by Todd Halwas | Jul 9, 2025 | Blog, Data & AI, SCA, Supply Chain Strategy & Transformation
Have you heard the Yogi Berra quote that “It’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future”? This is the unfortunate reality of New Product Introductions (NPI). Far too often NPI result in a costly gap between what you thought was going...
by Christian Nixel | Jun 18, 2025 | Blog, SCA, Warehouse Operations & Automation, WMS
It’s time to replace the aging systems in your warehouses and everyone in the organization knows it. Your WMS has reached its end-of-life for support. (Not to mention its incompatibility with the rest of your tech stack and some security concerns.) And your WCS is...
by John Sharkey | Jun 11, 2025 | Blog, Connected Planning & Fulfillment, SCA, Supply Chain AI & Data Engineering, Supply Chain Strategy & Transformation, Transportation & Mobility, Webinar
Automotive market disruptions are converging and industry leaders are facing a unique blend of volatility and opportunity. The automotive industry has faced a series of shifts and shocks in recent years. The recent announcement of a 25% tariff on vehicles imported...
by Team Spinnaker SCA | Apr 28, 2025 | News, SCA
Chicago, IL — April 28, 2025 —Spinnaker SCA, a Publicis Sapient company and a leading provider of supply chain strategy, planning, and execution consulting services, announced today its commitment as an Annual Sponsor of the CSCMP Chicago Roundtable, further...
by Team Spinnaker SCA | Apr 15, 2025 | APS, Blog, Connected Planning & Fulfillment, Health, SCA, Webinar
Change management is the unsung hero of digital transformations Healthcare and life sciences, like many other industries, can no longer overlook the need for digital transformations. In an environment defined by squeezed margins, volatile demand, regulatory...
by Team Spinnaker SCA | Apr 10, 2025 | eBook, SCA, Supply Chain Strategy & Transformation
Tariffs are back on the front page (again). Consumer sentiment is straight out of Barbie Land—shifting between glittery optimism and existential dread. And climate-driven events are no longer “acts of God”—they’re just acts of business.