The official hurricane season for the Atlantic basin began last week on June 1 and runs until November 30.
Every year, organizations along the Gulf Coast and Eastern Seaboard prepare for the possibility of severe weather. They review emergency plans, monitor forecasts, assess inventory positions, and establish contingency options long before a storm appears on the radar. Why? Because waiting until a hurricane makes landfall is far too late.
The same principle applies to today's supply chains.
Over the past several months, we've seen fuel prices swing dramatically, ocean freight routes disrupted by geopolitical events, tariff uncertainty create planning challenges, and freight markets shift with little warning. They all create the same business challenge: uncertainty.
What happens if fuel prices rise another 10%? What if ocean transit times increase by two weeks? What if a key carrier changes its network strategy or a major supplier experiences disruption?
Scenario planning and contingency planning help organizations answer those questions before they become urgent. They allow leadership teams to identify vulnerabilities, evaluate options, and respond with confidence rather than scrambling for solutions under pressure.
The lesson of hurricane season is simple: resilience isn't built during the storm. It's built beforehand.