did we leave room for dessert?
IN GOOD TIMES AND BAD, THERE ARE SOME THINGS THAT
never change. We’re not referring to depressing inevitabilities like
death and taxes, but to more welcome certainties—like a never-fail
recipe, a foolproof business strategy, or a conference that consistently hits it out of the park. In the supply chain management profession, one of those conferences is the Annual Global Conference
of the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals
(CSCMP).
At DC VELOCIT Y, we look on the Annual Global Conference as an
editorial version of an all-you-can-eat buffet. Year after year, we
leave the three-day event so “stuffed” with ideas that we feel much
the way people do after an old-time Thanksgiving dinner.
That’s not to say justifying the expense is
always easy. Like you, we’re working hard to
make the best use of our resources in difficult economic times. In fact, we briefly considered saving precious travel dollars by
sending fewer editors to this year’s event. But
we decided that would be false economy. Our
core mission is to provide you with useful,
high-value information that can help you
improve your logistics operations. And from
that standpoint, sending staff members to
the CSCMP conference may be the best editorial investment we make all year. In the
end, DC VELOCITY did what we have always
done: send seven editors to the conference,
which was held in September in Chicago.
To ensure that we make the most of the opportunity (and our
investment), we follow the same plan of attack each year. Our
planning gets under way well before the conference actually takes
place. We pore over the advance conference materials to identify
the educational sessions, keynote presentations, and other programs that are strong candidates for story development in the
weeks and months ahead. Each editor arrives at the conference
with a work schedule that stretches from dawn until well after the
sun has set.
Roughly a week after the conference, the editorial team gathers
for a debriefing. We consider each of the sessions, speeches, meetings, and events we covered in light of their informational value.
We also step back and assess whether we did indeed get the maximum return on our editorial investment. Every year—without
exception, and regardless of economic conditions—the answer has
been a resounding yes.
This year, for example, in roughly three
(admittedly very long) business days, our editorial team shot almost 30 video news segments
for our new DCV-TV Web site, moderated half
a dozen educational sessions, covered numerous
other sessions and speeches, generated nearly
two dozen articles and videos for our “
Post-con-ference Report” e-newsletter,” met with suppliers of logistics products and services in the conference’s Learning Exchange, and
attended breakfast, lunch, and dinner meetings. It’s no wonder we
left Chicago with enough grist for
the editorial mill to ensure we’ll
have stories to share with you for
months to come.
As for the kinds of stories we
came away with, the topics are
many and varied. But the following
are examples of some of the subjects we plan to cover in 2010: how
to properly insure your company’s
freight; best practices in the use of
global trade management software;
and how one consumer goods
manufacturer is using its supply chain to fulfill a
promise to Wall Street to improve cash flow.
Others include new approaches to assessing the
value derived from relationships with 3PLs; how
one computer manufacturer re-engineered its
reverse logistics program; and why some companies are moving parts of their operations from
China to Central and Eastern Europe.
The list doesn’t end there, but we’d better stop
now. Otherwise, there’d be no room left for
dessert!