come out with a similar collection in the future for the same spring offering.
Speaker CBut those items are not heavily replenished.
Speaker CSometimes they'll do an in season replenishment.
Speaker CBut that fashion is something that you know is being predicted months and months and months ahead of time.
Speaker CAlso in the apparel sector and fashion sector, that manufacturing is outsourced, predominantly or multi sourced.
Speaker CSo again, these tariff conversations that we're talking about are a big part of how these brands are planning for the future.
Speaker CSo tariffs are going to continue to play a big, big impact here.
Speaker CThis particular article, I recommend everybody take a read of it because it highlights some research from McKinsey.
Speaker CSo McKinsey does a report every year about the fashion industry and what's coming.
Speaker CAnd some of the stats that are shared in the article are from that McKinsey research.
Speaker CSo if you're in a highly seasonal business or a fashion oriented business, be sure to take a read of this article.
Speaker CIt makes a recommendation about multi sourcing.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd sourcing changes take time.
Speaker CIt's hard to implement those rapidly.
Speaker CSo again, changing tariffs may change your strategy on where you want to move your sourcing operations as well.
Speaker CSo no question, AI is going to have an impact.
Speaker CNo question supply chain network designs are going to change in the future and fashion is kind of the canary in what is it?
Speaker CThe canary in the coal mine.
Speaker CIn the coal mine?
Speaker CYes, Canary in the coal mine.
Speaker CSo fashion industry is going to feel it very rapidly, very quickly.
Speaker CAnd we should all kind of keep our eyes on the levers that they pull to address some of this volatility and change.
Speaker BWell said, Corinne.
Speaker BWe are going to move right along.
Speaker BWe're going to leave the fashion supply chain world.
Speaker BPaul, Nick and Corinne.
Speaker BAnd you know, I love talking about lots of good news.
Speaker BDid y' all see Paul?
Speaker EYes.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo you know, I love talking about good news, folks, right?
Speaker BY' all should know that maybe by now especially good news that is creating out in the market.
Speaker BBut as IT Brew reports on, we got to take the good and bad because as we all know, the bad actors are also innovating every hour with AI too.
Speaker BNow get this.
Speaker BAccording To Cisco's second annual State of AI Security report.
Speaker BThe bad guys are making progress in all the innovation, ensuring that AI risks become more sophisticated, complex, numerous and deadly to supply chain ecosystems everywhere.
Speaker BThreats include fragile AI supply chains with inadequate provenance checks, advanced prompt injection and jailbreaking techniques, and malicious use of AI tools.
Speaker BOriginally meant of course, for good positive productivity, attackers are increasingly using autonomous AI agents to scale and speed up their operations, creating new vulnerabilities.
Speaker BBut one big key, one big key, folks, governance before deployment.
Speaker BA sound AI strategy starts with a formal AI governance framework before tools are widely adopted.
Speaker BSo we got to kind of manage that action that, that bias for action with the bias for safe action perhaps, I don't know.
Speaker BPaul, this is right up your alley.
Speaker BYou've been doing some big things in technology, AI, you name it, for years.
Speaker BYour thoughts?
Speaker EYeah, I think I've been receiving a lot of inbound talking about, you know, for the work I do with Forbes, writing about the increase of, you know, where does data live?
Speaker EYou know, every organization has new AI committees before they commit to new applications.
Speaker EThey understand the benefit, but it's also, you know, almost, almost paralyzing trying to, you know, manage all of the risks of where is your data going?
Speaker EIs that data proprietary to certain customers if you're an application and things of that nature?
Speaker ESo there's a lot, a lot of governance as you mentioned, but I think it, you know, the, the ever presence of impersonation and fraud across supply chain, I think is, is a really key component that's while AI is going to drive credible outcomes and efficiencies and workflow and things of that nature, the element of impersonation and bad actors utilizing it as well for supplier impersonation and things of that nature is something that organizations are going to have to prepare for with their everyday applications today.
Speaker EAnd it's going to make planning more difficult and it's going to, you know, throw a wrench in the balancing of that finance and Risk game.
Speaker BPaul, good stuff.
Speaker BYou're gonna, before you leave here today, you're gonna give us a sneak peek on what's coming next on your good stuff that you're writing over at Forbes.
Speaker BNick, I enjoyed Paul's take here.
Speaker BI'd love to learn your take on the bad actor.
