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In an era where artificial intelligence dominates boardroom conversations, global supply chain leaders face a new challenge: separating hype from real, scalable value. As AI becomes an essential part of the enterprise toolkit, organizations are racing to implement it not just for efficiency, but also for empowering teams, making better decisions, and transforming entire value chains.

In this episode of Supply Chain Now, Scott Luton sits down with Anouk Schoenmakers, Managing Partner Consulting Solutions at Bluecrux, and Joy Taylor, Managing Director at alliantConsulting, to explore how organizations can move beyond the AI buzz and create meaningful, people-centered transformation across the value chain. Together, they unpack how supply chain leaders can use AI not as a shiny object, but as an enabler of better, faster, and more confident decision-making.

Anouk shares why decision intelligence is now a survival skill for modern businesses, and how companies can build the agility and mindset needed to thrive amid constant disruption. Joy offers her perspective on change management and the human side of digital transformation, explaining why technology alone isn’t enough without trust, transparency, and a people-first culture. From decoupling data and decision flows to scaling AI adoption through trust and clarity, they explore actionable insights for leaders ready to turn transformation into lasting impact.

 

This episode is hosted by Scott Luton, and produced by Trisha Cordes, Joshua Miranda, and Amanda Luton.

 

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Building Trust To Power AI Adoption

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[00:00:00] Anouk Schoenmakers: Now it’s AI that is overwhelming, but the next thing will be around the corner. It’s the constant state of change that is the real thing that is overwhelming. And we, all of us, have the obligation to change the mindset of people to cope with that because that is the surviving strategy for companies and for even our, um, private lives.

 

[00:00:22] Anouk Schoenmakers: Right? So. That mindset and building the right culture in your company will actually make or break the success of your ai.

 

[00:00:31] Voiceover: Welcome to Supply Chain Now, the number one voice of supply chain. Join us as we share critical news, key insights, and real supply chain leadership from across the globe, one conversation at a time.

 

[00:00:44] Scott W. Luton: Hey, good morning, good afternoon, good evening, wherever you may be. Scott Luton here with you once again on Supply Chain Now welcome to today’s show, folks. We’ve got a great show to up here. Today we’re gonna be diving into a central topic of optimizing value chain decision making, and how leading organizations and their leaders are leveraging innovative, targeted technology to empower the human factor.

 

[00:01:07] Scott W. Luton: To make better, faster, and more confident decisions and finding a whole bunch more success. We’re also gonna be exploring how organizations can take a much smarter approach to artificial intelligence right here in the golden age of supply chain tech in particular, how can we speed up, scale up, maximize adoption and desired impact of our AI initiatives?

 

[00:01:27] Scott W. Luton: And of course we’re gonna get some great bend there. Done that sound change management advice from a couple of business leaders. Making it happen out in industry. All that, and much, much more. So folks stick around for a great conversation that’s gonna offer up tons of actionable insights by the truckload.

 

[00:01:44] Scott W. Luton: Alright, welcoming in. My esteemed guest here today, I’m really looking forward to this conversation. Joy Taylor serves as managing director for alliantConsulting. Joy brings a ton of expertise and results when it comes to aligning people, processes, and technology to achieve breakthrough performance.

 

[00:02:03] Scott W. Luton: Joining Joy is Anouk Schoenmakers, who serves as managing partner at Bluecrux. Now, Anouk is on a mission with her award-winning team to build tomorrow’s value chains. By solving the unique complexities of their customers’ businesses and by creating lasting impact through powerful transformation.

 

[00:02:22] Scott W. Luton: That’s gonna be a big theme here today, transformation. So great panel here today. I wanna welcome in, Joy and Anouk. Hey, Joy. Joy Taylor. How are you doing here today?

 

[00:02:32] Joy Taylor: I am fantastic. Thank you for asking. It’s a pleasure to be here.

 

[00:02:35] Scott W. Luton: Wonderful tuned in from beautiful Naples, Florida, I believe. I look forward to learning from you here today, and Annu Annu tuned in from beautiful Belgium.

 

[00:02:44] Scott W. Luton: It was great to see you at Garner last spring and y’all keep maintenance over there. How you doing today?

 

[00:02:50] Anouk Schoenmakers: I’m doing wonderful. Thank you.

 

[00:02:53] Scott W. Luton: Outstanding. Well, great to have you and Joy. Y’all have got a quite a one-two punch we’re gonna dive into here today. But first y’all know where we start these things. I love my fun warmup question.

 

[00:03:04] Scott W. Luton: I love to get a little humanity in these conversations on the front end. EnJoy. We’re already established that you’re down there in beautiful Florida, although I know you travel a lot making things happen, but what our homework has told us, Joy is that. Lemme just paint a picture. So aft in a week where you’ve moved those mountains and helped your customers achieve big things and you need a weekend or at least a day to kind of take care of Joy Taylor and do something that gives you a a brief respite.

 

[00:03:33] Scott W. Luton: What do you do? Joy?

 

[00:03:35] Joy Taylor: I am famous for binge reading. I know people talk about, you know, binge watching on Netflix, Hulu, right? Vr, whatever. I am a binge reader. You give me a good book. Lock me anywhere you want, ideally in the sun. And I will just read through that book until it’s over. I will not stop until

 

[00:03:53] Scott W. Luton: it’s over.

 

[00:03:53] Scott W. Luton: Love it. Yeah, love it. Okay. And you’ve done a lot of that when she says binges reading, she is reading lots of stuff. I gotta ask you, I know you’ve got a long list I bet. But when you think through what you’ve read this year, what’s one of your favorite reads?

 

[00:04:07] Joy Taylor: So I’m actually going to name two reads. I know you didn’t ask for that, but I’m gonna give you two.

 

[00:04:10] Joy Taylor: Yeah. And there are actually books that I read, I’ve reread, I rarely reread things, but there are two that I read often. The first one is The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks.

 

[00:04:21] Scott W. Luton: Okay. Is

 

[00:04:21] Joy Taylor: the first book I ever read that made me want to go act, go do something, go quite frankly, make a large donation. Wow. I was so moved by that book well before it became a movie that I think it’s important for people to find a book where they, it causes them to, to really think hard.

 

[00:04:41] Joy Taylor: And then the second book is actually about consulting. And I apologize for anyone out there that has no interest in consulting, but if you do, a book worth reading is called Getting Naked. I know that sounds strange, strange name for a title of a book, but it’s about professional services and what it means to be an extraordinary consultant.

 

[00:05:01] Scott W. Luton: Okay, Joy, you’ve given us a lot of good stuff already and I, I’ll tell you, when I ever, whenever I hear that word naked, I think of Lewis Grizzard and as infamous there is Naked and there’s Naked and there’s, those are two big differences. There

 

[00:05:16] Voiceover: are,

 

[00:05:17] Scott W. Luton: yes. Anyway, Joy, love it and appreciate the book tips. All right, so Annu, that’s gonna be tough to beat, man.

