From AI Anxiety to Workflow Reinvention: Key Takeaways from Gartner Supply Chain Symposium 2026
At Gartner Supply Chain Symposium/Xpo 2026 in Orlando, some of the sharpest minds in supply chain gathered to tackle one central question: what does the next operating model for supply chain actually look like?
In a special livestream conversation, Scott Luton sat down with Mike Griswold, VP Analyst at Gartner, alongside fellow Supply Chain Now hosts Karin Bursa and Jake Barr, to unpack the biggest themes emerging from this year’s symposium.
The consensus? Supply chain leaders are moving beyond AI fascination and toward something much bigger: redesigning how decisions, workflows, and organizations operate.
AI Is No Longer the Story. Outcomes Are
One of the strongest themes from the event was a more mature, pragmatic approach to AI adoption. According to Mike Griswold, many organizations are finally moving past the “shock and awe” phase that dominated conversations a year ago.
“People need to figure out exactly what problem or problems AI is going to solve for them,” Griswold explains.
That may sound simple, but it represents a significant shift. Instead of experimenting with AI for AI’s sake, companies are becoming more disciplined about identifying operational value and measurable business outcomes.
Griswold also warns against a familiar trap: creating “highly efficient functional silos” with AI. If organizations automate disconnected functions without rethinking how work flows across the enterprise, they risk accelerating fragmentation rather than solving it.
From Automation to Autonomy
Karin Bursa sees the industry entering a fundamentally new phase.
“The big headline was not simply ‘AI is coming’,” Bursa says. “It is that supply chain is moving from this idea of ‘how do I automate as an efficiency lever’ to ‘how do I reach autonomy as a new operating model’.”
That distinction changes everything.
Instead of focusing only on incremental efficiency improvements, organizations are beginning to rethink how decisions are made. They are reimagining how workflows are structured, how ecosystems collaborate AND how leaders balance growth, cost, risk, and talent.
Bursa emphasizes that this is not merely a technology transformation. Really, it is an operating model transformation. And that means leaders must redesign workflows instead of simply automating existing ones.
“Tech Doesn’t Lead”
Jake Barr brought a healthy dose of realism to the conversation, challenging organizations not to confuse technology adoption with strategy.
“Tech doesn’t lead,” Barr states bluntly. “Tech is in support of a business outcome that I’m trying to engineer.”
That perspective resonated strongly throughout the Symposium.
Barr argues that AI should not simply become another bolt-on tool for process simplification. Instead, supply chain leaders should use this moment to attack longstanding inefficiencies and redesign how work gets done across planning, logistics, warehousing, and transportation.
This shift becomes especially important as AI accelerates decision-making velocity.
“It used to take me two days. I know in two minutes now where the disruption is,” Barr explains.
The challenge moving forward is not just gathering insights faster, but also building organizations capable of acting on those insights effectively.
The CSCO Image Problem
One of the more surprising takeaways from the discussion centered on leadership perception. Griswold believes many Chief Supply Chain Officers still struggle to earn recognition as strategic business leaders inside the C-suite.
“CSCOs are often seen as like the execution arm of the organization,” he says.
While supply chain leaders are widely respected for operational execution, they are not always viewed as strategic storytellers or enterprise architects. That creates a major opportunity.
Griswold emphasizes the importance of storytelling, particularly using data to communicate supply chain’s strategic impact on growth, resilience, and profitability. As supply chains become increasingly central to competitive differentiation, that narrative capability will matter more than ever.
Decision Velocity Becomes the New Battleground
One of Bursa’s most compelling insights focused on what she calls “decision stacks.”
Rather than thinking only about technology stacks, organizations must start examining how decisions are structured and executed across the business.
“Think about how decisions are made, because that’s going to help you identify if you’re AI ready,” Bursa explains.
This concept reframes AI readiness entirely. It’s no longer only about clean data or technical infrastructure. It’s about whether the organization has:
- Clear decision ownership
- Structured workflows
- Defined escalation paths
- Cross-functional coordination
Without those elements, AI cannot meaningfully accelerate decision-making. And no one needs another mediocre AI project in any organization anywhere.
Workflow Redesign Takes Center Stage
Looking ahead, all three leaders believe workflow redesign will become one of the biggest priorities over the next several years. Griswold predicts organizations will increasingly focus on identifying which core workflows are “ripest for redesign and review.”
That could include planning workflows, logistics coordination, inventory management, customer service processes, and exception management, just to name a few. Importantly, not every improvement requires advanced AI.
“There are a lot of other tools out there,” Griswold notes, cautioning organizations against assuming AI is the answer to every problem.
Sometimes workflow discipline, integration, and process redesign create the biggest gains.
Final Takeaway: Supply Chain Is Becoming a Strategic Operating System
Perhaps the clearest message from Gartner Supply Chain Symposium 2026 is this: supply chain is evolving from an execution function into a strategic operating system for the enterprise.
AI may be accelerating the shift, but the deeper transformation is organizational.
The leaders who succeed won’t simply automate faster. They will redesign workflows, rethink decision-making, connect ecosystems, and position supply chain as a driver of enterprise strategy.
And as Jake Barr reminds us, even small improvements in these areas create enormous value.
“Even a 20% improvement… you’re talking for a large-scale company, that’s hundreds of millions of dollars.”
Where to Learn More
We invite you to join us at Gartner Supply Chain Planning Summit 2026 in Denver, CO. And it isn’t too early to plan to attend Garter Supply Chain Symposium/Xpo 2027 in Orlando, FL. You’ll find regular key takeaways from these events, along with many others, via Supply Chain Now’s almost-weekly newsletter, “With That Said”. Learn more here.
More Blogs
The Amazon Effect for AI: Aadil Kazmi of Infios on Execution, AI Readiness and the Next Competitive Divide in Supply Chain