Speaker BStill gonna do the bad acting this time with AI and a whole bunch more.
Speaker BYour thoughts?
Speaker DYeah, I think this is.
Speaker DEveryone has the tool, right?
Speaker DNot just the good guys.
Speaker DSo the bad guys have the tool too.
Speaker DThey're gonna accelerate the, the things that they're doing impersonation fraud and they're figuring out just as quickly as we're figuring out how to do the good things.
Speaker DI think it's important to create more of a governance that you're able to prevent a lot of that.
Speaker DBut you know, even in, in my own use of chat gbt, you know, I've realized it's really tough to hit the undo button.
Speaker DYou know, if you realized, oh wow, I didn't realize it.
Speaker DIt took that to mean that I think that's what we have to understand is, is when you go down the road too far, right.
Speaker DIt's really hard in these LLM models to hit an undo button and make it forget everything that it based off of that.
Speaker DAnd that's, that's very scary in supply chain.
Speaker DRight, because now you have a whole bunch of, you know, if you're automating your supply chain, you're building supply chain intelligence.
Speaker DIt's really tough to hit the undo button once you've made those decisions.
Speaker BNick, billion dollar advice between you and Paul Curran, what would you add here?
Speaker CYeah, there's no question that we need to be vigilant and we need to have good governance for security, not just professional, but for personal as well, that these advances in technology can be used for evil as well as they can be used for good.
Speaker CSo I think the biggest challenge right now is just keeping up with how fast things are evolving and the access to data and looking at streaming data and double checking and making sure that there are still humans in the loop on many of these decisions until we can have better security in place overall.
Speaker BWell said, Corinne.
Speaker BFolks, go check out this read.
Speaker BGive us your take and it brew again focused on the Cisco annual cyber reports.
Speaker BLet us know.
Speaker BAll right, so Corinne, I wanted to give this a fully throated discussion here today, but time's not always ever on our side.
Speaker BI want you if you would share a couple key takeaways and I bet we can bake in some of these in the next segment.
Speaker BBut tell us you had a great article we published over on the Resource Hub at supply chain now.com focused on the critical need for better and faster, smarter supply chain decision making.
Speaker BWhat was some key takeaways here, Corinne?
Speaker CYeah, thanks for sharing that.
Speaker CThe, the Resource Hub, by the way, for our listeners, if you haven't taken a look at that on the Supply Chain now website, be sure to do that.
Speaker CThere's, there's lots of good information out there.
Speaker CWhat this really focuses on is this changing metric and how we think about decisioning or making decisions and how quickly we're able to make those.
Speaker CAnd a term that's evolving is decision velocity.
Speaker CSo understanding how you make decisions in your organization, the data that is a part of that, what good looks like for your business, it goes far beyond visibility.
Speaker CSo if you're still simply talking about visibility, that's table stakes.
Speaker CMy question to you is what will you do with that visibility?
Speaker CAnd that is your ability to make decisions, implement them and measure the success rate of the outcome.
Speaker CSo take a look.
Speaker CThere's, there's some good information in that article and I'd love to hear your thoughts on it.
Speaker CAnybody in our audience welcome your feedback folks.
Speaker BSCN Global Fan let us know this.
Speaker BThis has already generated a lot of comments and conversations out across social, so we'd love to hear your take on that.
Speaker BOkay, so Paul and Nick and Corinne, we're about to learn a lot more.
Speaker BYou're bringing back bad memories and nightmares of me and ISO from my days in manufacturing.
Speaker BBut we're going to talk about ISO 25500 in just a second.
Speaker BBut folks, I do want to share one quick heads up on you got to come join us February 26th.
Speaker BWe're just talking about AI for good, right?
Speaker BBig theme and for bad, but big theme, AI for good.
Speaker BThroughout today's conversation, check out this live program we've got coming up this Thursday 12 noon chat GPT just the beginning for shipping.
Speaker BWe're talking about what it can do, what AI cannot do.
Speaker BVery frank conversation and I promise you'll learn more.
Speaker BYou'll leave with some very actionable strategies for making life easier for your team and delighting your customers.
Speaker BOkay, so Paul and Nick, I want to dive into again this topic that I think this whole conversation here is going to put some critical thoughts on supply chain leaders, radars.
Speaker BI promise you they're probably in the blind spot for many folks out there based on everything else we're dealing with.
