Balancing the scales: interview with Monica Truelsch
Monica Truelsch's qualities as a logistics executive are matched only by her intense drive to see that women get the opportunities in the field they deserve, and that they succeed at them.
Mark Solomon joined DC VELOCITY as senior editor in August 2008, and was promoted to his current position on January 1, 2015. He has spent more than 30 years in the transportation, logistics and supply chain management fields as a journalist and public relations professional. From 1989 to 1994, he worked in Washington as a reporter for the Journal of Commerce, covering the aviation and trucking industries, the Department of Transportation, Congress and the U.S. Supreme Court. Prior to that, he worked for Traffic World for seven years in a similar role. From 1994 to 2008, Mr. Solomon ran Media-Based Solutions, a public relations firm based in Atlanta. He graduated in 1978 with a B.A. in journalism from The American University in Washington, D.C.
There are businesspeople, and there are advocates. Then there are the rare folk like Monica R. Truelsch. Truelsch has a demanding day job as director of marketing for logistics software developer TMW Systems, where she's been for 11 years. But she has also become a tireless advocate for expanding career advancement opportunities for women in logistics, not just because it's the right thing to do, but also because the field badly needs an infusion of qualified and knowledgeable professionals to meet the surge in demand for supply chain talent.
Truelsch's résumé is as varied as it gets. She has applied her deep technical knowledge to fields such as chemical handling, engineered materials, artificial intelligence, and industrial laboratory management. She has held positions as product manager, vice president of sales, and general manager. Today, Truelsch is responsible for TMW's corporate messaging, public relations, advertising, and product marketing.
At her behest, TMW sponsored the first "Distinguished Woman in Logistics" award competition, which had been established by the Women in Trucking Association, an advocacy group. The 2015 award was presented in April at the Transportation Intermediaries Association's annual conference in Orlando, Fla., to Kristy Knichel, president of Gibsonia, Pa.-based Knichel Logistics. During the ceremonies, Truelsch delivered an impassioned speech highlighting the growing role of women in the industry and across American business. Her remarks, which true to her technical form were supported by numerous data points, resonated with the attendees throughout the rest of the conference.
Truelsch spoke recently with Mark B. Solomon, executive editor - news, about her career, the outlook for women's advancement in the profession, how prospects have brightened, and where the culture needs to change.
Q: You've described yourself as being the first woman or the only woman in many of the positions you've held. Could you describe some of the experiences associated with that?
A: When I began working in an inside sales position during the early 1980s, it was commonplace to answer the phone and have a man demand to speak to "my boss" because he didn't have time to deal with an administrative person, which I was assumed to be. Typically, I would reply with something like, "I'm sorry, but my boss is out of the office at the moment. Let me just get a few details from you and we can get back to you quickly with the quote you need." This opened the door for me to begin asking highly technical questions about volumetrics, process design, chemical concentrations, and corrosivity, and then suggest a range of materials for the equipment. Before they realized it, we would be engaged in the sort of discussion they assumed I wasn't capable of. For women in all types of male-dominated industries, establishing credibility and competency as fast as possible is essential to our success.
Q: The University of Tennessee (UT) published a paper in April saying 77 percent of organizations surveyed have no budget or "roadmap" for supply chain talent development. Why have companies deprioritized their talent development efforts in a discipline that has become so relevant to their competitive standing?
A: The supply chain discipline has yet to find a consistent place in general business structure. In some companies, it is a subdiscipline of the purchasing or procurement function, where cost is paramount. In other firms, it is part of operations, the final step to getting the company's product to market. Often, the supply chain is a problem child. It is moved to a senior management oversight level to work out kinks and bottlenecks that threaten strategic goals, yet once the problems are addressed, the function is pushed down to lower management levels to be maintained. Until the supply chain function secures a stable role in the business management structure, it will be difficult for companies to prioritize talent acquisition or development for that skill.
Q: Female truck drivers represent only 5 percent of the U.S. commercial driver population. Is this a demographic that companies are beginning to pay attention to? If so, what needs to be done to attract and retain qualified women as drivers?
A: During the last recession, government data showed women made up half of the total work force. That number fluctuates a bit, but we are closer to parity than ever before. With the growing concern about the consequences of a driver shortage on economic growth, the trucking industry needs to figure out a way to tap that segment of the talent pool. Groups like the Women in Trucking Association are driving changes in the industry that affect how women see career opportunities and, by extension, help companies develop recruiting strategies that target women. This includes working with vehicle OEMs to make seating and driving controls better suited for less burly physical specimens, to increase personal security options while resting or sleeping in a truck cab, and to build more automatic transmissions. It also encompasses gender-neutral objectives such as creating a better work-life balance and higher earning potential.
Q: The same UT paper advised companies to hire "for the supply chain," not the specific job, making the point that a supply chain practitioner must master a wide range of complex tasks that affect the entire enterprise. Do you think this level of multitasking requirement presents a robust career path for women?
A: I hate to generalize about one gender or the other's possessing a particular aptitude for certain types of work activity. In modern business, the ability to adapt quickly, to wear many hats, to apply good analytical and decision-making skills, and above all, provide leadership in the face of a broad variety of challenges will mean the difference between success and failure. Because the supply chain responsibility is aligned with multiple functions across the enterprise—functions ranging from engineering to purchasing to operations and even sales—I'd say the career opportunities are as rich and diverse as anyone could hope for.
Q: Your situation is unique in that you are actively promoting opportunities for women in logistics while, at the same time, holding down a high-level corporate job. Has your corporate role helped or hindered your advocacy efforts?
A: I've always been attracted to technical roles because I enjoy those types of challenges. It wasn't because I wanted to blaze a trail for other women. That happened to be a side effect of my career choices, simply making it less unusual to find a competent female in a role where most people had only encountered men. The steady but mostly unremarkable progress of many women in roles previously almost exclusive to men has been going on for decades.
We are generally equal participants at the entry and middle management levels, but the numbers for women in positions of senior business leadership are still woefully below where I'd hoped we'd be at this point. The situation is more balanced in the small-business arena, where women are starting enterprises and are successfully assuming the leadership of family-run businesses. In the corporate world, the shifts occur more slowly. That's why I think pursuing more advocacy roles at this stage of my career is worthwhile to bring us all closer to that tipping point for equality of opportunity.
Q: How will you know that your efforts have succeeded? Are there specific goals that you benchmark yourself against?
A: Among Fortune 500 CEOs, the number of women is smaller than the number of men with the name of "John." When the number of women CEOs matches up more closely with the number of Jims, Bills, and Johns, I'll know that we've finally climbed one of the highest mountains.
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.