A recent industry survey has revealed that high levels of leadership turnover are significantly disrupting supply chain performance and operational continuity, underscoring a major people‑side challenge facing logistics and operations teams worldwide. According to insights from a comprehensive Gartner survey of 227 supply chain leaders, more than half (54 %) say turnover at leadership levels has moderately to completely disrupted their ability to operate over the past three years — a striking indicator of how talent instability can ripple through critical supply networks.
The research highlights several key consequences of leadership churn in supply chain functions. Many organisations still depend on individual “superstar” leaders rather than cultivating a broader bench of collaborative, adaptive leaders — and that approach has proven vulnerable as turnover accelerates. Only about one‑fifth of surveyed leaders exhibit collectively motivated behaviours that drive stronger cross‑team performance, while nearly 60 % report that leadership roles now require wider skill sets and competencies than in the past.
The survey also found that less than half of current leadership development programmes are rated as effective, pointing to a gap between the evolving requirements of modern supply chains and existing talent‑building practices. As digital transformation, artificial intelligence and rapid global market shifts place new demands on logistics operations, companies are being pushed to rethink how they grow, retain and develop supply chain leadership if they want to sustain performance and resilience.
Industry analysts say the findings reinforce how leadership strategy, like technology investment, has become a competitive differentiator in logistics — and that organisations with clearer career pathways, collaborative leadership models and proactive development plans will be better positioned to navigate ongoing disruption in 2026 and beyond.
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