Speaker BThat's ISO 25500.
Speaker BSo Paul, let's, let's, let's kind of start with kind of what it is.
Speaker BAnd given we were talking about something earlier on the buzz, you know, supply chains already exchanged tons, tons of data digitally.
Speaker BWhat problem does ISO 25500 actually solve that today's systems do not?
Speaker EYeah, I think it's, I mean the, the crux of the situation is, you know, ISO 25500 was recently published and what it's doing is creating a framework for the exchange of verifiable data across many different disciplines.
Speaker EBut if you think about, you know, supplier verification, material verification, things of that nature, it, it's difficult for any one organization to keep up with, you know, their master data in that regard.
Speaker EAnd so initially it's the framework.
Speaker EThere's about 30 governments that have, you know, kind of said, yes, this is, this is how we want to prepare.
Speaker EAnd it goes, goes also to the element of what we talked about earlier.
Speaker ERight.
Speaker EYou know, with the growing use of AI and AI platforms needing, you know, cleaner data the better, but not going back to the old playbook of data cleansing.
Speaker ERight.
Speaker EAnd coming up with new ways to verify data and exchange that data in, in the appropriate manner so that, you know, every part of the chain can adopt the AI tools that help them do business better without limiting or opening themselves up for risk.
Speaker EAnd so the framework's there and there have been a lot of ISO standards, ISO 8000 in terms of data formatting.
Speaker EThis is more of, you know, the exchange and the creation of the industrial Internet.
Speaker EBut organizations need to adopt that.
Speaker ESo there's an opening for, you know, vds, AI specifically that we'll talk about being able to allow end users, applications, SIs and suppliers to get their data verified and prepare themselves for what's coming in the future so that, you know, they're not playing from behind, adopting new AI tools that can't, can't utilize that data effectively.
Speaker EAnd so it's really, you know, allowing everyone across the supply chain to begin adhering to the standards that have been around for a long time.
Speaker EAnd largely organizations don't adhere to and applications don't.
Speaker EIt's all kind of siloed and in each individual box and allowing it to drive outcomes because obviously outcomes are what matter, but how you get there is certainly a key component and a foundational component of that like that.
Speaker BPaul, we need, we need to work with the dream team to get those outcomes.
Speaker BNick, what else would you add as it relates to ISO 25500 and why it's got to be on folks radar?
Speaker DYeah, I think it doesn't replace data exchange.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DWe're always going to be exchanging data.
Speaker DIt adds a layer to verify that data.
Speaker DSo must look at it as a filter, making sure that it's letting you know, hey, the data you're exchanging can't be verified by the party you're trying to send it to or by the authoritative source that owns that data.
Speaker DI think another key shift is we're exchanging today a lot of stored, replicated data almost whisper down the lane over the years, it really Switches that and says there may not be a need to own or store data that you, that you're not the source for because you, through I725500, you now have an infrastructure to be able to reference that data from the verified source.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BAnd Corinne, between what Paul and Nick both have shared your thoughts around the importance of ISO 25500 and where organization may be a little bit behind what it's aiming to address.
Speaker CYeah, yeah.
Speaker CI think one of Nick's last points was really important and that is storing data and that this can reduce the need to store or replicate data.
Speaker CIf you can use that data in stream or in flow and not replicate it, that that's a chance to be in its purest form, if you will, or to, to access it from that perspective.
Speaker CSo the fact that we have standards that are available gives us greater confidence in that and greater confidence in the trading partner or trading payers that we're looking at.
Speaker CSo I think that's important.
Speaker CWe will also continue probably in this next 24 months to see AI applied to improving data quality.
Speaker CPaul made a point of saying, you know, we're never going to have perfect data, but we do have an opportunity to improve the data quality that is available.
Speaker CSo these standards will help that improve the quality work towards a standard.
Speaker CAI will be a part of that message too, for sure.
Speaker CI think we'll see a lot of work on master Data Management or MDM in the next 24 months where AI can help improve that even within an enterprise, much less out in trading partner relationships where there's huge opportunity as well.
Speaker BGood stuff, Corinne.
Speaker BNick, I was reading as I was trying to get up to speed, especially up close to speed, between you and Nick, you and Paul and Corinne.
Speaker BI was reading something about the supply chain data for formatting clause, right?
Speaker BStandardizing dates and entities, locations and items.