 

[00:05:23] Scott W. Luton: Joy’s passion just came right on out. That makes me want to go pick up some reads, but Anouk, you were telling us in the pre-show, you know, we were talking about some, some friends out there that travel a lot and Anouk, I’ll tell you, you’re on a flight somewhere all the time. I don’t know how you do it, but I know one of the things you do to balance that travel and your health is palates.

 

[00:05:44] Scott W. Luton: Tell us more. Anouk.

 

[00:05:46] Anouk Schoenmakers: Yeah, it’s really true. So I travel the world constantly. I’m every two weeks on a long haul flight. Everyone knows that’s exhausting, right? But it’s for the greater good. We really have, uh, we on a mission to grow in the us So that’s super important. Uh. And it kept me off track on my Pilates ambitions.

 

[00:06:06] Anouk Schoenmakers: I actually need those sports, especially in the morning to get me through that day and get that energy to get me through that day. But then I found out that you actually can have a subscription that allows you to worldwide find your Pilates classes right around the corner. So now I have a subscription and I have my favorite Pilates class in Singapore.

 

[00:06:26] Anouk Schoenmakers: I have one in New Jersey City. I have one. For next week in San Diego because, uh, I will be there and I typically choose those that have the calls between five and 6:00 AM because then I can do it at my jet lag hours. But it also gets me through the day afterwards because it gives me tons of energy and makes me feel good.

 

[00:06:46] Scott W. Luton: I love it. I love it. It makes perfect sense. And it’s like the Uber for Pilates. What a great business model. I’m gonna have to check it out. Uh, and ask. Got one. One more follow up quick question, Anouk. Given that your travel schedule, have you surpassed like four or 5 million miles yet? Are you way, way past that?

 

[00:07:03] Anouk Schoenmakers: Oh, it, we actually have a family account and it’s on my husband’s name, so I’m typically gaining the miles he’s spending them. So I have no clue anymore who had my miles are.

 

[00:07:15] Scott W. Luton: I think you just, I think the whole world, Joy, just res, that resonated with a lot of our, our watchers. Huh.

 

[00:07:21] Joy Taylor: Indeed I am. I am speechless.

 

[00:07:24] Joy Taylor: And that’s a rare, that’s a rare moment.

 

[00:07:26] Scott W. Luton: Oh yeah. Well, Joy and Anouk, I really appreciate y’all both sharing some personal insights into the journey. We’re all on together and now we got a lot of business stuff to get to and, and, and I’m delighted again to learn from you both. You both are doing big things out in the industry.

 

[00:07:40] Scott W. Luton: We need. Action Driven leaders, outcomes driven leaders like you both. So let’s level set on a few topics and Annu, I wanna start with you. A lot of folks will know you and Bluecrux out there, but I bet you got some, some of our new audience members that you may be new to. So tell us a little bit, a little bit about yourself and what Bluecrux does in a nutshell.

 

[00:07:59] Anouk Schoenmakers: Sure. So yeah, I’m an engineer as, uh, a, my background, so I guess that makes me part of the woman in STEM Tribe. But today as, uh, as one of the managing partners at Bluecrux and globally responsible for the commercial side. And yeah, outside of work, I’m also proud mom and, uh, in formal life, a whole decent volleyball player, I would say.

 

[00:08:19] Anouk Schoenmakers: Okay, so anything else besides volleyball and Pilates? You want to know Scott or Sean and I stick to what, uh, what we do with Bluecrux.

 

[00:08:27] Scott W. Luton: So did you spike in your volleyball life? Did you spike down thundering points?

 

[00:08:33] Anouk Schoenmakers: Absolutely. I was going all for it. So it was either a, a volleyball career or a consulting career that I was going after.

 

[00:08:41] Scott W. Luton: Well, you’re doing the same thing in Supply Chain Now, so, and are you in Bluecrux? You’re growing left and right. What does Bluecrux do? Kind of in a nutshell.

 

[00:08:49] Anouk Schoenmakers: Yeah, so Bluecrux is a value chain consulting and technology company. In simple terms, we help our customers improve their end-to-end supply chains, not only by transforming processes and organizations, but also by implementing innovative technologies including that we, that some that we’ve developed ourselves.

 

[00:09:10] Anouk Schoenmakers: What I believe. Makes Bluecrux stand out is that we always look at challenges through a value chain angle. So operating across traditional silos, so not functionally, but looking with that value chain lens. And that is where we believe the biggest opportunities for impact really lies.

 

[00:09:31] Scott W. Luton: Oh, I love that you paint quite a picture and there’s so many opportunities to change how we do business these days.

 

[00:09:36] Scott W. Luton: Alright, so Joy, that’s one half of the one two punch. Joy. You’re doing some big things out there. Tell us briefly about yourself and the broader alliantgroup that you’re part of. So

 

[00:09:46] Joy Taylor: I’m gonna start by saying auk. I also played volleyball. We’ve known each other for almost 20 years, and I had no idea that we both shared a love of volleyball.

 

[00:09:54] Joy Taylor: How interesting.

 

[00:09:55] Joy Taylor: Thank you for letting us come together on that. But um, for those that are listening, my name is Joy Taylor, and I’m one of the senior managing directors at alliantConsulting. We are a traditional management consulting firm, but we focus on business strategy transformation, and quite frankly, change management is probably our superpower.

 

[00:10:16] Joy Taylor: We tend to work with organizations that are challenged by executing against their desired end state, meaning with and for companies that quite frankly just need some strong, skilled and experienced partners to get the job done on time, on budget, and within scope. alliantConsulting is part of a bigger family, though it’s part of alliantgroup, and we are made up of six divisions for which I’m very proud.

 

[00:10:40] Joy Taylor: We have alliantgroup, which is tax credits and incentives. alliantNational. We specialize in specialty tech services, alliantTech, which is cyber and it alliantTalent, which is workforce optimization. Kind of the right sourcing if you need,

 

[00:10:58] Scott W. Luton: right,

 

[00:10:58] Joy Taylor: alliantDigital AI and automation for which we’re going to be talking about today.

 

[00:11:03] Joy Taylor: And then of course, alliantConsulting ourselves. And again, our superpowers really being in the world of change and transformation. But it’s a pleasure to be here with you today.

 

[00:11:11] Scott W. Luton: Joy. I need all of that. I need all of that. Can we bring the whole hall of justice to Atlanta?

 

[00:11:15] Joy Taylor: You can, and I’d be happy to bring it to you.

 

[00:11:18] Scott W. Luton: Wonderful. All right, man, that is outstanding. And by the way, I gotta ask you the same question. Volleyball, what was your, and I don’t know a whole bunch, what was your specialty role there?

 

[00:11:27] Joy Taylor: I was also a hitter, but I am an unusual feature in that I had a 97% serve rate. Wow. So I have what’s called a floating lob.

