Mega-Cities in Emerging Markets Pose Special Logistics Challenges

December 15, 2011 • News

SupplyChainBrain caught up with Dr. Edgar Blanco at the 2011 Annual Conference of the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals, in Philadelphia.

Read the full interview here.

Onsite Relationships: Challenging But Rewarding

November 16, 2011 • News

Companies commonly use outsourcing as a means to lower costs or cover an area of supply chain expertise they currently lack. These relationships also bring opportunities to collaborate on ways to improve operational efficiency. A type of outsourcing that offers these benefits and takes collaborative relationships to a higher level finds an individual or team of professionals from the vendor embedded in the client company’s organization.

The Damage Ferdaus Could Have Caused

September 29, 2011 • News

We've been talking all morning about the alleged terror plot which was reportedly being planned by a 26-year-old Ashland, MA man. According to the FBI, Rezwan Ferdaus wanted to take remote control planes, loaded with explosives and fly them into the Pentagon and U.S. Capitol. 

Jim Rice, from the MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics, stopped by Fox 25's Beacon Hill studio to talk about it.

View the interview here.

Trade is Not a Four-Letter Word

September 29, 2011 • News

UPS chairman and CEO Scott Davis explores free trade, the U.S. economy — and the truth behind those whiteboard ads.

While many Americans see today’s increasingly competitive global economy as contributing to the nation’s economic woes, UPS Chairman and CEO Scott Davis argued in a Tuesday talk at MIT that free trade ultimately benefits the U.S. economy and employment.

Leveling the Fuel Surcharge Playing Field

August 30, 2011 • News

Is it possible to create a fuel surcharge program that is consistently fair to shippers and carriers? As we have seen over recent months, the cost of motor vehicle fuel is a national preoccupation. Perhaps this is one reason why rising prices at the pump, and mechanisms such as fuel surcharges that are designed to spread the pain between shippers and service providers equably, attract so much attention.

Car of the Future Will Keep Us Safe Behind the Wheel at any Age

August 29, 2011 • News

Hari Sreenivasan talks with Dr. Joseph F Coughlin, Director of the MIT AgeLab and the New England University Transportation Center about the car of the future. Coughlin says automobile technology will reflect a baby boomer generation that will live longer, are more technology savvy, and will demand to stay on the road longer than previous generations.

View the news segment here.

Products’ carbon footprints easier to track with MIT grad’s start-up

August 29, 2011 • News

Robert Harris is so proud of the local products he uses in his catering that he adorned tables at a recent event with a map showing where the dinner ingredients were grown or made. It’s a great tool to demonstrate to our clients the care that we take in sourcing,’’ said Harris, chef and owner of Season to Taste Catering and The Table, a 10-seat restaurant, both in Cambridge. 

Panama Canal Authority to showcase expansion effort

August 19, 2011 • News

The CEO of the Panama Canal, Administrator/CEO Alberto Aleman Zubieta, announced today that the Panama Canal Authority will host its first-ever best practices Engineering and Infrastructure Congress.

Talent Strategies: Getting Your Point Across Without Bullets and Builds

July 28, 2011 • News

It is a fair assumption that most supply chain professionals reading SCMR can quickly recount a harrowing tale, probably set at the end of the quarter, involving a key shipment that is about to miss its delivery deadline. Being at the core of the action in today's globalized businesses, the supply chain is full of exciting stories about how someone moved mountains to save the day... or not. Dr. Jarrod Goentzel from MIT shares more insights into using the power of narrative as an effective means of communicating critical messages across your organization.

It's Time to Tweak the Supply Chain

July 07, 2011 • News

When retailers, reps and sales managers gather next month at the Salt Palace for Outdoor Retailer Summer Market, talk will turn to products — how to market them, how to merchandise them, when to bring in back-up orders. No less important, however, will be the discussions among product designers, brand managers, suppliers and a small army of compliance auditors, contractors and consultants that manage the industry’s far-flung supply chain and will be focused on the questions of where, when and how to make product and maintain margins.

New Research Shows Many Boomers Want To Age In Place, But Most Have No Plan

June 21, 2011 • News

The Hartford launches Home for a Lifetime to encourage boomers to create living spaces that improve quality of life now and enable them to stay in their current homes as they age

One of the biggest issues boomers will confront in the years to come is planning for their future housing needs. According to a survey from The Hartford and the MIT AgeLab, 50 percent of boomers want to stay in their current home as they age, but most have no plans in place.

Disrupting Your Supply Chain for the Better

June 17, 2011 • News

Yesterday, the MIT Center for Transportation and Logistics held Crossroads 2011. The title of this year’s event reveals a lot: “Disruptive Innovations That Will Shape the Future of Supply Chains.” During the conference, leading MIT faculty examined what we can expect from supply chains in 10 or 20 years and the technologies and trends evolving today that will characterize tomorrow’s supply chains.

Read the full article here.