Speaker BNow all that sounds a little bit simple, but why is that such a big deal in practice?
Speaker DYeah, great question.
Speaker DThe standards actually have been around for a while and we haven't really adopted them.
Speaker DAnd I think one of the major reasons is that, you know, putting an infrastructure in place to actually exchange data using these standards.
Speaker DSo it was almost like putting the cart before the horse a little bit.
Speaker DI think this might drive folks, maybe adopt them, but one of the most important things is creating global, unique, unambiguous identifiers.
Speaker DThe ISO 25500 doesn't run unless you're able to have globally unique, unambiguous data running through it.
Speaker DOtherwise your traceability back to the source.
Speaker DIf you have different, you know, an identifier that might be resolved by two different sources, you don't know where to go to go get that information.
Speaker DSo really, it's the foundation of ISO 25500.
Speaker DIt's the building blocks to say we need to have data that is global, unique, unambiguous, that's traceable back to an authoritative source in order to operate on ISO 25500.
Speaker EYeah, and it benefits both sides, right?
Speaker ESo I mean, user, users of information that have thousands and thousands, if not tens of thousands of suppliers, suppliers that sell to tens of thousands of organizations and then all of the applications, whether it's a system of record and optimization or a planning platform.
Speaker EYou know, an easy example of that is that if I'm a supplier, I could have a thousand different representations of myself across every different portal and application and customer that I sell into.
Speaker EYou know, if you bring it back to that foundational, you know, every organization has an international business identifier that can be verified.
Speaker EAnd if, if I'm a user buying from thousands of different suppliers, that opens up risk in terms of impersonation and things that we've talked about and fraud.
Speaker EThe goal is to get ahead of that and be able to identify not only core suppliers within category management, but also be able to eliminate and validate even suppliers that are smaller in the long tail that you're buying from.
Speaker ESo, you know, being able to get back to that authoritative source, as Nick mentioned, and you know, once the supplier is verified, it could be verified across, you know, various applications.
Speaker EThe benefits are, you know, wild, wildly important, both from a financial and a risk aspect in terms of what chief supply chain officers, chief Procurement officers and CFOs are looking at of the impacts of this data and how do they utilize that data to run their businesses more effectively.
Speaker BCorinne, your thoughts?
Speaker CYeah, I think it's an important initiative and, you know, it.
Speaker CIt allows us to compete as a supply chain instead of a bunch of companies that do business together.
Speaker CSo anything that we can do to accelerate the access and availability and interpretation of meaningful trading partner data is a good thing.
Speaker CAnd so it will be interesting to see the adoption here.
Speaker CYou know, you mentioned date formats.
Speaker CWe've been struggling with that for 20, 30 years now at this point in time, as I think back to even early working situations on collaborative planning, forecasting and replenishment that the voluntary inter commerce standards worked on in 2000.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo, you know, what is a product?
Speaker CWhat's a product id?
Speaker CWhat's a Volume, what's a container?
Speaker CYou know, all these different definitions are just building blocks that can accelerate business.
Speaker CAnd what that lets us do in the long run is it allows us to replace risky inventory with valuable insights with that data.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo that we can accelerate faster and so that we're not caught in the fashion crunch that we talked about with the fashion industry.
Speaker CIf we can get that information faster, we can adjust our investments in inventory, in moving those goods or inventory in motion as it comes to market as well.
Speaker BCorinne, you're reading my mind because that's adoption and kind of what changes what I was going to post to the panel next.
Speaker BSo, Paul, I'm gonna pose this to you.
Speaker BSo if and when maybe ISO 25500 becomes much more widely adopted, what does change?
Speaker BYou know, kind of referenced a couple of these things.
Speaker BBut what else changes financially and strategically for global supply chains?
Speaker EYeah, I think we've talked about it briefly.
Speaker EBut you know, being able to have a technology you can plug in and action against the, the standards that exist and become compliant takes that uncertainty and mistrust in some of your core baseline master data, whether supplier, master, material, master, you know, giving you representative information to power the applications that you're using to run your business.
Speaker ESo, you know, it helps balance working capital and risk across, you know, the indirect, direct logistics part of the supply chain.
Speaker EAnd then as, as that compliance happens, there will be more and more outcomes and, and pipes that, you know, that data that can flow through, flow through those pipes, actually that again allows you to prepare and plan more effectively for the things that we've been talking about in this entire episode and we and you all talk about on a day to day and week to week basis.
