Build Supply Chain and Market Resilience for Disruption
Supply chain disruption is no longer an exceptional event. Trade wars, regional conflict, regulatory shifts, climate disruption, and lingering pandemic aftershocks can all change how a company sources, manufactures, and serves customers. The CEO who knows critical dependencies and invests in resilience before disruption maintains continuity while competitors look for alternatives under pressure.
Proficiency Level
This is a preview of how skill assessment works in Admire
Measurable Behaviors
Behaviors are optimized to be directly observable for evidence-based skill tracking.
Balance efficiency and resilience in supply chain design
Makes explicit choices about where low cost is acceptable and where redundancy is worth the premium.
Build regional alternatives that can absorb disruption in primary supply sources
Develops structural regional options that can carry volume when a primary source breaks.
Invest in diversification and dual-sourcing before being forced by crisis
Qualifies alternative suppliers or regional sources during calm periods, when options and terms are better.
Map critical supply chain dependencies and single points of failure
Identifies suppliers, components, inputs, or geographies where one failure could disrupt the business.
Treat supply chain strategy as a board-level topic
Frames resilience as strategic risk tied to valuation, continuity, investor confidence, and board oversight.
This is a preview of how behavior tracking works in Admire
Mastering Supply Chain and Market Resilience
A CEO who has mastered this skill knows the company's single-source suppliers, single-geography exposures, and market access vulnerabilities. They invest in diversification before crisis, make cost-resilience trade-offs explicit, and treat supply chain strategy as a board-level issue with long-term structural alternatives.