Broader Perspective, Big Data, Corporate Citizenship, Worldly Wisdom

ANN ARBOR—Employers still concentrate on how to deliver excellent products as efficiently as possible. They also keep an eye on other values – social and environmental issues. And that’s not all, because many supply chains today cross international borders, companies also want employees who operate with ease on the global stage.  

Supply chain professionals today work with colleagues throughout the organization. "They need to be able to connect supply chain with the language they understand," says Ravi Anupindi, professor of supply chain management and faculty director of the Master of Supply Chain Management Program. 

While using the classroom to prepare students for the "real world," the students of the Tauber Institute for Global Operations then apply their new knowledge in actual business settings.

Read about today's supply chain education.