Speaker ESo it's really getting back to that foundation and laying the foundation that allows, allows all of the great innovation and work that's happening in the supply chain to take greater shape and again, get back to the outcome that matter, which is running your business, regardless of what you make, what you ship, what you do.
Speaker BSign me up.
Speaker BAll right.
Speaker BSo Nick, anything you'd add?
Speaker BThat was a very comprehensive answer we got from Paul J. Noble.
Speaker BAnything you'd add there, Nick?
Speaker DI think we talked a lot about some of our challenges on impersonation, risk, everything on the industrial Internet, ISO 25500, you're verified, you know who's requesting information, you know who's responding with that information.
Speaker DI think that's a key piece to kind of prevent a lot of the bad actors.
Speaker DI'm sure they'll try once this becomes fully adopted to, you know, infiltrate.
Speaker DBut being preventative and only allowing verified entities, verified identities in is a key piece of design for this.
Speaker DI think the other thing, you know, if I go full Utopia, if we're verifying everything, we should be able to allow AI to start orchestrating our supply chain, finding efficiencies.
Speaker DYou know, I watch the Amazon truck come to my neighborhood every single day, right?
Speaker DSomething.
Speaker DIf everything's verified, we know everything that's coming and where it is, somebody should be able to figure out how to do that, you know, a lot more efficiently.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DAnd we'll be able to react faster, but also trust our reactions.
Speaker BCorinne, that's.
Speaker BThat's the key word.
Speaker BTrust, trust, trust, trust.
Speaker BYour thoughts, though, on what else changes, Corinne, that maybe Nick and Paul didn't hit on or something you want to maybe emphasize of what they did.
Speaker BShare.
Speaker CYeah, no, I like the idea of utopia, Nick.
Speaker CIf we ever get the utopia supply chain, I want to see that in action.
Speaker CBut it certainly turns fragmented data into more intraoperable framework for decision making or for digital communication between businesses.
Speaker CAnd I think that that's where it becomes a real accelerator.
Speaker CSo if we don't have to, if we get to the point where we're complying with the standards or ISO certified in that process, that means we can adopt AI, as was mentioned, and we can automate.
Speaker CSo automation, I think, is good, or the goal of getting to an automated framework or interchange is where all businesses want to be.
Speaker CIt may be painful getting there, but it's definitely a destination worth striving for.
Speaker BWe nail the approach, and then we're off to the races, like Carl Lewis or Jackie Joyner Kersey to throw out a couple Olympians from back in the day.
Speaker ERight.
Speaker CYou're on a roll.
Speaker BOlympics are on my mind, folks.
Speaker BAnd I wish I could run fast like this, folks.
Speaker BAnyway, all right, so let's do this.
Speaker BI wish we had another 30 minutes, hour, couple hours with y', all, but Nick and Paul, really excited to hear more about vdsai.
Speaker BNick, let's start with you.
Speaker BTell us about what the organization does in a nutshell.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker DSo vdsai, if you think of kind of the traditional Internet, we all have an Internet service provider.
Speaker DVDSAI is the commercial provider to allow everyone to access the industrial Internet.
Speaker DSo really, go to bdsai.net we can get you verified.
Speaker DThat's the most important.
Speaker DLike I said, there's a.
Speaker DThere's an entry of verifying almost.
Speaker DLook at it as we have a bouncer Checking your ID at the door and then we can get your prefix.
Speaker DSo just like on the Internet, we have a domain name.
Speaker DI'm sure all of you have tried to secure the right domain name or bought the domain name that fits your company best.
Speaker DThat's what we're doing right now is we're helping companies register that smart prefix, which is really your domain name for the industrial Internet.
Speaker DYou can get that today.
Speaker DAnd what that does is that secures your globally unique identifiers specific to your entity.
Speaker DSo also every entity.
Speaker DSo if you have multiple entities within your company, company can register prefixes for each entity.
Speaker BMan.
Speaker BOkay, I think I can, I'm, I'm put, I'm picking up what you're putting down, Nick.
Speaker BAnd that's not always.
Speaker BThat doesn't always take place on Mondays here on the Buzz.
Speaker BPaul, what would you add to Nick's, you know, as he shared what VdSAI does?
Speaker BIn a nutshell, what else would you add, Paul?
