This post is for those interested to start or build on specialist and business focussed careers in Strategic Operations, Sourcing, Supply Chain Management, Transportation and Logistics. These careers are of three types:
1. Directly with transportation service (including air & sea-ports), logistics, and supply chain service providers - airlines (cargo transport), shipping companies like Maersk / NOL / Evergreen, 3rd party logistics (3PL) - which might be independent companies like DHL (through both it's courier / Exel Logistics arm), Sembcorp Logistics, Schenker and Kuehne Nagel
or the 3PL arms of major shipping companies like Maersk, APL, NOL, Evergreen. These companies execute the operations of global trade & commerce. The best ones create / expand business opportunities for the companies they serve - essentially these are the ones you need to target.
After a year with L&T;, yours truly's started his career at 22 with one of the companies mentioned above, spent 7.5 years before going for an MBA.
2. The operations, strategic sourcing, supply chain, distribution and logistics functions of major light / heavy manufacturing, core process and capital intensive industries. The profile of these functions coorelates directly with the competitive dynamics of the industry where the function is performed. Simply put -
the more competitive the industry, the greater the focus on cost / optimization and efficiency, therefore the greater the focus on operational functions like these. To have a good profile, you need to target these companies
or companies whose industry is likely to get more competitive in the future. Example - a supply chain director is a BIG job in Unilever / Nestle / Tata Steel / Mahindra, because these companies play in brutally competitive and cost conscious industries. A supply chain & procurement director in a medical devices company
will become a big position 5 years from now when the industry becomes more competitive (medical devices is probably the world's most profitable core industry now).
3. Specialist technology and software development / service providers to both industry and companies above. You can count our very own Infosys, TCS, Wipro, Cognizant
and international majors like SAP, Celerant, Accenture etc.. as leading technology deliverers to this function. The technical & business people in these companies / vertical tend to have both technology training / education + specialist functional training in Logistics & SCM. As the demand for cost optimization and effective supply chains increase, it's people like these who will continue to be in demand.
Historically, people tended to start their careers in this field earlier by entering companies at a very young age - the physical nature of work gave it a perception of being less-than-classy,
unless they started in the IT field (#3 above)
Technology, education, broad awareness of the value deliverable by this function / skill and (most importantly) a realization that these profiles
can develop into business leadership positions has since attracted a more sophisticated, educated and urbane group to careers in this field - both industry and functional. The industry (#1) and function (#2) as mentioned above, are among the largest and fastest evolving client groups for advanced technology development and application.
If you are in or intend an MBA - and are interested in this career - your typical elective group should include strategy, operations management, advanced cost accounting, process excellence etc... The good schools are the same - US Top 10 (specially Stanford, MIT, Michigan, Cornell etc..), EU Top 3 and the famous Asian schools.
Outside of typical MBAs,
Master's Programs offering broad & deep education in Logistics and Supply Chain management have gained importance, visibility and attraction. Here're only a few good ones I know of, offered by well-known universities that you could think about:
1. The Logistics Institute, Asia-Pacific (TLI) and Georgia Institute of Technology's (called Georgia Tech or GaTech) School of Industrial and Systems Engineering offers a dual M.S program (
The Logistics Institute - Asia Pacific). For those who are still young i.e 1-3 years of experience, interested in this field - this is an almost perfect program to apply to and develop a career. Scholarships for internationals are on offer, but the cracker is an opportunity to be sponsored through a scholarship and
work for 3 years with one of the companies offering the scholarship. Effectively the scholarship is a loan you pay back with 3 years of work! GaTech is the world's finest school of industrial engineering, supply chain management, transportation engineering and logistics.
2. MIT's Engineering Systems Division (check previous post) runs a 9 month
Master of Logistics (MLOG) program. This feeds of the MIT name, the strength of the MIT coursework, the Center for Transportation & Logistics (MIT's CTL) - to attract some seriously good profiles... many former MBAs. Most of the attendees are specialists or experts in the field already. Very optimization, technology and systems focussed. Good for people who have either strong core industry experience or IT careers with a focus on retail, supply chain, transportation and logistics.
3. The Cranfield University School of Management (UK) runs a well regarded 1 year M.Sc in Logistics. Best to have 2 years experience with at least one foreign language before entering the program.
4. The Cass Business School of the City University of London (
Cass Business School, London|MBA, Masters MSc, Undergraduate, Executive Education, PhD) conducts 3 very quantitative and finance heavy programs in Logistics / Shipping / Energy + trade & finance. While related to the operational aspects, these are finance heavy courses and should be attractive if you want to marry previous experience in transportation and SCM with a career in (example) freight futures / commodity trading. You typically end up working for shipping consultancies / brokerages, commodity trading houses (like Cargill) or metals & mining companies as transportation or shipping specialists (very important)....
5. M.Sc in Transporation & Logistics - 2 year Master's Program from one of the Top 4-5 technical universities in Europe, and certainly the best in Holland. The program
TU Delft - Master Transport, Infrastructure & Logistics, is delivered in English. With more EU countries now looking for technically trained and experienced talent outside the EU, you can expect a favorable work permit environment particularly if you get a job with a multinational,
and if you speak one of the major EU languages (German, French or Spanish).
Have a look at these, all the best.
Cheerz
Baccardisprite
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