TL;DR
- 72% of discrete manufacturers discover material shortages only after delays are already unavoidable, per LeanDNA's 2026 Manufacturing Research study.
- Preventing supply chain disruption isn't about reacting faster. It's about seeing the problem early enough that there's nothing to react to.
- Documented results from manufacturers that broke the cycle:
- 59% shortage reduction at Husky Shanghai
- 83% shortage reduction in 3 months at Nice HySecurity
- 53% shortage reduction in 30 days at Daher
The high cost of heroics
Most supply chain organizations measure outcomes, not prevention. They tolerate expedites to keep production moving. They have weekly meetings to recognize the buyer who pulled the rabbit out of the hat at 11 PM on a Friday. The question of how to prevent supply chain disruption upstream, before the save is needed, rarely makes it onto the same dashboard.
Our 2026 study of 150 senior decision-makers at global discrete manufacturers found that 72% of those manufacturers discover material shortages only after the delays are unavoidable. The same study found that 64% spend 10% or more of their manufacturing budget reacting to disruption.
Across U.S. manufacturing alone, that translates to billions of dollars spent every year on expediting fees, overtime, premium freight, and last-minute resourcing. None of it builds capacity or makes the next quarter easier.
The companies winning at supply chain execution are not the ones with the best expediters, they’re the ones who stopped needing them.
The problem: why expediting feels like success
Expediting feels like winning because the alternative is a delayed production line. When a buyer pulls a part out of a supplier and saves the build, the win is visible. The cost is buried in the freight invoice three weeks later. The cause is buried even deeper, often months back, in the planning conversation that didn't happen.
This is what makes reactive supply chain management culturally sticky. Three patterns show up in nearly every supply chain organization that treats expediting as a core competency:
- Visibility lags the action. Per the 2026 study, 51% of manufacturers take a week or longer to decide on corrective action after they spot a problem. By then, the action is no longer corrective. It is recovery, and recovery costs more.
- Heroics get rewarded. Prevention does not. The buyer who expedites the part gets the recognition. The planner who prevented the shortage three weeks earlier did not generate a story worth telling, so the work stayed invisible.
- The cost compounds. 74% of manufacturers in the same study say constant reacting erodes organizational trust in the supply chain. Once trust erodes, leadership stops believing the plans. Once that happens, every plan becomes a negotiation, and every shortage becomes a meeting.
Prevention beats heroics
The shift starts with reframing what counts as a win. A win is not a save, it’s the absence of the situation that required a save.
Swetha Reddy, Vice President of SIOP and Materials at Duravant, makes the case for this reframe directly:
"I don't think that we are heroes if we expedite something and bring it in and then deliver to our customer. We are heroes when we don't have to do that. And that comes from really looking into our data."
What Reddy is naming is the goal most supply chain organizations don't say out loud. The aim is not to be faster at firefighting. The aim is to make firefighting unnecessary. That is what a factory-first AI decision layer, like APEX, does. APEX surfaces the shortage signal weeks before it forces an expedite, with the cost of waiting shown alongside each item. The buyer's role shifts from reactive to preemptive, and the expediting budget shifts to working capital.
Catching the shortage three weeks early
Eric Jensen, Director of the Control Tower at Husky Technologies, has spent his career building prevention discipline into supply chain operations. The story that crystallized that approach for him took place earlier in his career, at a previous manufacturer, where his team caught a developing shortage that would have triggered a three-week plant shutdown at a Mexico facility:
"I just pulled up LeanDNA. I brought up the item detail. I went over to the other sites tab and saw that one of our sister factories in Mexico had 300 of the part in excess.
And we only ended up losing one shift as opposed to three weeks"
Three weeks of plant downtime at a Mexico facility, prevented. The cost of that single event, in lost throughput alone, would have run into seven figures. The cost of the prevention, in terms of buyer hours, was a fraction of that.
This is what prevention looks like in practice. It is not that a manufacturer simply got faster at responding to crises. It is that the crises stopped happening, because the right decision layer caught the supply signals upstream and gave the buyers the time to act on them. The principle traveled with Jensen. He has built the same prevention discipline into the Husky Control Tower he runs today.
Why prevention is a competitive advantage
The companies that have moved from reacting to prevention are not just calmer to work in, they are structurally more profitable. Every hour a buyer is not expediting is an hour they are working on something that compounds: supplier development, inventory optimization, capacity planning. That is the work that builds next year's margin.