Speaker EYeah, I think.
Speaker EWell said, Nick.
Speaker EBut, you know, overall it's, you know, a simple, simple way to start actioning, actioning and getting prepared for what's coming.
Speaker ERight.
Speaker ESo there are simple things you can do to, you know, the industrial Internet's coming.
Speaker EThis is, you know, a way that you can, you know, secure your spot and begin, begin that verification process that'll, you know, if you're a supplier, it helps you with your customers.
Speaker EIf you're an application or an si, it helps prepare the system systems that are being used across and you're, again, you're less data dependent of, you know, trying to rectify that authoritative data back to the source to make your application work better.
Speaker EAnd then ultimately for the users of products, you have greater trust that can help you decision more effectively.
Speaker ESo just think of it as a simple plugin that does that foundational work for you and can get your compliant and get you ready for what's coming.
Speaker BOutstanding.
Speaker BAll right, so Corinne, it sounds like we're going to hear a lot more about ACE ISO 25500.
Speaker BAnd you gotta get help somewhere, folks.
Speaker BBDSA might be one such partner if you wanna.
Speaker DWhat was that?
Speaker BThe utopian supply chain?
Speaker BWas that an analogy all three of y' all were talking about earlier?
Speaker BBut Corinne, what'd you hear there?
Speaker BWhy do I mean, leaders got so much on their plates, they don't need one more, but they're gonna have one more.
Speaker BSeems like by the hour.
Speaker BYour thoughts when we heard there from Nick and Paul?
Speaker CYeah, I guess the final thought that I would leave with folks, is that data is critically important.
Speaker CIt's always been critically important, but it is growing exponentially right now.
Speaker CSo the fact that we have a standard that can be adopted that allows us to access, interpret and leverage that to accelerate business decisions is really important.
Speaker CSo I think each and every business needs to figure out, look, is data going to be rocket fuel that propels our business forward or is it going to be kryptonite that that really cripples our business in the future?
Speaker CAnd this is an opportunity to adopt a standard that's out there and really accelerate that adoption process.
Speaker BCorinne, I love that.
Speaker BRocket fuel or Kryptonite.
Speaker BThe choice is yours, folks.
Speaker BMy son Ben would love that.
Speaker BLove that.
Speaker BThere's two options there.
Speaker BOkay, well, I hate to leave it here, but folks, we're going to make sure you know how to connect with Corinne, Nick and Paul in just a moment.
Speaker BWe want to share just a couple more resources.
Speaker BIf you like conversations like this.
Speaker BWant to share a couple more resources where you can find more.
Speaker BStarting with all of our upcoming live programming.
Speaker BFolks, you can venture over to.
Speaker BI'm gonna still call it the new supply chain now.com because it's still kind of new.
Speaker BWe rolled out last year.
Speaker BIt was a big passionate project, folks, the new site.
Speaker BBut you can check out upcoming live programming for the latest live streams and webinars we've got scheduled.
Speaker BWe'd love to have you come join us and share your perspective.
Speaker BAnd as we've touched on a couple times, you're going to find find Corinne's great article there.
Speaker BYou're going to find at our Resource Hub.
Speaker BYou're going to find all of our written interviews from events like Manifest.
Speaker BYou're going to find all of that at the Resource Hub.
Speaker BWhite papers, news, ebooks, blogs, you name it all right there at the new Supply Chain now dot com.
Speaker BOkay, so let's do this.
Speaker BAs we start to wrap Paul and Nick and Corinne, I feel like I'm Smarter after this February 23rd edition of the Buzz.
Speaker BThat's that doesn't always happen.
Speaker BBut this has been a great session.
Speaker BSo I wanna, I want to make sure folks now to connect with all three of y', all, starting with Paul J. Noble, OG Here at Supply Chain Now.
Speaker BPaul, how can folks track you down.
Speaker EYeah, at Paul J. Noble and I think most of the, most of the platforms out there, LinkedIn, X, so on and so forth.
Speaker EOr you can go to Forbes.com and look me up.
Speaker ETrying to put out more and more informational meeting with different CEOs across finance optimization platforms.
Speaker EWe'll be putting out something, you know, covering takeaways from Manifest, finalizing that, and then we'll be writing more on the subject at hand.
Speaker DISO 2 5, 500.
Speaker BOkay, so folks, we got our sneak peek from Paul and Forbes.