 

[00:11:37] Joy Taylor: I know that sounds crazy. Back in the day, that was a really big thing where you, it looks like it’s going one space and then it just suddenly lands someplace else. It was. Pretty spectacular.

 

[00:11:47] Scott W. Luton: Yeah, there’s a supply chain analogy there for the floating lob too. What I’m sure

 

[00:11:51] Joy Taylor: there

 

[00:11:51] Anouk Schoenmakers: is and why this, this is not normal anymore because that was me as well in my team.

 

[00:11:58] Anouk Schoenmakers: So it’s not normal anymore. Uh, the similarities we have,

 

[00:12:02] Scott W. Luton: oh, I know

 

[00:12:03] Joy Taylor: we will talk about this off, off camera. Yes.

 

[00:12:06] Scott W. Luton: I thank you,

 

[00:12:07] Joy Taylor: Scott, for pulling it together and we try.

 

[00:12:09] Scott W. Luton: Plus my middle daughter, Gracie, started volleyball for the first time this past year, and she is outstanding. So I’ve been, I’ve been trying to learn fast and furious.

 

[00:12:17] Scott W. Luton: So Anouk and Joy, thank you so much. And thank you for also for level setting with what you organizations are doing out there. Um, Anouk, I’ve been spying a bit on your social. I love the, the sheers and the leadership perspective that you constantly drip out there. Uh, and you were at a recent trade show maybe a couple months ago.

 

[00:12:34] Scott W. Luton: When a senior executive approached you and said, Hey, we’re overwhelmed with all the AI conversations, that strikes me. I think we all three of us know we’ve gotta get past the buzz and lip service and do something with it. Your thoughts on that, Anouk?

 

[00:12:48] Anouk Schoenmakers: Yeah, absolutely. And AI is everywhere right now and there’s no escaping the bus.

 

[00:12:54] Anouk Schoenmakers: And when that executive told me he was overwhelmed, what hit me in that moment was that he genuinely felt like he was behind and alone in that feeling. But the truth is he’s far from alone. According to Gartner, only 23% of supply chain organizations actually have a formal AI strategy in place. So it’s not just a HIM problem, it’s an industry wide challenge, and I get it right.

 

[00:13:21] Anouk Schoenmakers: Supply chain leaders, myself included, love bride and shiny. And today, AI is the brightest and the shiniest of all of them, but I truly believe in the transformation power of ai. The question isn’t if it’ll change our industry, it’s how we will make it meaningful. AI on its own isn’t the answer. It’s the enable.

 

[00:13:47] Anouk Schoenmakers: The real value comes when we use it to solve real world supply chain problems, like improving planning a currency or simulating complex scenarios or freeing people from repetitive work so they can focus on better decision making. And that’s for me, Scott, why we need to move beyond the buzzword and the slogans on every trade show boots and have deeper, more honest conversations like this one today.

 

[00:14:14] Anouk Schoenmakers: And like I constantly have with Joy.

 

[00:14:17] Scott W. Luton: Anouk, we need to blast your last response and shout out from the mountaintops because what that executive shared with you and that that overwhelming feeling and that maybe that angst, there’s a lot of team members out there, not just in supply chain, but globally, and they know their leadership wants them to do something with ai, but there’s not always that targeting that direction.

 

[00:14:38] Scott W. Luton: And what are we trying to do here and. Is AI the right tool for the, the problem we’re after? Joy, your thoughts there on this opening conversation about getting past the bus

 

[00:14:49] Joy Taylor: Joy’s opinion on this? The AI conversation has become a lot of noise with not much signal coming through. The simple truth is we are seeing a significant number of supply chain executives that are pressured to balance disruption and preparedness with, you know, inventory costs yet.

 

[00:15:07] Joy Taylor: They lack predictive visibility in spite of the enormous number of technology solutions that are out there. The problem isn’t AI itself, though companies are just trying to transform everything at one time. And the reality is we deal with change constantly. And it’s not that people are afraid of change, they’re afraid of being prepared or a lack of being prepared for change.

 

[00:15:35] Joy Taylor: But the reality is, you know, market volatility, supplier disruption, regulatory shifts thrust us into constant states of change. So we really need to think about what we want from an AI transformation before we start it. So my advice, pick the single largest, most significant operational pain point that you have in your organization.

 

[00:16:01] Joy Taylor: And this is by leader, needless to say. Get a small team together and master that problem, create a team of advocates or internal champions that say, yes, this worked for us. But do not try and seed the field of every challenge in every problem at your fingertips.

 

[00:16:22] Scott W. Luton: That is out. Outstanding advice. I had a had a dear former colleague that always would encourage folks, let’s not try to boil the ocean targeting and prioritization and focus.

 

[00:16:33] Scott W. Luton: Oh man, we can’t sleep on any of those things. Alright, I’m gonna shift gears, ano and Joy. One of the big themes, I think Auks already kind of referenced it, maybe a Joy too that we’re talking about here today is optimizing value chain decision making and technology’s role in that, especially ai. I’m gonna dive into that here next.

 

[00:16:50] Scott W. Luton: So, Enuk. Let’s talk about the why first. I think I like, I love Simon Sinek’s legendary approach here, starting with the why so inuk, why the need for faster, better, and more confident decision making across the whole value chains out there in the first place.

 

[00:17:06] Anouk Schoenmakers: Yeah. If you think about today’s value change, they’re, they’re under more pressure than ever, right?

 

[00:17:13] Anouk Schoenmakers: Constant disruption, tariffs just being the latest, rising expectations and more data than anyone can process. And the result of that. Decision fatigue. That’s what we see and that’s why the ability to make faster, better and more confident decisions is no longer a nice to have. For me, it’s a survival skill and the companies and leaders who drive are those who can sense, decide, and act quickly with clarity.

 

[00:17:44] Anouk Schoenmakers: And that requires not just process actual excellence, but decision intelligence and in order to make it happen. That’s where technology MI can play a huge role.

 

[00:17:57] Scott W. Luton: Hmm. Auk, I feel in my bones, decision fatigue on some days. And I bet a lot of our audience members out there know exactly what you’re talking about.

 

[00:18:05] Scott W. Luton: Joy, what would you add to a no’s? Why there?

 

[00:18:09] Joy Taylor: So I believe that speed and scale are absolutely the biggest challenges that organizations are facing, particularly around AI because as Auk mentioned earlier, it, it is the shiniest. Object out there right now, and it’s not going away. I wanna put that really clear.

 

[00:18:25] Joy Taylor: It’s not going away. And people do feel behind, but they may not be, don’t do not fret. However, rarely is it about the technology. I would argue that it’s organizational readiness. Hmm. Again, I’m the change person, right? But I am, I am leading with this, with this topic. You can have the most sophisticated AI platforms, but if your teams do not trust the data.

 

[00:18:50] Joy Taylor: Or understand how to act on the output they receive, you’re stuck.

 

[00:18:56] Voiceover: Yeah.

