COVID-19

Source
DC Velocity
Edition and Date

December 15, 2020

It's been nearly 10 months since Covid-19 slammed into the global economy like a wrecking ball. And while businesses have learned to manage, many will endure lasting effects that may take years to resolve. In the meantime, all of us—businesses and consumers alike—are yearning for things to get back to normal. But what does that even mean? Is it possible that we may someday return to some semblance of our old lives? Or will we enter a "new normal"? And if so, what will that look like?

Source
The Dispatch - The Morning Dispatch
Edition and Date

December 14, 2020

The FDA officially granted emergency use authorization for the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine on Friday, writing that “in making this determination, the FDA can assure the public and medical community that it has conducted a thorough evaluation of the available safety, effectiveness and manufacturing quality information.

Source
The Street
Edition and Date

December 14, 2020

Extreme lockdown measure in Germany are coming up. In the US, hospitalizations keep breaking records. The good news is Pfizer begins shipping its vaccine.

Source
Logistics Management: 15th Annual Virtual Summit
Edition and Date

December 14, 2020

Sessions during the summit put some of today’s game-changing strategies and digital solutions into perspective and offer practical tips for evaluating, implementing and leveraging today’s technology to streamline operations and build resilience into your supply chain.

Professor Yossi Sheffi offers us a session that takes a look at how the pandemic has actually accelerated the acceptance of new supply chain technology and intelligence tools. 

Source
The Wall Street Journal
Edition and Date

December 13, 2020

Mobilization involves factory workers, truck drivers, pilots, dry ice, ultracold freezers and plenty of needles. A lot can go wrong. To work, every one of the many and complicated links of the chain has to hold.

Source
The Wall Street Journal
Edition and Date

December 3, 2020

When Pfizer Inc. said last month it expected to ship half the Covid-19 vaccines it had originally planned for this year, the decision highlighted the challenges drug makers face in rapidly building supply chains to meet the high demand.

Published Date
December 02, 2020
Source
Supply Chain 24/7
Description

During the pandemic, stay-at-home consumers switched to online buying, and the 2020 roll call of bricks-and-mortar bankruptcies reads like a “who’s who” of retailing, however, the pandemic has also unleashed a wave of unparalleled supply chain innovation. {Originally published in Supply Chain Management Review}

Published Date
December 01, 2020
Source
Future of Sourcing
Description

Large-scale disruptions such as the COVID-19 pandemic cause huge supply/demand imbalances due to interruptions in supply or surges in demand. In an unstable environment, companies often have to prioritize which customers they serve. Past disruptions reveal how companies on both ends of the supply chain have handled such challenges, both in terms of tactics they employed and considerations they used for their decisions.

Source
Boston 25 News
Edition and Date

November 18, 2020

Whether it’s appliances, groceries, electronics, toys, or hardware supplies, most retailers have been affected in some way by COVID-19′s disruption to the global supply chain... Dr. Yossi Sheffi, an MIT professor who specializes in supply chain management, said reduced air travel is going to impact items imported from overseas, like iPhones and computer chips.

Published Date
November 01, 2020
Source
Peerless Media - Innovation Strategies
Description

Covid-19 has swelled the e-commerce tidal wave that was submerging traditional retailing before the virus struck. During the pandemic, stay-at-home consumers switched to online buying in droves, and the 2020 roll call of brick-and-mortar bankruptcies reads like a "Who's Who" of retailing.