LeanDNA's 2025 study of 200 U.S. manufacturing leaders found that 85% of supply chain leaders now view supply chain as a growth driver, compared to only 70% of executives. The gap is the cost of reactive culture. As long as supply chain is in fire mode, the rest of the C-suite sees it as a cost center. The moment it shifts to prevention, the conversation changes.
Dustin Dunn, Inventory and Technology Leader at Boeing, frames the shift this way:
“Let the technology do the work and tell us where the risk exists, so that our professionals can focus exclusively on solving the problems.”
The point Dunn is making is clear: the technology is not replacing the team. It is taking the work that should never have been on the team's plate in the first place.
How to prevent supply chain disruption: five strategies that replace heroics
1. Stop recognizing the save. Start recognizing the catch.
In many supply chain organizations, the biggest expediting save gets celebrated. Flip the recognition and recognize the planner who caught the shortage four weeks out, before it required an expedite. Heroic culture is reinforced by what leadership celebrates.
2. Measure the expediting rate as a leading indicator
Per the 2026 research study, 72% of manufacturers find out about shortages only after the delays are unavoidable. Track the percentage of shortages that required emergency action versus the ones resolved within the standard buyer workflow. If the emergency rate is north of 20%, the upstream signal is not getting through.
3. Deploy AI on signal detection, not just signal response
A decision layer that reads ERP data, supplier commits, and demand changes simultaneously can surface a developing shortage three to four weeks before it triggers an expedite. Platforms like APEX are built specifically for the signal-detection role in manufacturing supply chains.
4. Re-scope the buyer's job description
If the buyer's day is 80% expediting, the role is broken, regardless of how skilled the buyer is. The fix is not to add more capacity, it’s to give the buyer a tool that surfaces the signals early enough that 80% of the day becomes resolution before the problem starts.
5. Make prevention visible to finance
The save is visible because it has an invoice. The prevention is invisible because nothing happened. Build a prevented-cost report. When the decision layer flags a shortage four weeks early, calculate the cost of the expedite that would have happened. Show that number to the CFO every quarter. That is how prevention becomes a budget line, not a culture-change project.
Proof: companies that broke the reactive cycle
The case for prevention is not built in theory, it’s in the metrics manufacturers report after they move:
- 59% shortage reduction at Husky Shanghai, where the control tower model caught supply gaps weeks ahead of impact.
- 83% shortage reduction in 3 months at Nice HySecurity, demonstrating how fast the curve bends once prevention is the default mode.
- 53% shortage reduction in 30 days at Daher, where one French aerospace manufacturer reset the firefighting baseline in a single month.
- 50% critical shortage reduction at Veeco Instruments, with the highest-impact shortages cut in half once supplier signals were integrated into the daily buyer workflow.
FAQs
Why is expediting considered a failure mode rather than a success?
Expediting is considered a failure mode because every expedite is evidence that the system caught the problem too late to act on it through normal channels. The cost shows up in premium freight, supplier escalation, overtime, and disruption to other priorities. Per the 2026 research study, 64% of manufacturers spend 10% or more of their manufacturing budget reacting to disruption, which is structurally unsustainable. The companies winning at supply chain execution are not the ones with the best expediting teams. They are the ones who caught the signal early enough to avoid the expedite.
How can manufacturers prevent supply chain disruption?
Manufacturers prevent supply chain disruption by deploying a decision layer that surfaces shortage signals upstream of the expediting window. This typically means integrating ERP data, supplier commits, and demand changes into a single view that flags developing shortages weeks before they become production issues. Documented results from companies running this approach include 59% shortage reduction at Husky Shanghai, 83% shortage reduction in 3 months at Nice HySecurity, and 53% shortage reduction in 30 days at Daher. The shift from reactive firefighting to proactive prevention typically pays back within 6 to 12 months and structurally lowers the cost of running the supply chain.
Conclusion: heroics are a leading indicator of a broken process
When a supply chain organization is full of heroes, the system is failing. The heroes, hours, and saves are real, but every hero is evidence that the upstream visibility broke down somewhere, and the fix is not more heroes. The fix is upstream.
The manufacturers who treat expediting as a metric to drive down, will spend the next decade widening the gap on the ones who don't.
Want to see how APEX helps your team prevent supply chain disruption weeks before it hits the floor? Book a demo.





