Stage 21 of the 2025 Tour de France had everything: rain, cobbles, Montmartre, and a gutsy solo win by Wout van Aert. But behind that win was a masterclass in strategy—one that supply chain leaders can learn from.
Van Aert’s teammate, Matteo Jorgenson, didn’t ride for personal glory. He attacked early before the final climb, forcing Tadej Pogačar to respond. That effort softened Pogačar just enough for Van Aert to launch his winning move. The team had one goal: win the stage. Every decision, every sacrifice, was made in service of that outcome.

That’s exactly how a smart supply chain should operate.
In a modern warehouse, not every task is equal. Some orders are urgent, others can wait. But with thousands of tasks moving through multiple zones, it’s nearly impossible for a human to see the full picture and make the right call every time.
Omnichannel fulfillment makes this even harder. A single facility might be shipping to retail stores, fulfilling e-commerce orders, and handling returns all at once. Each channel has different SLAs, priorities, and labor requirements. Without a system that understands the full context, it’s easy to waste time on the wrong work or miss critical deadlines.
That’s where LogistiVIEW’s Warehouse Execution System (WES) comes in. It sees the entire facility, understands the objectives, and orchestrates the ideal plan in real time. It’s like having a race director who knows exactly when to attack and when to hold back.
For example, if one order has been sitting in the queue for two days but isn’t due for another week, and a new order just dropped with a two-hour SLA, LogistiVIEW ensures the urgent work gets done first. That’s a simple case. In reality, the system is constantly balancing thousands of variables to keep operations flowing.
Winning in the warehouse takes more than effort. It takes clarity, coordination, and the right tools. That’s what LogistiVIEW delivers.
