Paul A. Mohabir is head of IT at Transervice Logistics.gettyFor nearly two decades, logistics strategy centered on efficiency—optimizing routes, reducing costs and maximizing utilization. That model worked in a more predictable world but doesn't hold up as effectively today. The competitive advantage in modern logistics is now decision velocity. It's the ability to sense change, make decisions and execute in near-real time.In my experience leading IT within the logistics industry, I've seen organizations invest heavily in AI and automation but struggle to generate meaningful operational returns. The challenge is the operating model surrounding the technology.AI has evolved far beyond forecasting. Modern logistics platforms can now dynamically reroute shipments, predict disruptions, optimize labor allocation and adjust operational workflows in real time. However, many organizations aren't structured to move at the speed these technologies enable.What slows them down is organizational latency—the delay between when data becomes available, when insight is generated and when action is taken.Historically, supply chain latency referred to transportation delays. Today, the greater risk is internal. When organizations take hours (or days) to respond to operational signals, they lose the advantage that AI's designed to create.This is why logistics strategy is shifting through three distinct phases:1. Efficiency-First: Focused on cost reduction and process optimization.2. Resilience-First: Built around redundancy, continuity and risk mitigation.3. Agility-First: Defined by the speed of decision making and execution.AI supports all three phases, but its greatest strategic value is realized in agility.Most organizations have visibility. The real question is whether they can act on that visibility fast enough.I experienced this firsthand within a logistics operation where we had extensive dashboards, reporting and operational data, yet execution remained slow. Teams could quickly identify disruptions, but resolving them often required multiple layers of approval, fragmented ownership and delayed escalation paths.How can organizations successfully gain a competitive advantage?​Shift From Visibility To ActionabilityInstead of simply alerting teams to operational disruptions, we implemented rule-based automation that enabled dispatch teams to reroute shipments automatically when thresholds were met. Situations that previously required management escalation and lengthy coordination could now be resolved in minutes.This required operational trust and governance redesign. We established clear decision thresholds that defined which actions front-line teams could execute independently versus which scenarios required leadership involvement. This reduced bottlenecks while maintaining accountability and operational control. Prioritize Real-Time Operational DataOne of the biggest challenges in logistics environments is relying on stale information. Batch reporting may provide visibility, but by the time reports are reviewed, conditions have already changed. We invested in streaming operational data pipelines that delivered live shipment, fleet and operational updates directly into workflows and dashboards. This improved responsiveness because decisions reflected current conditions rather than historical snapshots.Align Technology With Operational StrategyToo often, organizations deploy AI tools without redesigning workflows around them. Technology can't accelerate an organization if the business process itself remains slow and hierarchical. We focused on embedding technology directly into operational execution instead of positioning it solely as a reporting layer. This resulted in faster response times, improved service performance, reduced operational friction and greater adaptability during disruptions. More importantly, the organization became more responsive under pressure.That's the real transformation taking place across logistics today. Efficiency is expected, and resilience is necessary. However, agility—powered by decision velocity—is becoming the defining differentiator.The future of logistics leadership will belong to those who can convert insight into action faster than their competitors.Forbes Technology Council is an invitation-only community for world-class CIOs, CTOs and technology executives. Do I qualify?