 

[00:18:57] Joy Taylor: The interesting part is what’s very exciting about AI is I let, let me be the first to share with you. AI is not going to replace your job. It’s not, it’s going to expand your capabilities. It is going to expand your reach faster than it ever has in the past, and a demand planner will become a strategic analyst.

 

[00:19:19] Joy Taylor: A procurement specialist will, will become a risk predictor. People are not gonna lose their relevance, they’re going to gain some superpowers. And for me, it’s not just about implementing technology, it’s got to be more about changing how people think about decision making. And that takes time and the creation of trust in an organization.

 

[00:19:42] Scott W. Luton: Talk about the currency of global supply chain. You nailed it there with trust. And I would just add one more thing and know I’m about to ask you about some of the decoupling we’ve gotta do here. But folks, uh, you’ve heard us talk about this a lot over the years, right? And I, I whole wholeheartedly agree with Joy, especially in terms of, you know, losing jobs and stuff due to emerging technology.

 

[00:20:03] Scott W. Luton: As long as you’re willing to learn, raise your hand, step into those new doors and windows of opportunities and apply what you’re learning. You have massive opportunities for folks that want to do all those things. If you wanna do the same thing every day, hour by hour, eight hours a day. Go out and learn.

 

[00:20:21] Scott W. Luton: Go out and learn folks, I promise you there’s great opportunity. So good stuff. Joy and Anouk is bringing lots of good news here today. That’s my language. Alright, so Anouk, you have spoken as you get out there and travel the world and and meeting and working with the movers and shakers across global supply chain.

 

[00:20:35] Scott W. Luton: You’ve talked a lot about the need to decouple linear physical flow with the data and decision flows out there. Why is this important and what are a few keys to accomplishing this shift?

 

[00:20:47] Anouk Schoenmakers: Yeah. Traditional supply chain have been managed like a, a real race, linear and step by step passing information along from one function to the next.

 

[00:20:58] Anouk Schoenmakers: But that model doesn’t work anymore. The real world isn’t linear, right? Decisions in planning effect and manufacturing, which then affects logistics and then loop back to planning again, and so on and so on. Yeah, I know that I’m even oversimplifying things here. So we need to really decouple that physical flow of goods because the goods will still flow linear right from the data and decision flow.

 

[00:21:23] Anouk Schoenmakers: And what that means is while your products move physically still from point A to point B, your decisions and simulations need to move freely across the entire value chain. Instantly and constantly, and that’s how you identify bottlenecks. You can anticipate on disruption and align all functions around the same truth, and that you hit a lot.

 

[00:21:47] Anouk Schoenmakers: Like we really want one source of truth. Well, that is what a true value chain thinking can really help you with. And in fact, the key is creating a digital decision layer, a kind of digital layer that connects data. Insights and people, so Joy, I am not forgetting the people. So, and people who make those cross-functional decisions at the speed of business.

 

[00:22:13] Anouk Schoenmakers: And that’s where AI can drastically shift and play a role.

 

[00:22:19] Scott W. Luton: And we’re gonna talk about AI’s role in just a second, but Joy should touch on some. Some keytones there that I know resonated with you and, and the great work you do out there. And I, I love the call out for the people. Hey, we love calling out the people.

 

[00:22:30] Scott W. Luton: They’re so, they make supply chain happen every day. Joy, your follow up thoughts there?

 

[00:22:35] Joy Taylor: It is my opinion, not a huge surprise that it’s about adopting the technology and what’s interesting is it’s not a human problem. The re that what’s best thing about companies, they spend so much time solving what I think is the wrong problem.

 

[00:22:52] Joy Taylor: Which is they’re asking what is the data supposed to do? What is the technology supposed to do? And instead we have got to get our people closer to trusting and then want to use it. And the notion is AI adoption of fails when there’s a gap between what the technology can do and what people believe it can do.

 

[00:23:15] Joy Taylor: And so they have to use it and experience it and ideally be part of designing it. I think where we miss a big part of the pull through is we let people give us a solution,

 

[00:23:29] Scott W. Luton: right?

 

[00:23:29] Joy Taylor: And they don’t engage the voice of the team members, plural, that are actually in the end-to-end process. Hmm. But if you would just talk to them before you present it and get their words, and then when you showcase it to them and show them how it actually gave them exactly what they wanted, we would get so much further, faster.

 

[00:23:50] Scott W. Luton: Oh, preach it louder to the folks in the back. We gotta do it with the people, not to the people.

 

[00:23:54] Joy Taylor: With the people. That’s right. Perfect.

 

[00:23:56] Scott W. Luton: Yeah. Um, okay, so Nook, I’m gonna circle back around and folks in a second we’re gonna be talking about optimizing the speed, scale and adoption of AI initiatives, which Nook and Joy have both touched on already, but we’re gonna dive a little deeper.

 

[00:24:08] Scott W. Luton: Uh, a let’s define AI’s role, whether it’s going back to the decoupling of those flows you were talking about, or in, in a broader sense, uh, your thoughts.

 

[00:24:19] Anouk Schoenmakers: Yeah, so if I was. Referring to that digital decision layer, that’s where AI can come in. So not as the shiny object, but really as the real enabler of progress.

 

[00:24:31] Anouk Schoenmakers: Not that the solution, the magical solution that will solve everything, but as the enabler of progress if you’re willing, because AI is that engine that powers the digital decision layer, and it helps us then to move from. Reactive firefighting to proactive foresight, and that is something where people need to get super excited about.

 

[00:24:54] Scott W. Luton: Hmm. And Joy as a follow up to that. I like how, what I’m hearing there from Anouk, and this is just what I heard, one of the things I heard there is how can we use artificial intelligence, not to replace the people as you’re talking about, but to empower them and to create more fulfilling work. More impactful work, and to really, I’m not sure if it’s a left brain or the right brain that enJoys creative stuff.

 

[00:25:18] Scott W. Luton: Mm-hmm. Using technology and letting technology do technology things. While giving time back to our people to do the very unique things that their superpowers are fit for. Your thoughts, Joy,

 

[00:25:30] Joy Taylor: what’s fascinating here is every if, if there’s a human out there that does not have a smartphone of some kind, I’m sure that’s a small, it’s a small percentage.

 

[00:25:40] Joy Taylor: If we can remember back in the day when you said you’re gonna push an app and it’s going to do all these things to you and make your life easier, we, we found that hard to adopt,

 

[00:25:49] Scott W. Luton: right?

 

[00:25:50] Joy Taylor: This is literally no different. No different than that, but I think people are, they’re better equipped at touching it and feeling it before they play with it,

 

[00:25:59] Voiceover: right?

 

[00:25:59] Joy Taylor: They’re also afraid to play with it, but the notion is we simply need to show them more examples of what it’s going to feel like and what it is going to look like. And I argue that the fastest way to get a person to adopt and be part of, Hey, bring me closer to the AI option. Ask them, what are the things you absolutely hate doing all day and every day?

