Share:

ToolsGroup CEO Sean Elliott on Embracing Uncertainty, Probabilistic Planning, and Preparing for an Agentic Future

At the Gartner Supply Chain Planning Summit in Denver, Scott Luton sat down with Sean Elliott, CEO of ToolsGroup, to discuss why uncertainty is no longer something supply chain leaders should fear—and how the right technology can turn volatility into advantage.

Elliott brings decades of experience across supply chain execution and planning, a background that shapes his pragmatic leadership philosophy. As he noted, bad plans can cripple even the best execution environments, just as poor execution can undermine well-crafted plans. ToolsGroup’s mission sits squarely at that intersection.

 

What Makes ToolsGroup Different

Elliott described ToolsGroup as one of the few truly probabilistic planning providers in the market. While many vendors claim probabilistic capabilities, most stop at probabilistic forecasting. ToolsGroup goes further by embedding probabilistic thinking across the full breadth of its planning technology.

The company’s belief is simple but powerful: uncertainty is not the enemy—it’s an asset. Rather than chasing forecast accuracy for its own sake, ToolsGroup focuses on business outcomes. What planning organizations really care about, Elliott argued, is having the right inventory in the right place at the right time to satisfy customers.

Customer satisfaction—driven by availability, pricing, and service—is the ultimate goal. Probabilistic planning enables organizations to position inventory intelligently in uncertain conditions, which is exactly where global supply chains find themselves today.

 

A Historic Era of Disruption

Elliott pointed to research from EY and McKinsey showing that large-scale macro disruptions have accelerated dramatically. A century ago, such disruptions occurred every five to ten years. Today, they happen three to five times per year—and that count doesn’t even include “logical” disruptions such as tariffs, regulatory changes, and pricing volatility.

Physical disruptions like canal blockages and pandemics are now compounded by dynamic trade policies and sourcing uncertainty. Together, these forces are reshaping how companies think about inventory, pricing, and risk.

For Elliott, this environment represents a defining moment for supply chain technology—and a clear validation of ToolsGroup’s approach.

 

Doubling Down on the Engines That Matter

When asked what excites him most as CEO, Elliott took a deliberately countercultural stance. While acknowledging the industry’s enthusiasm for agentic AI, he emphasized that strong engines must come before autonomous agents.

ToolsGroup is doubling down in two key areas:

First, the company is integrating both sides of the supply-demand equation. Most planning solutions focus almost exclusively on supply-side levers. ToolsGroup combines supply planning with demand-side capabilities—such as pricing, promotions, and markdown optimization—allowing organizations to manage demand and supply simultaneously.

Second, ToolsGroup is preparing thoughtfully for an agentic future. Elliott cautioned that automated agents powered by mediocre math will only deliver mediocre outcomes. The priority, he said, must be better recommendations, stronger explainability, and decision-centric workflows—so that when agents are fully empowered, they drive real, trusted value rather than noise.

 

How to Connect with ToolsGroup

Elliott encouraged supply chain leaders to connect with ToolsGroup through the company’s website, which is designed to quickly route organizations to meaningful, human-centered conversations. “We’re problem solvers,” he said. “We want to get you to the right discussion as fast as possible.” You can also follow Sean Elliott on LinkedIn: click here. To listen to the audio version of this interview with Scott W. Luton and Sean Elliott: click here.

As uncertainty continues to define global supply chains, ToolsGroup’s message is clear: embrace volatility, invest in stronger decision engines, and prepare now for the next generation of planning.

More Blogs

workforce
Blogs
December 11, 2025

AI and the Future of Supply Chains: How Leaders Move from Hype to Real Impact

Special Guest Blog Post written by Karin Bursa, Founder and CEO of NIRAKIO and Supply Chain Now Host   Artificial intelligence is no longer a “what if” in supply chain — it is here. In fact, Gartner predicts that 50% of cross-functional supply chain management solutions will use intelligent agents to autonomously execute decisions in the ecosystem by 2030. But how do leaders move from hype to real impact? During our recent Supply Chain Now Power Panel, I asked five senior executives to share where they see AI making the biggest impact. Their answers revealed not just excitement, but a roadmap for how supply chains can evolve. Here is how they responded, in their own words. Q: Where do you see AI making the greatest impact in your supply chain? Eliza Simeonova – VP Global Supply, Mars Pet Nutrition “AI forces operational discipline. Clean data is no longer optional. The system itself demands it. I also see AI shaping supply chain synchronization — aligning suppliers, factories, warehouses, and customers in new ways.” Whitney Shlesinger – VP Global Planning & Logistics, McCormick “For me, it’s about people. Employees want to move beyond non-value-added work. AI allows us to free them up…
reverse logistics
Blogs
January 28, 2026

Why Can’t America Train Workers for a Trillion-Dollar Industry?

Inside the reverse logistics education gap and the economic blind spot keeping it invisible Special Guest Blog Post written by Deborah Dull   Tony Sciarrotta has been asking the same question at industry conferences for years. As the Senior Director of Circularity and Reverse Logistics at the National Retail Federation, he knows what answer he’s going to get. But he keeps asking anyway. “Anybody in here go to school for returns management, reverse logistics, circularity? Any degrees in those fields the room?” It’s rare that anyone raises their hand. “That’s what’s wrong with our industry,” Sciarrotta told me at NRF Rev this January, the first conference under NRF’s new reverse logistics banner. “We still need to fix it.”   The Numbers That Should Make Headlines Here’s what makes reverse logistics so fascinating: the scale is staggering, but the infrastructure to support it needs to be stronger. According to the National Retail Federation, American retailers processed approximately $890 billion in returns in 2024 which is roughly 17% of all retail sales – and it’s higher for ecommerce. But that number almost certainly understates reality. “We have a fragmented industry,” Sciarrotta explained. “Where are all those returns going? It has to be…