Planning for What Will Go Wrong

1–2 minutes

Every logistics plan looks perfect on paper. Reality enjoys testing that confidence.

Delays happen. Weather changes. Suppliers disappear. Vehicles break down. The real measure of a logistics system is not how it performs when everything goes right, but how calmly it responds when things go wrong.

Resilient logistics is built on redundancy, clear communication, and fast decision-making. It values preparation over prediction. You can’t control every variable—but you can control your response.

Logistics doesn’t eliminate chaos. It contains it.



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