it's about time (and space): interview with Ken Ackerman
Everything's changed in 20 years; yet nothing's changed in 20 years. Veteran DC consultant Ken Ackerman may rhapsodize about the potential of technology, but in the end, he says, the business is still all about the effective management of space and time.
Mitch Mac Donald has more than 30 years of experience in both the newspaper and magazine businesses. He has covered the logistics and supply chain fields since 1988. Twice named one of the Top 10 Business Journalists in the U.S., he has served in a multitude of editorial and publishing roles. The leading force behind the launch of Supply Chain Management Review, he was that brand's founding publisher and editorial director from 1997 to 2000. Additionally, he has served as news editor, chief editor, publisher and editorial director of Logistics Management, as well as publisher of Modern Materials Handling. Mitch is also the president and CEO of Agile Business Media, LLC, the parent company of DC VELOCITY and CSCMP's Supply Chain Quarterly.
Some guys run off and join the Peace Corps. Some pull a few strings and land a cushy government post. Others return to school, where they can spice up their graduate seminars with first-person accounts of life in the corporate trenches. A few finagle some funding and launch a dot-com … or a magazine. Somewhere down the line—often decades into a very successful career—many professionals find themselves at a crossroads, a mid-career junction (crisis would be too strong a word) where they simply want to do something else.
Twenty years ago, Ken Ackerman found himself in such a position. The head of Distribution Centers Inc., a logistics services company with operations in eight metro areas, Ackerman longed for a change. "I didn't want to spend my whole career in the corporate world," he says.
His thoughts first turned to education—but more in a Michael Hammer way than a Mr. Chips. "I decided that teaching big kids would be more fun than teaching little kids," says the Ivy League-educated professional, "and that, after all, is what consulting is all about."
Ackerman's first leap didn't take him too far from Corporate America. He cashed out his interest in Distribution Centers Inc. and spent the following year—which he describes as both "fabulous" and "life-changing"—as a consultant in the logistics practice of Coopers & Lybrand (now part of PricewaterhouseCoopers). Although he stayed there for only a year, the experience did two things for Ackerman. First, it confirmed for him that consulting was what he wanted to do. Second, it allowed him to learn the ropes of the consulting trade. "I had a chance to go to West Point before I committed to joining the Army," he quips.
With experience as both a practitioner and as a consultant under his belt, he launched The Ackerman Company, which is today widely considered one of the premier small consulting houses in the supply chain field.
In the 20-plus years since,Ackerman has both observed and lobbied for many of the advances that have changed the way logistics professionals do their work. In a late March conversation with DC VELOCITY Editorial Director Mitch Mac Donald, Ackerman reflected on the changes he has seen and on what's in store for us next.
Q: Let's stay on the block and tackle subject for a moment. The efficient use of space is important. Moving things in and out quickly, safely and damage free is important. What else is important? If a stranger were to walk up to you and say, "Hey, what are the three or four most important elements in a good warehousing or distribution center operation?" how would you answer?
A: Ah, the elevator pitch. I would tell them they needed to be sure they were managing the space as well as it can be managed and managing time, which is the labor, as well as it can be managed. Is there some waste in the operation? Are there steps that shouldn't be there?
Q: How do you go about helping them identify that?
A: Well, with space, you go in and look at many things, and ask many questions.
Are the aisles wider than they need to be? Are the staging areas excessive? Have you properly isolated the fast movers and stored them so they are easily accessible? Many facilities are a combination of a distribution center and a warehouse. As a result, you have to identify what will be moving through quickly and what you'll be storing for later use.
Q: Are you seeing a lot of companies that are trying to use their space for the dual purpose of warehouse storage and distribution?
A: Not very many, but there is opportunity there. That's how we make a living. There are a few companies that really have things figured out, and they're doing it. A lot more probably should be.
Q: Let's shift to the things you have observed that have driven change. Let's say you're a logistics professional and your job is overseeing your company's DC operations. What has made your job profoundly different today than it was, say, 15 years ago?
A: It is the information revolution.
Q: Are you talking about this parallel flow of goods and information and how they interrelate? How is that really changing the job? Are people more productive or are people able to make better decisions because they have more information? Or is there another side to this, with people becoming overwhelmed by information?
A: Both. I think if I look back at the last 20—some years, the biggest thing to come along has been automatic identification, specifically bar coding and scanning. The next big thing, which I believe will supplant and possibly replace scanning, is voice recognition in the DC. I was initially skeptical about voice—based technology, so I had to be shown. When I went and saw it in a wholesale grocery DC in northern Ohio, I was blown away. It is so much better than scanning.
Q: What are some of the inherent advantages of voice? Are we talking about a technology that can really change the game?
A: Yes, and I'll tell you why. Your hands are free with voice. You don't have to hold a scanner. You don't have to hold any papers . You run down the aisle we a ring your earphones, your microphone and a computer attached to your belt, and you pick orders. The machine says, 'Go to X-70'; you say, 'I am at X-70 and I see queue #1234'; it says, Pick six pieces'; you say, 'Six , five, four, three, two, one, check'; and it tells you to proceed to the next location. It's programmed to check the count, too—which means better accuracy. The wholesale grocer that I saw doing it bought this system to improve accuracy; it did not buy it to boost productivity. Getting both was a pleasant surprise.
