Resilience Over Speed: Why Supply Chains Are Recalibrating Their KPIs in 2025

By Maria Kalamatas | May 7, 2025

Frankfurt, GERMANY —
For over a decade, speed was king in global supply chains. But in 2025, the race for velocity is being replaced by a new obsession: resilience.

“Companies aren’t asking how fast they can deliver,” said Lars Neubauer, VP of Global Operations at Euronet Manufacturing. “They’re asking how long they can survive a shock.”

From raw material shortages to climate-linked port disruptions, the last five years have left supply chain leaders questioning traditional KPIs—like lead time and on-time delivery—replacing them with metrics like supplier redundancy, buffer inventory rates, and crisis response time.

Beyond Just-In-Time

The Just-In-Time model, once seen as the gold standard for lean efficiency, is being cautiously unwound. In its place, a hybrid model is emerging: Just-In-Case meets Just-In-Time.

“We’ve added 18% to our inventory holding cost this year,” said Kimaya Desai, Head of Procurement at Polaris HealthTech. “But it saved us from three stockouts during Q1. In 2020, that would have been seen as waste. Now it’s insurance.”

Nearshoring vs. diversification

Companies are also rethinking where they source, not just how. The nearshoring trend continues, particularly in North America and Europe, but it’s no longer about proximity alone.

“Nearshoring isn’t foolproof,” noted Neubauer. “Our biggest risk in 2024 was a local supplier hit by flooding. What we’ve learned is that you need diversification, not just relocation.”

Multinational firms are now mapping multi-tier supply chains down to sub-suppliers—a level of visibility once considered too granular to justify. But new risk management software and ESG reporting requirements are forcing that transparency.

The new metric: response velocity

Perhaps the most telling shift is the one not seen in dashboards: how quickly teams can respond to the unknown.

“We’re tracking how fast we can make a decision, not just how fast we can ship,” said Desai. “It’s a cultural change as much as a logistical one.”

2025: The Year of Measured Movement

The supply chain revolution of 2025 is less about overhauls and more about quiet recalibration. Companies that once prided themselves on precision are now embracing controlled flexibility—and redefining what “success” looks like.

“Speed isn’t dead,” Neubauer concluded. “But it’s not the hero anymore. The hero is continuity.”

The post Resilience Over Speed: Why Supply Chains Are Recalibrating Their KPIs in 2025 appeared first on The Logistic News.

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