Only as Strong as the Weakest Link

June 08, 2011 • News

As the effects of the Sendai earthquake and tsunami ripple through the global economy, companies should shore up their supply chains to guard against disaster.

Read the full article here.

MIT’s Center for Transportation & Logistics Announces Speakers at the Malaysia Institute for Supply Chain Innovation Global Supply Chain SumMIT

June 06, 2011 • Press Releases

UPDATE June 16, 2011: We are pleased to announce our keynote speaker, Alberto Alemán Zubieta, CEO of the Panama Canal Authority. Mr Zubieta will be speaking on the topic of the future of the Panama Canal and its impact on supply chain.

 

Leading academics from top institutions as well as global industry executives convene for inaugural event.

Professor Yossi Sheffi Receives Salzberg Lifetime Award

May 26, 2011 • News

Professor Yossi Sheffi has been selected to receive the Salzberg Lifetime Award from the Whitman School of Management at Syracuse University. The Salzberg Medallion has come to be recognized as one of the most prestigious awards in the field of transportation and supply chain management. In a letter to Sheffi on behalf of the Whitman School, Dr.

US and Europe Escape Worst of Quake's Aftershock

May 19, 2011 • News

US and European companies have generally suffered only minor and short-lived disruption as a result of the March 11 earthquake in Japan, executives and analysts have said, showing the resilience of global supply chains. The catastrophe led to severe problems for many Japanese companies such as

Talent Strategies: Do You Have the Skills to Manage a Crisis?

May 16, 2011 • News

In light of recent natural disasters, what skills are necessary to be prepared for, and recover from, a large-scale disruption in your supply chain? And who in the organization should take the lead? Dr. Bruce Arntzen and Jim Rice from CTL share their thoughts in the latest edition of Supply Chain Management Review.

Read the recent article for more details.

Lab Shows What it Feels like to Age

May 11, 2011 • News

CNN's Deb Feyerick goes inside a lab, and an aging suit, to learn what it's like to lose mobility and flexibility. Watch Dr. Joe Coughlin from the MIT AgeLab discuss the Age Gain Now Empathy System (or AGNES), as well as other innovations that are being developed to help aging baby boomers live better.

See the full story here.

Cultivating Supply Chain Experts

May 05, 2011 • News

Getting a product from the manufacturer to your doorstep involves a complex chain of contracts, transportation, customs, inventory control, planning and demand forecasting, among other steps. When parts and demand for a product come from around the world, the supply chain becomes an intricate network.

Stay Ahead of the GHG Curve

April 21, 2011 • News

Despite a lack of cohesive global practices on global carbon emission reduction, supply chain emissions continue to play a central role in corporate environmental initiatives.

Read the full article here.

 

Japan's Supply Chain Ripple Effects

April 15, 2011 • News

This past Monday marked the one-month anniversary of the earthquake that struck Japan on March 11. As the country braces for aftershocks in the months to come, businesses around the world are steeling themselves against ripples in their global supply chains. In a recent community briefing, MIT experts spoke about the earthquake’s effects on supply chains for both commercial products and humanitarian aid.

BASF Establishes Partnership with MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics

April 12, 2011 • Press Releases

April 12, 2011 (Cambridge, MA) - BASF, the world’s leading chemical company, today announced it is establishing a partnership with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Center for Transportation & Logistics (CTL). The company has become a Strategic Partner in the Center’s Supply Chain Exchange. The Supply Chain Exchange is an active community of companies that share a common goal to leverage cutting-edge research and knowledge to achieve supply chain-centric competitive advantages.

Drivers as Good as Their Vision

March 31, 2011 • News

Mom and Dad always told you to look both ways before crossing the street, but if Grandma or Grandpa is driving down the road, you'd better look twice. A recently published study by researchers at Israel’s Ben Gurion University concluded drivers 65 and older are half as likely to notice pedestrians and other roadside hazards as drivers in the 21 to 40 age group. This is partly due to diminished peripheral vision.

Talent Strategies: Three Questions that Define the Leadership Debate

March 31, 2011 • News

Leadership in supply chain management has become a hot topic over the last few years. Many supply chain executives visit the MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics (MIT CTL) for recruiting, executive education, and other reasons, and it is a rare meeting where the topic of leadership (or really the lack thereof) does not come up. The issue usually surfaces in side conversations where supply chain executives lament the shortage of individuals in their organizations who possess leadership skills, both “hard” and “soft.”

The Japan Disaster: Rebuilding Supply Chains

March 28, 2011 • News



In this recent webcast, panelists discussed the effects of the recent earthquake and tsunami on trade between the U.S. and Japan, including how the disaster has affected global supply chains in the automobile, electronics and agriculture industries, and what shippers and logistics providers can do to keep distribution channels open. 

Panelists include: 

Mario Moreno 
Economist 
The Journal of Commerce/PIERS 

Jim Rice 
Deputy Director, Center for Transportation and Logistics 
MIT