Q: It seems that a lot of emerging technologies that have made a huge difference in DC and logistics operations have come out of retail— especially the grocery and apparel businesses. Is that the case?
A: I'd say that's accurate, although we've seen some solid breakthroughs come out of the chemicals industry, as well. Overall, though, I think you're right. When they see a solid return in accuracy, or productivity, or both, folks in those industry segments aren't afraid to make an investment. The vice president of logistics at [the grocery chain] Kroger told me last summer that his company was going to put voice recognition in as quickly as it could get the money. He also told me that Wal-Mart was heading in the same direction. So here are two of the world's biggest retailers, both committed to this technology.
Another important point to make regarding voice-recognition technology is that the training is ridiculously easy. You can literally train an order picker in a few minutes. An order picker I observed in a Lima, Ohio, DC was a Teamster member. He had no motivation whatsoever to put on a show for me, but he did. That is what really blew me away—how fast this kid moved.
Q: So, rather than warily approaching this new technology, some workers are actually embracing it to make their workplace better?
A: Some of the folks who have spent more time on it than I have tell me that it actually reduces employee turnover. The young people who are using it think it is really cool and they are glad to be part of something that is really sophisticated.
Q: Let's look into the crystal ball a bit. You touched on some of the fundamentals that haven't changed in 20 years. You touched on some of the changes technology has brought to the DC. But where will the industry be in five or 10 years?
A: Thats a tough question. I recently wrote an article with George Gecowets, the retired head of the Council of Logistics Management, in which we identified eight developments that will change things in the coming years—some in a big way, some in a small way. Basically, the eight things are as follows: a greater emphasis on systems and flow in measuring performance; greater use of artificial intelligence; branding in the supply chain; simplified released-rate pricing to eliminate liability hassles; more pap erless and almost laborless operations; more emphasis on worker education and training; consolidation to two types of freight carriers, linehaul and last mile; and federal involvement in rebuilding the transportation infrastructure, particularly as the railroad rights of way become national property.
The supply chain risk management firm Overhaul has landed $55 million in backing, saying the financing will fuel its advancements in artificial intelligence and support its strategic acquisition roadmap.
The equity funding round comes from the private equity firm Springcoast Partners, with follow-on participation from existing investors Edison Partners and Americo. As part of the investment, Springcoast’s Chris Dederick and Holger Staude will join Overhaul’s board of directors.
According to Austin, Texas-based Overhaul, the money comes as macroeconomic and global trade dynamics are driving consequential transformations in supply chains. That makes cargo visibility and proactive risk management essential tools as shippers manage new routes and suppliers.
“The supply chain technology space will see significant consolidation over the next 12 to 24 months,” Barry Conlon, CEO of Overhaul, said in a release. “Overhaul is well-positioned to establish itself as the ultimate integrated solution, delivering a comprehensive suite of tools for supply chain risk management, efficiency, and visibility under a single trusted platform.”
Artificial intelligence (AI) and data science were hot business topics in 2024 and will remain on the front burner in 2025, according to recent research published in AI in Action, a series of technology-focused columns in the MIT Sloan Management Review.
In Five Trends in AI and Data Science for 2025, researchers Tom Davenport and Randy Bean outline ways in which AI and our data-driven culture will continue to shape the business landscape in the coming year. The information comes from a range of recent AI-focused research projects, including the 2025 AI & Data Leadership Executive Benchmark Survey, an annual survey of data, analytics, and AI executives conducted by Bean’s educational firm, Data & AI Leadership Exchange.
The five trends range from the promise of agentic AI to the struggle over which C-suite role should oversee data and AI responsibilities. At a glance, they reveal that:
Leaders will grapple with both the promise and hype around agentic AI. Agentic AI—which handles tasks independently—is on the rise, in the form of generative AI bots that can perform some content-creation tasks. But the authors say it will be a while before such tools can handle major tasks—like make a travel reservation or conduct a banking transaction.
The time has come to measure results from generative AI experiments. The authors say very few companies are carefully measuring productivity gains from AI projects—particularly when it comes to figuring out what their knowledge-based workers are doing with the freed-up time those projects provide. Doing so is vital to profiting from AI investments.
The reality about data-driven culture sets in. The authors found that 92% of survey respondents feel that cultural and change management challenges are the primary barriers to becoming data- and AI-driven—indicating that the shift to AI is about much more than just the technology.
Unstructured data is important again. The ability to apply Generative AI tools to manage unstructured data—such as text, images, and video—is putting a renewed focus on getting all that data into shape, which takes a whole lot of human effort. As the authors explain “organizations need to pick the best examples of each document type, tag or graph the content, and get it loaded into the system.” And many companies simply aren’t there yet.
Who should run data and AI? Expect continued struggle. Should these roles be concentrated on the business or tech side of the organization? Opinions differ, and as the roles themselves continue to evolve, the authors say companies should expect to continue to wrestle with responsibilities and reporting structures.