 

[00:26:22] Joy Taylor: And I’m gonna give you a real life example here. Joy Taylor consultant. I love being on a sales call. I love it. I think I’ve got a problem.

 

[00:26:30] Anouk Schoenmakers: Okay? I really

 

[00:26:31] Joy Taylor: do. What I hate is leaving that call and then having to write a statement of work. Well, I am lucky. I work for an organization who literally does digital integration and we have created a digital agent.

 

[00:26:44] Scott W. Luton: Okay?

 

[00:26:45] Joy Taylor: All I have to do is write out a handful of sentences of, here’s what I discussed with Scott. Here are the needs that he has. Here’s the template I’d like us to use, and it generates a starter statement of work for me. In 35 seconds, I stop having to create the document and I get to critique the document and personalize it to the actual discussion.

 

[00:27:10] Scott W. Luton: Yep.

 

[00:27:10] Joy Taylor: I cannot tell you how life changing that is. That took me from a 90 minute exercise to a 20 minute exercise, and that is not an exaggeration.

 

[00:27:20] Scott W. Luton: Joy. I love that. And here’s a pro tip for everybody watching or listening to us out there, especially those leaders that are trying to figure out. How to apply any technology, right?

 

[00:27:30] Scott W. Luton: Find out what your people’s problems are, what they hate to do every day, and whether it’s, and you gotta use the right tool, right? It goes out saying, but eliminate those barriers and those friction points. And I’ll tell you, you’ll be moving along like light speed check, life changing as Joy put it. And one more thing.

 

[00:27:46] Scott W. Luton: Um, auk, you and Joy both have referenced, Hey, this isn’t changing, genie’s not going back in the bottle. And I was talking earlier today. Little football analogy ’cause we’re recording this on American Football Day and the Forward Pass, and I’m looking right over here to my notes. The forward pass First.

 

[00:28:04] Scott W. Luton: First legal Forward pass in football took place September 5th, 1906. It was a game between St. Louis University and Carroll College up in Wisconsin. And I bet there was a lot of folks at the time saying, ah, this is a fad, it’s gonna pass, you know, it’s gonna be all running as we all know. The game of American football, it’s all we do is pass these days.

 

[00:28:26] Scott W. Luton: It was here to stay and it changed the game. And I think there’s a important parallel to where we are today and what, that’s why it’s so important for y’all to follow Joy in the nooks advice. Whether you’re a leader or you’re a frontline valuable team member, experiment, learn, try, do, because this golden age of supply chain tech is certainly here to stay.

 

[00:28:46] Scott W. Luton: So all of that leads us to this next really important part of our conversation today. And not, I wanna start with you because we’re gonna help organizations and their leaders and their team members optimize the speed scale and that critical adoption that Joy’s already been talking about of their AI initiatives.

 

[00:29:02] Scott W. Luton: So, no, let’s start with speed and scale first, because we know. Global business velocity is picking up by the hour. Your thoughts on speed and scale?

 

[00:29:12] Anouk Schoenmakers: Yes. Speed and scale are where most organizations struggle, and too often we also see that AI stays trapped in those pilot modes and. Experiments are there to do so.

 

[00:29:24] Anouk Schoenmakers: So I’m not saying don’t do them, but exciting proof of concepts should be in industrialized. So think of your speed and scale. So to really scale, you need three things, in my opinion. So one, a clear business value. Know exactly what the problem is. You’re solving, like we talked already about this, uh, with Joy comments, but really know you have problem and why it also matters, why it matters for the people, but also why it’s matters for your company.

 

[00:29:53] Anouk Schoenmakers: What’s the value you’re actually chasing? Not for the, not for AI as ai, but what’s the value? The business value, the people value start from the problem and not from the solution. Second is an agile roadmap because there is no straight line to success anymore. Actively manage your roadmap so that it can expand quickly once value is proven, or take a left turn and a right turn to scale, that is what you need.

 

[00:30:22] Anouk Schoenmakers: And thirdly, trust in the system. People will only adopt when they trust. This is what Joy was preaching all about, but that means explainable ai transparent data. And results they can see and believe in. So that is really crucial. But when you combine those three, those elements, that’s when AI moves from being a shiny object to a true engine for transformation across the value chain.

 

[00:30:52] Scott W. Luton: Oh, I loved it. And Anouk can help you with all those three things and more folks. Alright, so Nook referenced Joy and Joy. You’ve got a new nickname maybe. The, uh, Reverend Joy Taylor of the First Church of Organizational Success. Okay. Okay. I’ll take it. So, Joy, you were taught touching on adoption earlier, and we all know adoption’s not a new challenge.

 

[00:31:12] Scott W. Luton: It may be a growing challenge based on all the, you know, the velocity and the innovation and the, just the sheer depth of technology and the role it’s playing. But what else would you suggest when it comes to the adoption of AI initiatives and how we can tackle that better?

 

[00:31:28] Joy Taylor: All right, so I’m gonna answer that question by saying things that I’m seeing in the marketplace today is that organizations are trying to scale AI quickly.

 

[00:31:41] Joy Taylor: A as if there’s some, some RA race that’s happening across the organization, but they are doing it across multiple functions simultaneously, but without first proving the value.

 

[00:31:54] Voiceover: Yep.

 

[00:31:54] Joy Taylor: And I’m, I’m, I am leaning a little bit on what Nuk was talking about. We’ve gotta build some inner confidence and we must have ROI, arguably, I am saying start really small.

 

[00:32:07] Joy Taylor: Ideally find a challenge that can be funded by the solution itself.

 

[00:32:14] Scott W. Luton: Yep.

 

[00:32:14] Joy Taylor: And getting people that, ’cause that will increase the speed and the accuracy of users to becoming, wanting to adopt. Any technology solution it, but our fear is what we don’t wanna have is to create expensive technology that sits unused.

 

[00:32:33] Joy Taylor: That’s right. That is a, that’s a death sentence. We certainly don’t want that. So for speed, we need to focus on some quick wins that demonstrate, like I said, that clear ROI, so the people can get comfortable. Something that we, we didn’t share about my, my personal self is my husband and I are a foster parent.

 

[00:32:48] Joy Taylor: And the truth is, we’ve actually had 24 children in the last 12 years.

 

[00:32:51] Voiceover: Wow.

 

[00:32:52] Joy Taylor: We do family placements. We don’t do single children very often. We simply do sibling placements, and what we have learned is that people can hold it together for about seven days. I’m gonna extend that in a business place. You can hold it together for about 30 days.

 

[00:33:09] Joy Taylor: Before you lose your mind and either push back on a solution or just stop showing up.

 

[00:33:15] Voiceover: Mm-hmm.

 

[00:33:16] Joy Taylor: We have got to show people what’s really in it for them. If they want speed and scale

 

[00:33:22] Scott W. Luton: Joy, I love it. The whiff ’em, what’s in it for me? What’s old is new again. Mm-hmm. We’ve gotta get that buy-in and really show people how their days will be easier and more successful.

