Blogs

Why Supply Chain Security Risk in Europe Often Looks Compliant Until It Isn’t
Supply chain security risk in Europe rarely appears dramatic. Most shipments move through highly efficient logistics networks with perfect documentation,

GCC Cold Chain Execution: Where Quality Breaks First
Why cold chain quality breaks first in the GCC. Learn how real-time execution signal evaluation prevents temperature risk and campaign

Supply Chain Visibility: How Real-Time Execution Signals Are Transforming Network Design
I have spent a significant part of my career designing supply chain networks. Building optimization models. Running stochastic simulations. Stress-testing

8 Types of Supply Chain AI That Power Real-Time Decision Intelligence
Supply chain visibility platforms generate constant signals, but most cannot translate those signals into decisions. Decklar’s architecture closes this gap

When Order Volume Outpaces Intelligence in Retail Operations
Retailers processing a million or more order line items per day are no longer dealing with complexity at the edges.

The Great Enterprise Software Repricing Has Started
A few days ago, SAP lost roughly $130 billion in market value from its peak in February 2025. The stock

Why Supply Chains Still Fail Despite Billions Spent on TMS, Planning Software, and Visibility Tools—And What Decision Intelligence Fixes
Companies worldwide spend more than $25 billion every year on systems such as TMS software, planning tools, and supply chain

How to Deploy Supply Chain AI Effectively: A Framework Quadrant for Tactical and Strategic Decisions
Supply Chain AI is often misunderstood as an automation engine. While AI can automate tasks, its true value lies in

Meeting 53 Supply Chain Leaders Across 4 Continents in 12 Months: The Inspiration Behind Building Decklar
Across fifty-three conversations with chief supply chain officers from Fortune 500 and Global 2000 companies around the world in the

The Shift Left Movement: How Real-Time Visibility + AI Solves Critical Supply Chain Challenges
Supply chains have become highly automated, yet disruptions, delays, and manual workarounds still dominate day-to-day operations. Traditional automation delivers efficiency