Speaker BMake sure you follow Paul wherever he may be.
Speaker BAll those socials he mentioned.
Speaker BNick, Nick, for your first time here on the Buzz, I really enjoyed your perspective.
Speaker BI don't like your Phillies as we
Speaker Eit always comes back to that.
Speaker EYeah, right, right, right.
Speaker DI hope you'll have a backdoor in
Speaker Bbaseball season, Nick, as the all kidding aside, as we talked about though, at Manifest, when the Phillies beat down the Braves in their last playoff matchup, y' all took our soul.
Speaker BWe gotta get it back.
Speaker BWe gotta get it back.
Speaker BBut Nick, congrats the cool, big things you're doing in industry.
Speaker BHow can folks connect with you and VdSAI?
Speaker DYeah, so you can go to my LinkedIn page.
Speaker DI'm working on probably being more active on social media.
Speaker DMaybe Paul can coach me on that.
Speaker DBut also vdsai.net, you know, go to our webpage, tons of resources there explaining everything we just talked about.
Speaker BOutstanding.
Speaker BCorinne Bursa, tell you what, you are always on the move.
Speaker BReally enjoy what you do here.
Speaker BI know you do a lot of keynoting and advising out in the market marketplace.
Speaker BHow can folks have a conversation with you?
Speaker BCorinne?
Speaker CYeah, I think the easiest way is LinkedIn, as our other participants mentioned.
Speaker CIt's just, it's an easy way to kind of cut through some of the noise.
Speaker CSo please connect with me there.
Speaker CI still want to invite feedback on the article that we shared today as well, because I think we're going to hear more and more on decision velocity and the impact on your business and just the way you think about metrics that you measure.
Speaker CBut please reach out and of course, I look for opportunities to be with you here on supply chain now as well.
Speaker BOutstanding.
Speaker BCorinne Versa.
Speaker BWhat a great, great hour spent Here on the February 23, 2026 version of the Buzz, brought to you by our friends at easypost.
Speaker BI want to thank our esteemed panel, Paul J. Noble.
Speaker BGreat to have you back, Paul.
Speaker EGreat to be back.
Speaker EThanks.
Speaker EAlways fun to spend some time on the supply chain now platform.
Speaker ESo appreciate the opportunity and always good to be here.
Speaker BYou bet.
Speaker BI think I got a certification with you and Nick and Corinne here today and Nick DiPolito with VDSA folks.
Speaker BYou can learn more at vdsa.net Nick, great to have you here today.
Speaker DThanks for having me.
Speaker DScott, this is fun.
Speaker DFirst time it was great.
Speaker BAnd I thought you're gonna throw in a go Phillies there, Nick.
Speaker BRight, right.
Speaker EI was ready for it.
Speaker BI was ready.
Speaker EYeah.
Speaker EYeah.
Speaker BWell, Nick, all kidding aside, great, great to meet you.
Speaker BYou manifest Good to catch up with you as well, Paul.
Speaker BGreat to have y' all here.
Speaker BI want to thank my esteemed co host Corinne Bursa.
Speaker BCorinne, always a pleasure.
Speaker CI en it's great conversation today.
Speaker CThanks.
Speaker BNo doubt.
Speaker BBig thanks to our friends easypost again who are powering the buzz all month long here in February and who are helping to make shipping easy, flexible and scalable.
Speaker BFolks, you can learn more@easypost.com Big thanks to Amanda and Trisha behind the scenes and most importantly, the biggest of thanks to our global audience for being here with us.
Speaker BAppreciate all the feedback.
Speaker BKeep it coming.
Speaker BBut folks, you got homework.
Speaker BYou know the homework.
Speaker BIt's the same assignment every show.
Speaker BYou got to take one thing you heard here from what a great.
Speaker BIt was a great panel.
Speaker BCorinne and Paul and Nick, take one thing, share it with your team.
Speaker BDo something with it.
Speaker DRight?
Speaker BPut it into practice.
Speaker BIt's all about deeds, not words.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BAnd with that said, on behalf the entire supply chain now team Scott Luton challenging you.
Speaker BDo good, give forward.
Speaker BBe the change that's needed.
Speaker BWe'll see you next time right back here on Supply Chain Now.
Speaker BThanks for bye.
Speaker AJoin the Supply Chain now community for more supply chain perspectives, news and innovations innovation.
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