 

[00:33:32] Scott W. Luton: Excellent points, and by the way, I admire your, you and your husband’s calling and mission. 24 kids are better off thanks to all of your wonderful work. Um, we are better off.

 

[00:33:41] Joy Taylor: Let me be clear. We are better off.

 

[00:33:43] Scott W. Luton: That’s right. Uh, well said. Alright, so Joy, I’m gonna stick with you for a second ’cause I wanna stick with change management, right?

 

[00:33:51] Scott W. Luton: It’s a close neighbor to a lot of things we’re talking about here today. My opinion and Anouk and Joy. Y’all might disagree, tell me where I’m wrong, but. It, a lot of conversations I’m having, a lot of observations I’m having of the industry is we get put so much focus on the technology and the cool things we can do, and as Anouk said, the the shiny squirrels or what is it, the shiny object syndrome and the squirrels that go chase after ’em.

 

[00:34:14] Scott W. Luton: Right? And we forget about what’s all, what the, the timeless universal importance of change management, right. Joy, what’s most critical when it comes to the incredible people component and how we approach change management.

 

[00:34:31] Joy Taylor: I am hesitating because I wanna make sure everyone hears it. We have to care. We are a people first organization. I don’t care what technology you have, I don’t care how much money you spend on it, if the people don’t want it, if they don’t see the why or the how it works, they will create a way to do workarounds.

 

[00:34:56] Joy Taylor: Our job is to truly work, really work on what we call the case for change. Why is the organization making this decision? What role do I want you to play? And I am all about making it personal. I legitimately would love to create categories of people and say, I’m talking to you, Scott, and we selected, or we designed this technology so that you could get blank.

 

[00:35:23] Joy Taylor: And that’s because you told me it’s something you wanted.

 

[00:35:25] Voiceover: Yeah.

 

[00:35:26] Joy Taylor: Again, the first thing about change management is finding out the why and what’s in it for individuals and then sharing it with them and building it around their needs. Yeah, you’ll get people on board very quickly when that’s the case.

 

[00:35:38] Scott W. Luton: Joy been there, done that perspective for sure.

 

[00:35:40] Scott W. Luton: There. Uh, and enough, we’re about to change gears and talk about an AI culture, but speak for a second around the importance of change management. What do we hear there from Joy and what’s your own suggestion perhaps?

 

[00:35:51] Anouk Schoenmakers: Yeah, I’m fully agreeing with Joy here on every single word. So people first is really, I think what also gave the sparks between us Joy.

 

[00:35:59] Anouk Schoenmakers: So I think, uh, I’m fully with you there. So, um, so yeah, from my perspective, I really think it is change management, but change management often has that quotation of softness and let’s do some. Let’s do some workshops, uh, around change and forth, but for me it’s more about mindset, and I know that that is what Joy is preaching here.

 

[00:36:22] Anouk Schoenmakers: It’s around having a transformational mindset as a business and as a business leader. And I. And find a way to, in your organization, adopt that mindset. Because let’s be honest, it’s it now, it’s AI that is overwhelming, but the next thing will be around the corner. It’s the constant state of change that is the real thing that is overwhelming.

 

[00:36:45] Anouk Schoenmakers: And we, all of us have the obligation to change the mindset of people to cope with that because that is the surviving, um, strategy for companies and for even our, um, private lives, right? So that mindset and building the right culture in your company will actually make or break the success of your ai.

 

[00:37:07] Scott W. Luton: Anouk, man, y’all are bringing it. Y’all two need to go on the road. Uh, maybe get the Rolling Stones open for you. Uh, I’m telling you, I love it. That’s a great segue too. So, Anouk, I wanna stick with you for a second here. You’ve mentioned, and you really tout the importance of building an AI culture, which is just as important as the, as the ad driven outcomes themselves.

 

[00:37:28] Scott W. Luton: Because my hunch is when you can capture. And culturally build in those gains or the force multiplier effect. Oh my gosh, the mindset that you’re referencing a second ago, very, very powerful, transformational. So why is building an AI culture really important?

 

[00:37:45] Anouk Schoenmakers: Yeah, that that culture ties again, back with that mindset, right?

 

[00:37:48] Anouk Schoenmakers: So as a company, you need to have that culture, that embrace change. And embracing change is embracing new technology. And innovation is these days linked with ai, right? So if you are able to build that real culture of adopting, finding new superpowers, like Joy, Joy calls them, if you can make them. Curious about the next thing, then you’ll find a way to adopt as well.

 

[00:38:15] Anouk Schoenmakers: And that really starts from a company culture and how you are as a company in an innovative mindset instead of stuck in the past.

 

[00:38:23] Scott W. Luton: Yes, we can’t afford to be stuck in the past these days. We can’t afford to run supply chains like it’s 1982, or I guess you can, but it comes with some bad consequences. Uh, Joy, your thoughts on building the Paramount, how important it’s to build an AI culture?

 

[00:38:39] Joy Taylor: I am gonna lean in on creating a culture period, which is leaders in an organization set the stage every day. We call it the, the shadow of a leader. Mm. Leaders cast a shadow every single day that their employees and team members follow. Whatever they pay attention to is what the company will pay attention to.

 

[00:39:03] Joy Taylor: The tonality, the way they respond, the way they. Share transparent. Apparently with the content that’s going on in the organization, you are creating a culture by your actions. So creating a culture for AI means that you have to actually believe it’s important and you need to be using it yourself as a leader.

 

[00:39:22] Joy Taylor: If you’re not using it, but you want your teams to use it, that seems a bit odd. Creating a culture starts at the top. You need to model the behavior you want.

 

[00:39:33] Scott W. Luton: Joy. I love it. It’s so, so true. It’s so true. Whether it’s AI or anything else. And I love the, um, your opening comments about how leaders set the stage.

 

[00:39:43] Scott W. Luton: And I would go a step further, and y’all might disagree with me, but I think so many, so many of the challenges we have in global supply chain today, so many of ’em aren’t technology or people, they’re leadership challenges because we’re taking the wrong approach as leaders. We’ll have to come back for a whole nother episode maybe related to that.

 

[00:40:03] Scott W. Luton: I wanna drive this discussion home. We’re got, we got a big, fast and furious finish with Joy and Anouk here. And, you know, examples and stories and anecdotes really help people learn, right? And hopefully have some actionable takeaways from every conversation. So, um, Anouk, let’s start with you. Some companies out there that are accomplishing big things by leveraging an effective approach to AI within their supply chain organization.

 

[00:40:26] Scott W. Luton: What anecdotes come to your mind?

 

[00:40:29] Anouk Schoenmakers: Yes. And I love to bring this to life with a few example because this is where AI stops being abstract and start creating real impact, right? Yeah. And what’s super powerful ab about my upcoming, let’s say top three examples, I cannot choose one Scott. So I will do three, is that they are not just studies we’ve heard of, they are our customers.

