Advancing the enterprise in volatile times: Supply chain as a source of reason

Resilient supply chain strategy turns tariffs, geopolitical risk, and structural protectionism into long-term competitive advantage

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In periods of global uncertainty, such as tariff escalation, geopolitical tension, and macroeconomic adjustments, many organizations freeze. The best do not. They move thoughtfully, deliberately, and strategically, understanding that every decision must drive measurable business impact. Competitive advantage does not come from avoiding disruption; it comes from identifying the opportunities and managing them better than others.

This is where a resilient, agile supply chain provides an adaptive edge—helping business leaders adjust with speed where appropriate, patience where necessary, and discipline throughout. The goal is not reaction; it is a coherent adjustment.

At the core of supply chain excellence in volatile times are six essential disciplines:

1. Distinguish between quantitative and qualitative shocks

Not all disruption is equal.

Quantitative shocks are measurable and can be modeled:

  • Tariffs
  • Transportation cost changes
  • Commodity price fluctuations
  • Confirmed regulatory changes

These are painful but calculable. They can be simulated, optimized, and managed with rigor.

Qualitative shocks are structural and less concrete:

  • Iran and broader Middle East instability
  • Greater China - Taiwan tensions
  • Global and U.S. political realignments
  • Protectionism embraced as a long-term shift

These reshape supply chains more fundamentally. They require scenario thinking, not spreadsheets alone.

The strategic mistake companies make is treating qualitative shocks as temporary noise. Tariffs may change after a negotiation cycle or political shift. Structural realignment, protectionism, friendshoring, nearshoring, and geopolitical fragmentation may not. Qualitative risks must be evaluated alongside quantitative ones, not separately from them.

 

2. Control the controllable

By and large, everyone faces the same tariffs. That is not a differentiator. What separates leaders is how they manage what remains within their control:

  • Refusing to use tariffs as an excuse for inefficiency
  • Optimizing pricing architecture
  • Monitoring commodities proactively
  • Assessing bonded inventory strategies
  • Choosing to accelerate or delay freight
  • Making conscious, not reactive decisions

The discipline is simple: do not let macro chaos paralyze micro execution. Macro volatility is external. Operational excellence is internal. Competitive advantage lives there.

3. Return to the playbook: Timing with discipline

“Act early” does not mean move recklessly. It means revisit your playbook against current conditions and evaluate decisions with discipline. In today’s environment, where tariff announcements may reset after 150 days, and political outcomes in the U.S. remain uncertain, measured positioning matters.

Key questions include:

  • Do we file for refunds now or reserve the option?
  • Do we hold inventory or accelerate shipments?
  • Do we adjust based on confirmed European tariff actions?
  • Do we reopen negotiations while leverage exists?
  • Do we observe competitors, or position ahead of them?

Many organizations are in holding patterns. Strategic patience, however, is different from indecision. The best supply chains spread bets across 18-24 months, build options, and maintain operational efficiency to drive competitive advantage in volatile times.

“When you are going through hell, keep on going.”
— Winston Churchill

4. Build horizontal strength: Partnerships as a multiplier

The real advantage is not tariff arbitrage, particularly when there is little clarity on tariff durations or whether refunds will be issued or when. Advantage comes from building a horizontally connected supply chain ecosystem, what we at the Digital Supply Chain Institute describe as a Constellation of Value, the essence including:

  • Strong supplier partnerships
  • Shared visibility
  • Pricing transparency
  • Relationship-based negotiation
  • Operational synchronization
  • Inherent resilience
  • Aligned cybersecurity practices

Refunds and concessions are difficult to negotiate when relationships are weak. (Did supply chain parnters absorb price increases or pass them along? If so, was it 100% or less?) In volatile times, partnership equity becomes financial equity.

To think of supply chains as just a cost center is a mistake. It is a coordinated network of value. Small, synchronized adjustments across inventory positioning, freight timing, negotiation strategy, and digital collaboration can outperform competitors who focus on only one lever.

5. Think in three horizons

Volatility must be managed across timeframes.

Tactical (0-12 months):

  • Freight acceleration vs. delay
  • Bonded inventory optimization
  • Commodity monitoring
  • Tactical pricing adjustments
  • Cash and credit timing decisions

Given the likelihood of U.S. policy resets and election-driven uncertainty, tactical decisions may need to be revisited in recurring cycles.

Strategic (18–24 months):

  • Diversify sourcing
  • Expand nearshoring or friendshoring
  • Rebalance exposure to high-risk regions
  • Build structural flexibility

Long-term (3–5 years):

  • Redesign network footprint
  • Embed geopolitical scenario modeling
  • Invest in digital visibility
  • Institutionalize resilience as competitive advantage

Tariffs are episodic. Structural protectionism and geopolitical realignment may not be.

6. Be the source of reason and find the advantage

Tariffs are visible. Geopolitical instability is systemic and harder to quantify. Boards and executive teams need structured, balanced leadership. Supply chain can be that source of reason:

  • Build scenarios
  • Quantify where possible
  • Frame qualitative risks clearly
  • Prevent overreaction
  • Prevent paralysis

The goal is to be structured, not alarmist and certainly not complacent.

But the mandate goes further. The role is not only to mitigate risk, but to identify opportunities within disruption.

When others freeze:

  • You reposition inventory
  • You strengthen partnerships
  • You spread sourcing bets
  • You prepare for structural shifts

Some companies will simply survive this period. Others will “keep on going” and widen the gap.

The difference will not be tariffs.

The difference will be leadership, clarity, disciplined execution, and a supply chain organization willing to serve as the steady, strategic source of reason.


About the author

Marko Kovacevic is Managing Director of Digital Supply Chain Institute, a nonprofit research institute focused on the evolution of enterprise supply chains in the digital economy. Learn how a Constellation of Value framework helps build agile, resilient supply chains.

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In an era of tariffs, geopolitical fragmentation, and macroeconomic volatility, supply chain leaders can create competitive advantage by distinguishing quantitative from qualitative shocks, controlling operational levers, and building resilient, partnership-driven networks that serve as a structured source of reason for the enterprise.
(Photo: Getty Images)
In an era of tariffs, geopolitical fragmentation, and macroeconomic volatility, supply chain leaders can create competitive advantage by distinguishing quantitative from qualitative shocks, controlling operational levers, and building resilient, partnership-driven networks that serve as a structured source of reason for the enterprise.
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