An Alternative Route to a Fuel-Efficient Last Mile
Arizona State offers Masters in SCM that builds on the MIT CTL MicroMasters
Four Last-Mile Routes to Successful Omnichannel Retailing
Getting the word out: CTL research on last-mile delivery and aging featured in media
MIT SCALE Master's Ranked #1 Global SCM Program by EdUniversal
The MIT SCALE master's programs have been ranked #1 Supply Chain Management programs in the world for the fourth consecutive year by Paris-based EdUniversal.
EdUniversal has evaluated academic institutions and programs in France since 1994, and internationally since 2007. Its rankings are based on criteria including overall program reputation, career and salary outcomes of recent graduates, international reach, and feedback from students and alumni.
Will Amazon Add Package Delivery to Its List of Market Triumphs?
Weaponizing Trade Put Global Supply Chain in the Crosshairs
How to Make CO2 a KPI for Freight Transportation
MIT AgeLab Awards OMEGA scholarship to three high school students
Follow the Food - The crucial ingredient our diet lacks
Children on campus - stories heard, lessons learned (SCM Student Voices)
Every decision is the right one as long as it works for the family.
This story was intended to share perspectives on bringing families with children to Cambridge from abroad while studying at MIT. These are our stories as ten-month and five-month on-campus Master’s candidates. While writing it together, we had some enlightening arguments. We talked about the roles of men and women in families, the difference between moms and dads in children’s eyes, gender equality, and the social perceptions of it.
Can We Live Longer but Stay Younger?
With greater longevity, the quest to avoid the infirmities of aging is more urgent than ever.
Aging, like bankruptcy in Hemingway’s description, happens two ways, slowly and then all at once. The slow way is the familiar one: decades pass with little sense of internal change, middle age arrives with only a slight slowing down—a name lost, a lumbar ache, a sprinkling of white hairs and eye wrinkles.
In logistics, profitability, provability frame IoT adoption (external resource)
With the implementation of 5G wireless, IoT’s B2B services will speed up, but will the logistics sector be ready for the ride?
Technologies related to shipping and logistics technologies are accelerating. The rollout over the next few years of 5G wireless will bring with it the speeding up of the Internet of Things (IoT), an ability of machines to instantaneously communicate with us and with each other.
MIT Agelab's Lifestyle Leaders Panel and the MBTA
The Lifestyle Leaders Panel convened at MIT AgeLab in the Center for Transportation and Logistics for a presentation and focus group session on transportation in older age.
MIT Supply Chain Management and AWESOME announce AWE Scholarship and Research Expo Winners
The winning finalists of the AWE - Advancing Women Through Education scholarship were awarded at MIT on 30 January 2019. The award, to be given annually and currently valued at $72,000, is the first ever full-tuition award specifically for women in the 20-year history of the MIT SCM program. It represents a significant commitment by MIT SCM, the MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics, and AWESOME to encourage women to prepare for and perform successfully in supply chain leadership roles.
Navigating the road to digital supply chain transformation
In Good Company Challenge Announces Winners of 2018 Optimal Aging Challenge
Massachusetts Tech, Innovation, and Aging Service Leaders Award Four Organizations Combatting Loneliness in Older Adults A group of industry, academic and government partners affiliated with Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker’s Council to Address Aging announced today the winners of the In Good Company: The 2018 Optimal Aging Challenge, a global competition designed to
Here’s what you need to know about the French fuel protests
GM thinks layoffs will boost its bottom line. The reality is more complicated.
Drug Delivery, Uncertainty, the Mom and Pop, and More - MIT CTL at INFORMS
Why we need operations and management research
From malaria testing to micro-retail stores to global business operations, a clear understanding of what is happening in the supply chain is essential to exist and succeed. Observation of operations and knowledge of human actions alone are not enough. According to W. Edward Demming, "The world is drowning in information but is slow in the acquisition of knowledge." MIT CTL and SCALE researchers take aim at the deluge of information and translate it into working knowledge with their applied research.
Why Define Success In Our Evolution Toward Self-Driving?
By: Bryan Reimer
Self-driving Not well understoodThe convenience of low-cost on-demand personal mobility has taken our roads by storm. Young and old alike are leveraging ride-hailing platforms at an increasing rate. Driverless taxis may further accelerate the use of personal or shared ride-hailing services as part of an increasingly automated lower cost mobility system. The ramifications for personal vehicle ownership, environmental impact, use of public transport, and congestion are not yet well understood.
MIT CTL's Bruce Arntzen Joins NESCON Hall of Fame for 2018
The 2018 New England Supply Chain Conference Hall of Fame Award winner is Bruce C. Arntzen, Ph.D. He has contributed in distinctly outstanding ways to the Supply Chain profession.
The Green Lobby’s Misdirected Anger
BOSTON – In August, when US President Donald Trump proposed to freeze fuel-efficiency standards for cars and trucks, environmentalists and their supporters were outraged. Now, the temperature of the debate has risen again, following a special report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) that highlights the urgent need to take drastic action to curb carbon dioxide emissions.
Lessons From the Auto Industry on Managing the Next Recession
The chorus of warnings that another recession is imminent seems to be getting louder by the day in the business community. The many possible triggers of another downturn include America’s trade dispute with China and rising corporate debt. Can companies draw lessons from the Great Recession of 2008 that will help them weather the next financial storm?