 

[00:40:50] Anouk Schoenmakers: So if we’ve seen this transformation up close, and that’s really exciting for me. So first. Sanofi, one of the world’s leading biopharma companies that executive leadership has publicly committed to becoming the first biopharma company, powered by AI at scale. And they do that by integrating AI based decision intelligence across their value chain.

 

[00:41:15] Anouk Schoenmakers: It’s literally at their fingertip on their smartphone to make decisions. And here it links back to your whole point on leadership. It started by their executive leadership going public with this ambition and then making it happen. And this literally is giving, getting life-saving treatments to people faster.

 

[00:41:36] Anouk Schoenmakers: So what’s not to get excited about, right. Second example, Froneri, one of the world’s largest ice cream producer, and let’s be honest, who doesn’t like his, uh, his or her ice cream? Right? Just and just a little more when the weather is sunny.

 

[00:41:52] Voiceover: That’s right. So

 

[00:41:53] Anouk Schoenmakers: seasonal demand. High transportation costs and daily deployment decisions were making its operations hard to manage.

 

[00:42:02] Anouk Schoenmakers: But now by connecting factory warehouse and logistics data into an AI powered engine, they were actually tackling complex planning decisions on almost real time. It used to take more, more than hours of manual coordination, and this disappears. Today they really run on an optimized deployment plan and that balances service cost and capacity in near real time, and it saves millions in logistics, expensive while improving service reliability.

 

[00:42:36] Anouk Schoenmakers: So we can enJoy our ice cream everywhere we want, even if the sun is not shining.

 

[00:42:41] Scott W. Luton: Man, that’s like a superhero mission.

 

[00:42:44] Anouk Schoenmakers: Absolutely. And finally, and yeah, this one is one of my favorites. It’s legend Biotech, and we’re actually helping them right now, so as we speak, to use AI in their manufacturing site in ton to allocate life saving slot capacity to patients.

 

[00:43:00] Anouk Schoenmakers: It’s a great example of how AI isn’t just about efficiency, but it’s about prioritization. What truly matters. And here it’s about saving people’s life. These are the kind of stories that shown for me how ai, when applied with purpose, can reshape the entire value chain, not by replacing people, but by empowering them to make faster, better, and more meaningful decisions.

 

[00:43:29] Scott W. Luton: Yes, Anouk. Really quick before I go to Joy, two quick things there. I’m not sure if there’s a more noble calling than, uh, in our healthcare and, and biopharma and really saving people’s lives, extending lives. It’s amazing what supply chain pros are doing across those industries. And then secondly, one of my favorite themes that you talk touched on there, there’s so much complexity and I, what I’ve found, no one likes to be confounded.

 

[00:43:53] Scott W. Luton: By problems, big or small. Mm-hmm. And one of the common themes you shared in each of those three anecdotes was committed leaders that are unleashing targeted technology to evaporate complexity and really unleash the power of their people. So Joy examples, I bet you’ve got a bunch of examples in your end too.

 

[00:44:12] Scott W. Luton: What comes to.

 

[00:44:13] Joy Taylor: I do, and I chose two incredibly different industries because I wanted to show, well, Anouk and I spend a lot of time together. I’m sure people have probably figured that out, but two areas for which are very different from the industries that Anouk shared. I won in retail and then in global logistics and uh, freight management.

 

[00:44:31] Scott W. Luton: Love

 

[00:44:31] Joy Taylor: it. So my first is Zara. So you know, they used AI to monitor fashion trends, social media, buzz. And then in-store data to inform their design and production. And the reality is, before ai, they were certainly relying on data to, to do models and scenario planning. But AI now is a demand sensing, allowing them to quickly restock their best sellers and more importantly, avoid overproduction in retail.

 

[00:45:03] Joy Taylor: That’s the kiss of death is overproduction. And what do you do with that in the secondary market? So we, they reduced waste. Maximizing the revenue and the truth is they really revolutionized the demand model in the retail space and the placement of their product line. But what they did is they focused on their core competitive advantage.

 

[00:45:24] Joy Taylor: Which has always been and will now continue to be speed to market.

 

[00:45:27] Voiceover: Hmm.

 

[00:45:28] Joy Taylor: The next one is Maersk. Most people think of that as those big containers that sit on top of ships. Right. You know, that pass the ocean. They, again, that is a fascinating business. It’s a an amazing industry for which we all rely.

 

[00:45:40] Joy Taylor: People don’t think much about it, but it is the only reason why you have 90% of the things you have in your house. That’s true. So they used AI to optimize their global container positioning. But it was a real breakthrough. It was actually getting their regional teams to buy in because as you can imagine, that industry is known for its longevity.

 

[00:46:00] Joy Taylor: People work there for 30 and 40 years. They have personal relationships with their customers and their delivery statements and their, the ports and the people with which they worked through their entire value chain. They took that incredibly, incredibly personally, but they used ai. To get their regional teams to trust the recommendations of where those containers should be placed for ultimate optimization.

 

[00:46:29] Joy Taylor: And the reality was they did this by making the AI completely transparent, which was after the answer came, it gave an example an an explanation of exactly why the AI chose the answer. It gave the thinking through the process. And by the end of that, people were like, I get it. I would’ve done the same thing.

 

[00:46:50] Joy Taylor: Or, wow, I hadn’t considered that. What a fascinating way to choose that placement. So again, fascinating different things, but the common thread there between both of these organizations, they did not start with a grand AI transformation. Neither one of those two organizations said, Hey, let’s make 50 things happen.

 

[00:47:09] Joy Taylor: Right? They solved a very specific problem. They proved the value first. Built trust. Then they went on to scale after that.

 

[00:47:18] Scott W. Luton: Hmm.

 

[00:47:19] Joy Taylor: That’s,

 

[00:47:20] Scott W. Luton: those are all those five or billion dollar examples. Some may be literally, and I gotta Joy, two quick things from yours on that. On the MES example, I love, we all like to understand the why.

 

[00:47:32] Scott W. Luton: Yeah. Right. And it builds more trust in what the technology is telling us, AI or otherwise. So I love that little wrinkle in that story. And going back to Zara, hey, the fashion and apparel. Supply chain industry is a tough one. And saying about trends, if we think we have velocity issues elsewhere, that is a very unique industry there.

 

[00:47:52] Scott W. Luton: So that’s a great example. Joy. Okay. I really wish we had three more hours with Joy Taylor and Nook Shoe Mockers, but let’s do this. We’re gonna, again, we’re coming down to Home Stretch and Nook. Let celebrate some great news because the Bluecrux team continues to expand its presence here in the US and globally.

 

[00:48:09] Scott W. Luton: Really over the last five years. What are you most excited about? In the coming year. ’cause we’re, gosh, we’re gonna blink. It’s gonna be 2026.

