Building the Core Competence of Supply Chain episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 5, 2021 · 23 MIN

Building the Core Competence of Supply Chain

from Rethinking Supply Chain · host Venzee

In this episode of Rethinking Supply Chain, Venzee CEO and host John Abrams talks with Dr. Nick Vyas, Executive Director of the USC Marshall Center for Global Supply Chain Management. John and Nick discuss the significance of education in supply chain as well as the importance for brands and policy makers to build competent supply chains, especially during the post-COVID era.

In this episode of Rethinking Supply Chain, Venzee CEO and host John Abrams talks with Dr. Nick Vyas, Executive Director of the USC Marshall Center for Global Supply Chain Management. John and Nick discuss the significance of education in supply chain as well as the importance for brands and policy makers to build competent supply chains, especially during the post-COVID era.

NOW PLAYING

Building the Core Competence of Supply Chain

0:00 23:12

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

21 Million Forever

Jan 2, 2026 ·3m

Fork This Chain

May 9, 2025 ·2m

Ed Goes Corporate

Aug 23, 2024 ·22m

Dennis?

Aug 16, 2024 ·10m

Kyle Its Cold Outside!

Aug 9, 2024 ·13m

Rethinking Youth Ministry | A podcast for youth ministry leaders, pastors, volunteers, and anyone who cares about students OrangeStudents.com The Rethinking Youth Ministry Podcast is for youth ministry leaders, pastors, volunteers, workers, and anyone who cares about middle school and high school students. Each episode, we hope to raise the bar for youth ministry by asking questions, interviewing thinkers, and having real, honest conversations about what it looks like to lead the next generation. Rethinking Youth Ministry is a podcast from the Orange Students team. Our mission is to help you, the youth leader, influence the next generation. We do that through this podcast, other resources, and our weekly curriculum, XP3. If you'd like to learn more, check out OrangeStudents.com. Managing Next Generation Energy Systems Cambridge University Background Stakeholders working with energy systems have to make complex decisions formulated from risk-based assessments about the future. The move towards more renewables in our energy systems complicates matters even further, requiring the development of an integrated power grid and continuous and steady transformation of the UK power system. Network flows must be managed reliably under uncertain demands, uncertain supply, emerging network technologies and possible failures and, further, prices in related markets can be highly volatile. Mathematicians working with engineers and economists, can make significant contributions to address such issues, by helping to develop fit-for-purpose models for next generation energy systems. These interdisciplinary approaches are looking to address a range of associated problems, including modelling, prediction, simulation, control, market and mechanism design and optimisation. This knowledge exchange workshop was part of the four months Res Kusarigama (Sickles) ⚜️🗡️ Asian Serenity [LoFi] Reap the rhythmic harvest of the Kusarigama, where every beat is a dance between blade and chain! 🎵⛓️ Fork This Chain Rod Palmer Fork this chain

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Rethinking Supply Chain?

This episode is 23 minutes long.

When was this Rethinking Supply Chain episode published?

This episode was published on August 5, 2021.

What is this episode about?

In this episode of Rethinking Supply Chain, Venzee CEO and host John Abrams talks with Dr. Nick Vyas, Executive Director of the USC Marshall Center for Global Supply Chain Management. John and Nick discuss the significance of education in supply...

Can I download this Rethinking Supply Chain episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!