VP Supply Chain — M5
SUPPLY.VPSUPPLYD005.M5
Leadership focus accountable for the end-to-end supply chain organization — procurement, inventory, warehousing, distribution, and transportation — translating strategic vision into operating plans, owning enterprise-scale spend and P&L, and driving network and transformation decisions. Distinct from tactical Supply Chain Manager focuses (single-site operations) and from pure Procurement or Logistics specialist focuses; this focus integrates all sub-functions under executive ownership.
Leadership focus accountable for the end-to-end supply chain organization — procurement, inventory, warehousing, distribution, and transportation — translating strategic vision into operating plans, owning enterprise-scale spend and P&L, and driving network and transformation decisions. Distinct from tactical Supply Chain Manager focuses (single-site operations) and from pure Procurement or Logistics specialist focuses; this focus integrates all sub-functions under executive ownership.
Focus — VP Supply Chain
Leadership focus accountable for the end-to-end supply chain organization — procurement, inventory, warehousing, distribution, and transportation — translating strategic vision into operating plans, owning enterprise-scale spend and P&L, and driving network and transformation decisions. Distinct from tactical Supply Chain Manager focuses (single-site operations) and from pure Procurement or Logistics specialist focuses; this focus integrates all sub-functions under executive ownership.
Material PAY differential vs the function baseline.
Responsibilities by level
What this person actually does at each level on the executive track — escalating scope, not one generic blob. Your level is highlighted.
- Directs daily operations across procurement, production, and distribution to ensure products are delivered efficiently, on time, and within budget within a defined area such as logistics, inventory management, or a regional DC network.
- Develops and monitors KPIs for the team and implements corrective actions when performance metrics fall short.
- Manages and develops the supply chain team, owning operational budgets and short-term goals for the function.
- Collaborates with suppliers and internal teams to resolve sourcing, fulfillment, and quality issues and ensure compliance with company policies and industry regulations.
- Translates departmental plans into actionable team workflows and selects appropriate tools (e.g., SAP, WMS, TMS) for execution.
- Translates the divisional supply chain strategy into actionable multi-team plans across procurement, inventory management, and logistics, aligning with broader business objectives.
- Manages multiple supply chain sections or critical functions, optimizing processes and implementing new technologies and practices (e.g., Blue Yonder, o9, Kinaxis) to improve cost and service.
- Leads distribution network design decisions including adding or closing DCs, shifting transportation modes, and evaluating insource vs. outsource trade-offs.
- Sets strategic operating policies and performance standards across teams, monitoring metrics and directing corrective action to protect business activities from disruption.
- Develops and challenges senior supply chain managers, building organizational capability and succession depth.
- Directs all aspects of the division's supply chain policies, objectives, and initiatives across procurement, inventory, warehousing, distribution, and transportation, leading through department managers.
- Develops and manages global commodity and supply chain strategies, defining methods to deliver year-over-year material cost productivity improvement (e.g., 5% YoY).
- Owns enterprise-scale spend and P&L for the division, setting standards and metrics for measuring results and supplier performance.
- Designs networks resilient to regulatory concerns, economic fluctuations, and supplier instability, embedding risk and ESG considerations into strategy.
- Influences executives and major suppliers on key issues and presents supply chain strategy and performance to the C-suite and board.
- Plans and directs the enterprise supply chain function across multiple divisions, owning policies, objectives, and initiatives with long-term effect on company success.
- Collaboratively develops the long-term vision, strategy, and roadmap for the future supply chain, leading through senior managers and directors across functions and geographies.
- Owns total enterprise supply chain spend and P&L (up to ~$3 billion), aligning capital, network, and sourcing strategy with corporate objectives.
- Drives transformational results across the enterprise and divisions, leading large-scale organizational change and digital/AI adoption.
- Negotiates with executives and strategic partners on critical matters and shapes corporate policy on resilience, ESG, and global commodity strategy.
Level guidelines
The universal leveling rubric applied to this function — how scope, complexity, collaboration, and experience step up across levels.
| Level | Knowledge & Application | Complexity & Problem Solving | Collaboration & Interaction | Typical Degree & Years |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M3 | Applies operational supply chain expertise across logistics, inventory, or procurement to manage day-to-day execution within a defined area; selects established methods and tools to meet short-term goals and budgets. | Resolves diverse operational issues, evaluating trends in KPIs and supplier performance to identify and correct root causes. | Leads a functional team and engages suppliers and internal customer teams to resolve issues and ensure on-time, in-budget delivery. | 5–7+ years managing supply chain professionals and operating budgets. |
| M4 | Applies strategic supply chain knowledge to set policies across multiple teams or sections, aligning network, technology, and process decisions with business objectives. | Addresses strategic, multi-team issues such as network design and insource/outsource trade-offs where errors could jeopardize business activities. | Engages senior leaders on functional strategy and oversees multiple departments or critical functions through subordinate managers. | 8–10+ years with complex team and organizational leadership in supply chain. |
| M5 | Defines methods and standards for division-wide supply chain strategy, owning global commodity strategy, enterprise spend, and supplier performance frameworks. | Solves complex, division-wide problems involving cost productivity, resilience, and ESG that carry business-wide implications. | Leads through department managers, influences executives and major suppliers on key issues, and presents to the C-suite and board. | 10–12+ years including second-level management and strategy work. |
| M6 | Defines long-term, cross-functional supply chain strategy across divisions, integrating sourcing, network, digital, and resilience into enterprise direction. | Tackles abstract, enterprise-wide issues with long-term effect on company success, defining strategy under significant ambiguity. | Leads through senior managers and directors across functions and divisions; negotiates with executives and strategic partners as a policy influencer. | 12–15+ years of deep leadership across departments or divisions. |
Skills
Focus-specific skills the role applies — the relevance layer beyond the occupational base.
- Strategic planning
- Designs supply chains that support business strategies adapted to changing market conditions, new opportunities, or cost reduction.
- Financial acumen
- Translates supply chain decisions to broader business objectives and financial outcomes; owns enterprise-scale P&L and spend.
- Risk and resilience management
- Designs networks resilient to regulatory concerns, economic fluctuations, and supplier instability; a core senior competency.
- Change leadership
- Leads transformation and organizational change at the senior/executive level.
- ESG compliance
- Manages environmental, social, and governance compliance across the supply chain at senior levels.
- People leadership
- Selects, hires, develops, challenges, and supports effective teams.
- Communication
- Translates technical concepts for executive audiences and presents to the C-suite and board.
- AI literacy
- Understands how AI tools work, what they can and can't do, and how to interpret their outputs for demand forecasting, supplier evaluation, and inventory optimization.
- Demand planning
- Forecasts demand and creates supply plans that ensure availability of materials across the network.
- Data analytics
- Analyzes inventory and supply chain data to increase inventory turns, reduce waste, and optimize customer service.
Provenance
The evidence base behind this profile — every layer is sourced; quality is scored by an adversarial review panel (1–5; passes at ≥4 on the minimum dimension).
Level — M5 — Senior Director
Leads multiple functions or a large department; drives multi-year strategy.
- Scope
- Multiple functions or a large department
- Autonomy
- Owns multi-year strategy for the area
- Complexity
- Org-level trade-offs and investment
- Impact
- Multi-function results
- Decision rights
- Owns investment and org design across functions
- Leadership
- Leads directors and managers
- Typical experience
- 12–18 yrs
Adjacent roles
Nearest roles by structural coordinates (level + taxonomy). Distance 0 → 1; each carries its 3-state match band. How coordinates work → · Compare side-by-side →
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O*NET / SOC
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