 

[00:48:18] Anouk Schoenmakers: Yeah, absolutely. It’s over before you know it, right? So a year is nothing. But what excites me in the upcoming year is really the opportunity to help and work with more companies here in the us.

 

[00:48:31] Anouk Schoenmakers: So we have built an incredible team of supply chain experts here out in the US over the last five years, and we have expanded with support for our global clients and build the first solid customer, US based customer base. But in the coming years. We are really going to scale that and we’re super excited because we see so many companies in the US investing in transforming their supply chain into AI driven value chains.

 

[00:48:58] Anouk Schoenmakers: And we believe we’re an amazing fit and can help this organization navigate that journey. So the future is indeed exciting and bright for us here at Bluecrux in the us And yeah, that’s what really excites me.

 

[00:49:13] Scott W. Luton: Auk, I felt that passion jumping through the, uh, the video there. I love it. I love it. And you know what?

 

[00:49:18] Scott W. Luton: I’ve seen y’all in action. I’ll tell you the impact y’all are making there. There’s no, no, no doubt we all completely get why, what’s powering the expansion. I look forward to seeing you at the next event soon. But in the meantime, for any of our folks watching or tuned in listening, how can folks connect with you and the Bluecrux team?

 

[00:49:36] Anouk Schoenmakers: I would say the easiest way to find me is follow me and reach on, reach me on LinkedIn. That’s where you can follow where my next shows will be, where I have keynotes, where we will be on supply chain conferences and uh, yeah, that, that’s really where you can find where I will be in the world.

 

[00:49:52] Scott W. Luton: Love it and we’re gonna include the link to that in the show notes.

 

[00:49:55] Scott W. Luton: And folks, you can also venture over to Bluecrux.com and learn a lot more about absolutely about everything Nook has touched on here today. Good stuff. And Nook, congrats on the continued innovation, growth and success. Joy. Now different question. We’re gonna make sure folks know how to connect with you in a second, but again, as I prep and as our team does homework for these conversations, we do a lot of spying on social and I love a lot of stuff you’re putting out you and your organization.

 

[00:50:21] Scott W. Luton: You were recently shared a great Jim Collins quote. I think I’ve got his, one of his great books right there related to the timeless value. And you really spoken to this today, crawl, walk, run. It was some, in some of the, your last examples there. I, because we know we need to hear things 12 times before we, we do them.

 

[00:50:41] Scott W. Luton: Expound on that really important mantra, if you would.

 

[00:50:44] Joy Taylor: I am a good to great fan, not a, not a huge surprise. I am a cult follower of Jim Collins. That’s not a, not, not a surprise then I’m so grateful to see it in the background. But you know, his message when I read it, it just hit home for me and it cut through a lot of noise that I feel both personally.

 

[00:51:02] Joy Taylor: And certainly professionally. He basically said crawl, walk, run can be a, a very effective approach even during times of rapid and radical technological change. How apropos of today. Yep. And the reality is no one is asking you to run a marathon tomorrow. I am asking. Just stand up and take a step. I would rather get one small thing wrong.

 

[00:51:27] Joy Taylor: Then to try something magnanimous in waste resources, people process, technology, money, time, budget, scope. I’m just asking. The beauty of this approach is that you don’t have to be revolutionizing in your ideas on anything or everything. It doesn’t have to be overnight to create an a meaningful impact.

 

[00:51:44] Joy Taylor: Just crawl. Just start one specific thing, try it. I doubt that you will not reap the reward.

 

[00:51:53] Scott W. Luton: Joy. I love that. And you know, as you’re sharing, it reminded me back in the eighties and nineties and in the old General Electric heyday, GE Heyday, incremental improvements was CoreEd to their culture. And they did an incredible, they were a world class organization before they kind changed into what GE is today, which is nothing wrong with that, but the mantra was, well, what you’re saying.

 

[00:52:16] Scott W. Luton: Start today, crawl. Incremental improvements and gains is a great thing. And when they build on top of each other, you blink. You got transformation. Joy, excellent advice. Let’s make sure Joy Taylor folks can connect with alliantConsulting in the broader alliantgroup. How can folks track you down Joy,

 

[00:52:32] Joy Taylor: as same with Nook I.

 

[00:52:34] Joy Taylor: The best way to find me the easiest way is on LinkedIn. I do a lot of posting. I spend a lot of time on LinkedIn and I will connect with anyone you write me. I will write back, be very afraid of that. And again, Joy Taylor. There are a few of us out there, but look for Joy Taylor alliantConsulting, or on our website and you can find us there, alliantConsulting.com.

 

[00:52:53] Scott W. Luton: It’s just that easy. Uh, well it is. Both of y’all are breaths of fresh air and I look forward to our next conversation, uh, and I look forward to y’all’s next one, two punch, keynote or panel session. You name it. And little Birdie told me. That may be on the next Olympics in la, which is right around the corner.

 

[00:53:11] Scott W. Luton: Y’all might be vying for the volleyball gold. Is that right? Joy?

 

[00:53:14] Joy Taylor: Oh, yeah. Oh yeah. No, I’ll be right. I’ll go on

 

[00:53:17] Anouk Schoenmakers: the sidelines. Guaranteed. Absolutely. Get, get those free tickets in Scott. Yes, that’s right.

 

[00:53:23] Scott W. Luton: You’re reading my mind. But, uh, what a great conversation, folks. Uh, I tell you what, first off, let’s thank everybody.

 

[00:53:29] Scott W. Luton: Joy Taylor again serves as managing director for alliantConsulting. We just heard how to connect with her. Please do that. Joy, a pleasure to have you here today.

 

[00:53:37] Joy Taylor: Pleasure to be with you

 

[00:53:39] Scott W. Luton: and Annu Schumacher serves as managing partner over at Bluecrux Organization on the move. Annu, great to see you again.

 

[00:53:46] Scott W. Luton: Thanks so much for being here today.

 

[00:53:48] Anouk Schoenmakers: My pleasure.

 

[00:53:49] Scott W. Luton: And to our audience members this episode, whether you’re listening or watching, hopefully you’re watching ’cause we really had a lot of time and you could really see Joy in the milk, bring it with passion and what they’re sharing. But we love all of our audience.

 

[00:54:02] Scott W. Luton: Wherever you are. You got homework. You know the homework. And there’s so many options here today. You gotta take something you heard or saw here today from Anouk and Joy. Put it into practice. Share it with the team. Share it with your leadership team. Uh. Do just what you do day in and day out based on some of this great advice.

 

[00:54:20] Scott W. Luton: It’s all about deeds, not words. That’s how we’re gonna continue transforming the global business world and realize more and more of the art of the possible. There’s so many opportunities out there. So with all that said, on behalf the whole team here, Supply Chain Now, Scott Luton challenge, you do good to give forward, be the change that’s needed.

 

[00:54:36] Scott W. Luton: We’ll see you next time. Right back here on Supply Chain Now. Thanks. Bye.

 

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