Shippers today are praising an 11th-hour contract agreement that has averted the threat of a strike by dockworkers at East and Gulf coast ports that could have frozen container imports and exports as soon as January 16.
The agreement came late last night between the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) representing some 45,000 workers and the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX) that includes the operators of port facilities up and down the coast.
Details of the new agreement on those issues have not yet been made public, but in the meantime, retailers and manufacturers are heaving sighs of relief that trade flows will continue.
“Providing certainty with a new contract and avoiding further disruptions is paramount to ensure retail goods arrive in a timely manner for consumers. The agreement will also pave the way for much-needed modernization efforts, which are essential for future growth at these ports and the overall resiliency of our nation’s supply chain,” Gold said.
The next step in the process is for both sides to ratify the tentative agreement, so negotiators have agreed to keep those details private in the meantime, according to identical statements released by the ILA and the USMX. In their joint statement, the groups called the six-year deal a “win-win,” saying: “This agreement protects current ILA jobs and establishes a framework for implementing technologies that will create more jobs while modernizing East and Gulf coasts ports – making them safer and more efficient, and creating the capacity they need to keep our supply chains strong. This is a win-win agreement that creates ILA jobs, supports American consumers and businesses, and keeps the American economy the key hub of the global marketplace.”
The breakthrough hints at broader supply chain trends, which will focus on the tension between operational efficiency and workforce job protection, not just at ports but across other sectors as well, according to a statement from Judah Levine, head of research at Freightos, a freight booking and payment platform. Port automation was the major sticking point leading up to this agreement, as the USMX pushed for technologies to make ports more efficient, while the ILA opposed automation or semi-automation that could threaten jobs.
"This is a six-year détente in the tech-versus-labor tug-of-war at U.S. ports," Levine said. “Automation remains a lightning rod—and likely one we’ll see in other industries—but this deal suggests a cautious path forward."
Editor's note: This story was revised on January 9 to include additional input from the ILA, USMX, and Freightos.
Logistics industry growth slowed in December due to a seasonal wind-down of inventory and following one of the busiest holiday shopping seasons on record, according to the latest Logistics Managers’ Index (LMI) report, released this week.
The monthly LMI was 57.3 in December, down more than a percentage point from November’s reading of 58.4. Despite the slowdown, economic activity across the industry continued to expand, as an LMI reading above 50 indicates growth and a reading below 50 indicates contraction.
The LMI researchers said the monthly conditions were largely due to seasonal drawdowns in inventory levels—and the associated costs of holding them—at the retail level. The LMI’s Inventory Levels index registered 50, falling from 56.1 in November. That reduction also affected warehousing capacity, which slowed but remained in expansion mode: The LMI’s warehousing capacity index fell 7 points to a reading of 61.6.
December’s results reflect a continued trend toward more typical industry growth patterns following recent years of volatility—and they point to a successful peak holiday season as well.
“Retailers were clearly correct in their bet to stock [up] on goods ahead of the holiday season,” the LMI researchers wrote in their monthly report. “Holiday sales from November until Christmas Eve were up 3.8% year-over-year according to Mastercard. This was largely driven by a 6.7% increase in e-commerce sales, although in-person spending was up 2.9% as well.”
And those results came during a compressed peak shopping cycle.
“The increase in spending came despite the shorter holiday season due to the late Thanksgiving,” the researchers also wrote, citing National Retail Federation (NRF) estimates that U.S. shoppers spent just short of a trillion dollars in November and December, making it the busiest holiday season of all time.
The LMI is a monthly survey of logistics managers from across the country. It tracks industry growth overall and across eight areas: inventory levels and costs; warehousing capacity, utilization, and prices; and transportation capacity, utilization, and prices. The report is released monthly by researchers from Arizona State University, Colorado State University, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rutgers University, and the University of Nevada, Reno, in conjunction with the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP).
As U.S. small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) face an uncertain business landscape in 2025, a substantial majority (67%) expect positive growth in the new year compared to 2024, according to a survey from DHL.
However, the survey also showed that businesses could face a rocky road to reach that goal, as they navigate a complex environment of regulatory/policy shifts and global market volatility. Both those issues were cited as top challenges by 36% of respondents, followed by staffing/talent retention (11%) and digital threats and cyber attacks (2%).
Against that backdrop, SMEs said that the biggest opportunity for growth in 2025 lies in expanding into new markets (40%), followed by economic improvements (31%) and implementing new technologies (14%).
As the U.S. prepares for a broad shift in political leadership in Washington after a contentious election, the SMEs in DHL’s survey were likely split evenly on their opinion about the impact of regulatory and policy changes. A plurality of 40% were on the fence (uncertain, still evaluating), followed by 24% who believe regulatory changes could negatively impact growth, 20% who see these changes as having a positive impact, and 16% predicting no impact on growth at all.
That uncertainty also triggered a split when respondents were asked how they planned to adjust their strategy in 2025 in response to changes in the policy or regulatory landscape. The largest portion (38%) of SMEs said they remained uncertain or still evaluating, followed by 30% who will make minor adjustments, 19% will maintain their current approach, and 13% who were willing to significantly adjust their approach.