MIT Humanitarian Supply Chain Lab Director Receives 2024 Humanitarian Logistics Award
Dr. Jarrod Goentzel, of MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics, receives 2024 honor.
Dr. Jarrod Goentzel, of MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics, receives 2024 honor.
Mobility Confidence Index Study in Collaboration with the MIT Advanced Vehicle Technology (AVT) Consortium
On Monday 7 October, Loughborough University welcomed leaders and executives from across the supply chain industry to the UK Supply Chain and Logistics Excellence (SCALE) Centre Symposium.
This symposium aimed to bring together key stakeholders from industry, policy and academia to discuss and co-create visions how the UK SCALE Centre, and supply chain community, can confront some of the biggest challenges facing the sector.
Omnichannel supply chain strategies are driven by the growth of eCommerce, and technology-related innovations are helping industry players remain competitive in this transformational journey.
In an article for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette MIT AVT Foudner Bryan Reimer weighs in on Tesla's newly anounced robotaxi.
MIT CTL's Angela Acocella, Chris Caplice, and Yossi Sheffi's recent research offers a fresh look at how shippers, carriers and market dynamics play into freight contract performance.
Dean of Loughborough Business School, Professor Janet Godsell, has been named as a winner for the ‘Sector Activist’ category in 2024 edition of The Manufacturer Top 100.
Now in its 12th year, The Manufacturer Top 100 scours the length and breadth of the nation to find the 100 most dynamic leaders and innovators in manufacturing, nominated by The Manufacturer’s audience, the industrial community and judged by a panel of industry leaders, academics and manufacturing associations.
CTL Director Yossi Sheffi was quoted by The Associated Press on American dockworkers' strike and their attempt to minimize the impact of future automation.
You cannot bet against the march of technology,” said Yossi Sheffi, “You cannot ban automation, because it will creep up in other places.”
MIT CTL Director Yossi Sheffi was recently named the #1 Supply Chain Influencer by SupplyChainDigital.
Beyond academia, Dr. Sheffi has founded or co-founded five successful companies, including LogiCorp and Logistics.com. His consultancy with top enterprises cements him as the leading voice in shaping modern supply chain strategies and addressing emerging industry challenges.
Dr. Jarrod Goentzel, MIT Humanitarian Supply Chain Lab, and Principal Research Scientist at MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics, receives 2024 honor.
2024 report highlights five years of global progress, uncovering gaps in corporate sustainability goals, with Scope 3 emissions remaining a major hurdle for supply chains worldwide
CTL Director Yossi Sheffi was interviewed by Sourcing Journal about recent east coast port strikes and how the employees have more bargaining power due to recent precedents set by UPS and other organizations.
Experts from the Netherlands, Malaysia, USA and Uruguay spoke exclusively to MundoLogistica about the particularities and perspectives of a tomorrow that is already here.
CTL’s Dr. Eva Ponce (Director, Online Education; Director, MITx MicroMasters in Supply Chain Management; Director, Omnichannel Supply Chain Lab) worked with MundoLogistica on the article.
MIT CTL Executive Director Chris Caplice was recently quoted in MIT Sloan School of Management's Ideas Made to Matter.
“AI is a moving target,” said Chris Caplice, the executive director of the MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics. “It’s not sitting still; it’s aspirational because what was considered AI 30 years ago — even 20 years ago — is not considered cutting-edge AI anymore. It’s always that thing that exceeds our grasp.”
Understanding the process and the resources required improves the ability to meet the project goals.
By Ken Cottrill, editorial director, MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics
Companies can engage with academia on various levels through educational programs and the cross-sharing of knowledge. Another channel to engagement is research—the subject of this column.
AgeLab Director Joseph Coughlin was recently quoted in The Atlantic:
Loughborough University Joins Prestigious International Network to Advance Global Supply Chain and Logistics Innovation
CAMBRIDGE, MA, USA, and LOUGHBOROUGH, UK – The Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Center for Transportation and Logistics (MIT CTL) and Loughborough University proudly announce the addition of the UK Supply Chain and Logistics Excellence (SCALE) Centre at Loughborough University
Humanitarian supply chains have unique characteristics that the private sector must understand
Executives have a lot of learning opportunities at their avail. Here’s how certifications fit into the picture.
In the constantly evolving world of supply chain management, the executive quest for new knowledge, qualifications, and skills never really ends. In this article by Contributing Editor Bridget McCrea, Eva Ponce, Director of Online Education at MIT’s Center for Transportation & Logistics, highlights a growing trend where employers increasingly prioritize certifications to formally upskill their workforces.
Many companies are turning to AI to help manage their data efforts, but dirty data leads to poor analysis
The increasing use of artificial intelligence and Generative AI in supply chain will not fix the primary problem that has existed since the dawn of time: data quality. The old saying, garbage in, garbage out, still applies to AI. But, paraphrasing the words of Yossi Sheffi, director of MIT’s Master of Supply Chain Management degree and a leading voice in supply chain: All AI is doing is allowing us to fail faster.
Loughborough University has partnered with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Center for Transportation and Logistics (MIT CTL) to be the first UK member of its Global Supply Chain and Logistics Excellence (SCALE) Network.
The union will offer an exclusive Master’s degree program for hundreds of students each year, with time divided between both Loughborough and Massachusetts, in the United States.
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Center for Transportation & Logistics (CTL)has commissioned a new research lab to investigate high-impact applications of new data-driven technologies in the logistics industry. The formation of the lab was supported by seed funding from the intralogistics group Mecalux. Specifically, the Intelligent Logistics Systems Labat MIT CTL will explore the potential of machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI) to transform the future of logistics operations and goods transportation.
Lab to serve as the foundation for future research collaboration between MIT CTL and Mecalux.
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for Transportation & Logistics (MIT CTL) has launched a new research lab to investigate high-impact applications of data-driven technologies in the logistics industry. Seed funding from the intralogistics group Mecalux supported the formation of the lab.