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Supply chain's AI moment: billing fixes, orchestration tools and C-suite moves signal a sector in transition

From Fixefy's agentic AI to Hershey's new CSCO, supply chain leaders are pushing AI and leadership changes to the forefront in 2026.

By MarketScale Newsroom · June 8, 2026, 8:39 PM UTCAi in Supply ChainSupply Chain ManagementWarehouse AutomationAgentic Ai
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Supply chain's AI moment: billing fixes, orchestration tools and C-suite moves signal a sector in transition

Key takeaways

01

Supply chain leaders are adopting AI technologies to streamline operations.

02

Companies are making significant leadership changes to drive transformation.

03

The industry is adapting to emerging technological and strategic demands.

Artificial intelligence is moving from pilot programmes to operational infrastructure across global supply chains, according to a cluster of stories tracked by Supply Chain Digital — and the executive ranks are shifting to match.

Agentic AI targets billing and orchestration

Fixefy is deploying what Supply Chain Digital describes as agentic AI specifically to detect and resolve billing errors — a category of financial friction that has long consumed analyst hours across procurement and logistics teams. The move reflects a broader industry push toward AI that acts, not merely advises.

Separately, supply chain software firm 4flow launched Optaire, an AI-driven orchestration platform aimed at closing the gap between strategic planning and day-to-day execution. Supply Chain Digital frames the product as a step toward end-to-end supply chain orchestration, with the system designed to coordinate decisions across planning, sourcing and fulfilment in a single environment.

Freight broker and logistics company C.H. Robinson is also pressing forward with AI implementation, according to Supply Chain Digital's reporting, though the publication focuses on the internal realities of deploying such systems at scale — a process that requires significant data infrastructure before any efficiency gains materialise.

Hershey installs a new supply chain chief

The Hershey Company appointed Mitchell Arends as its chief supply chain officer, Supply Chain Digital reported. Arends arrives having held leadership roles at UTZ Brands, Kraft Heinz, Nestlé, Gerber and Deere & Company — a cross-sector background that spans food manufacturing, consumer goods and industrial equipment.

The appointment places a seasoned operator at the head of one of North America's most recognisable food supply chains at a time when input costs, logistics volatility and demand forecasting complexity continue to pressure consumer goods manufacturers.

CVS and UPS move on physical infrastructure

CVS Pharmacy is advancing warehouse automation initiatives, with Supply Chain Digital reporting on the partners the pharmacy chain has engaged to build out that capability. The project reflects a widening pattern among large retailers treating distribution centres as competitive assets rather than cost centres.

UPS, meanwhile, is expanding its North American supply chain footprint, according to Supply Chain Digital. The logistics giant's network build-out aims to improve speed and coverage for shippers relying on its services across the continent.

Leadership voices weigh in on data and procurement's evolving role

Supply Chain Digital's interview series surfaces perspectives from practitioners navigating the same pressures. Shiv Trisal, Global Industrials GTM Lead at Databricks, discussed how data platforms can connect digital tools to physical industrial sectors.

For business users who don't write code, Genie is an exceptional capability. — Shiv Trisal, Global Industrials GTM Lead, Databricks

Jabil's Chief Supply Chain Officer Frank McKay framed procurement as a direct revenue driver in his conversation with the publication, arguing that treating suppliers as customers — rather than vendors to be squeezed — produces better resilience outcomes. His perspective aligns with a growing body of practitioner opinion that procurement's value is no longer measured only in cost savings.

At pharmaceutical company Sanofi, incoming Global Head of Supply Chain Vanessa Clemendot is charting a new course after 25 years at L'Oréal. Her move to a life sciences supply chain represents both a personal career shift and a data point in the broader talent flow between consumer goods and healthcare logistics.

Awards programme marks the industry calendar

The Global Supply Chain Awards 2026, scheduled for 8 September, will be held in conjunction with the Supply Chain LIVE: The London Summit. Entries are open, with the programme framed around recognising innovation, leadership and technology deployment across the sector.

A World Tour NYC edition of the Procurement & Supply Chain LIVE event is also on the calendar, extending the programme's reach to North American audiences. Together, these events reflect the degree to which supply chain management has moved from back-office function to a discipline commanding dedicated professional forums on both sides of the Atlantic.

About the author

MN
MarketScale Newsroom

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MN
MarketScale Newsroom