EP80 Dude! Where's my stuff? Managing Iran war supply chain disruptions
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As impacts from the war with Iran become more evident around the world, and more serious, we dive into how one highly experienced supply chain manager is managing the disruption. Hint, planning is key, but existing relationships (or lack thereof) with suppliers can play a significant role in your response.
Jeff Zudock, a veteran of ExxonMobil and an expert in supply chain management and troubleshooting, shares his insight into how companies are handling this emerging crisis. More product shortages are likely in the coming months as material storage is drawn down and not replenished. What can you do about it? Jeff offers up his perspective for VPs and senior managers working these critical issues.
We talk about why the Iran conflict is not just an “oil story,” but a transportation and capacity story, where vessels get trapped, lead times stretch, and costs surge even when material still exists somewhere in the world. Jeff explains how modern global supply chains depend on invisible feedstocks like methanol and other industrial chemicals, and why some specialized fuel additives are made by only a handful of producers across limited regions.
From there, we zoom out to the management systems behind the scenes: just-in-time inventory, minimal safety stock, and the harsh math of rebalancing supply across oceans, rail, and truck when ships and containers are out of position. Jeff shares a practical crisis management approach for procurement leaders: map your gaps, set trigger points, segment customers, communicate early and often with suppliers, and empower the people closest to the work to run tactical solutions while leadership steers the longer-term plan.
If you want a clearer view of supply chain risk, procurement strategy, and business continuity planning under real pressure, listen now. Subscribe, share this with a colleague, and leave a review: what part of your supply chain would break first?
Reach Jeff Zudock on LinkedIn here.
#supplychain #iranwar #crisismanagement #procurement
We'd love to hear from you. Email the show at Tom@leadinginacrisis.com.