A Supply Chain Manager owns the flow of goods, materials, and information from suppliers through production and delivery. You coordinate across suppliers, logistics providers, warehousing, and internal operations — each with their own systems, timelines, and constraints. When any step breaks down, the impact cascades through the entire chain.
Supply chain coordination spans organizations that don’t share systems. Supplier confirmations come through email. Logistics updates live in carrier portals. Internal teams track status in spreadsheets. You’re manually stitching together visibility across a chain that should be connected. Every handoff between parties is a potential information gap.
Disruptions don’t stay contained. A delayed shipment from one supplier affects production schedules, which affects customer delivery timelines, which triggers exceptions across multiple downstream processes. The more complex the supply chain, the more coordination overhead is required to keep everything aligned — and the more damage each breakdown causes.
Moxo connects the parties and steps in supply chain processes into coordinated workflows. AI agents track status, route exceptions, follow up with suppliers and logistics partners, and keep internal teams informed. Humans stay in control of sourcing decisions, exception handling, and escalations. The result is better throughput, fewer surprise disruptions, and a supply chain that responds to issues before they cascade.