26 posts tagged with “logistics-technology”

2026 marked the year logistics technology moved from pilot programs to operating infrastructure. This retrospective covers the AI, automation, visibility, compliance, and resilience trends that reshaped freight, warehousing, and supply chain execution.

Alternative parcel carriers are using AI to improve routing, customer service, and proof-of-delivery quality. Shippers still need unified milestones, scorecards, and exception governance.

ShipStation Global shows how SMB shipping software is merging with freight networks, pushing mid-market shippers to demand cleaner execution control.

Amazon Supply Chain Services shows why shippers need connected freight, fulfillment, parcel, inventory, and exception data in one operating layer.

FedEx and ServiceNow's procurement integration shows why supplier, shipment, carrier, and invoice data now need to operate as one logistics signal.

Supply chain risk management is shifting from disruption alerts to operational response workflows that change load plans, carrier choices, and customer promises.

Penske Logistics' Supply Chain Insight platform shows why supply chain visibility is shifting from dashboards toward AI-assisted execution across freight, warehousing, inventory, and partner networks.

Amazon Connect Decisions shows how agentic AI is pushing supply chain planning beyond dashboards toward AI teammates, faster exception handling, and connected logistics execution.

The connected worker platform market is hurtling toward $20 billion by 2030. Here's what that means for warehouse operators, logistics managers, and the frontline workers who keep freight moving.

Warehouse digital twins are moving from slide-deck hype to measurable operational value, especially in inventory validation, labor planning, slotting, and congestion analysis.