Richard Lebovitz is the Founder of LeanDNA, a technology company focused on using AI to optimize manufacturing and supply chain performance.gettyEvery generation of supply chain technology has promised to free up human capacity. MRP systems were going to eliminate manual planning. ERP was going to unify the data. Advanced analytics were going to replace gut instinct. Generative AI was going to put answers at everyone's fingertips. While the tools improved, the workload stayed roughly the same because the judgment required to act on that data remained entirely human.Agentic AI is different. For the first time, technology is not just informing human decisions. It is handling them autonomously, at scale and with compounding accuracy. The AI can now consistently execute daily prioritization, PO adjustments, supplier follow-ups and variance capture without the fatigue that accumulates by Thursday afternoon.But this is not a story about replacement. It is a story about elevation.As agentic AI takes on routine execution, the human role in the supply chain is shifting from firefighter to strategist. The buyer who spent their day chasing shortages across 2,000 parts through spreadsheets and supplier emails now has a more valuable job. They now direct the AI, manage the relationships and make the complex judgment calls that no algorithm has yet learned to navigate. Execution remains critical, but humans are no longer doing it alone.Leaders who recognize this shift and redirect their organizations will build advantages that compound. The ones who resist it, or who automate without developing the human strategic layer alongside it, will find themselves on the wrong side of a widening gap.What Agentic AI Is Now HandlingUnlike traditional AI that generates recommendations and waits for humans to act, agents take autonomous action within defined boundaries. Instead of just flagging that a supplier is running late, AI agents can evaluate the downstream production impact, assess alternatives, adjust the priority queue and initiate the follow-up. Instead of solely noting that a safety stock value is misaligned, they update it, log the reason and feed that learning back into the optimization model.This frees the human operator from the burden of daily triage. The result is more time to think, manage relationships and plan strategic direction. The AI handles repetitive, data-driven tasks. The strategist takes care of anything that requires wisdom, context and judgment. That division of responsibility, when executed well, is powerful.The Strategist's DomainThree things remain firmly and permanently in the strategist's (human) domain.1. Supplier relationships that carry value beyond any single transaction. An experienced procurement professional knows that a particular supplier is navigating a difficult quarter, that their operations director responds better to phone calls than portal messages and that the relationship built over five years is worth more than the savings from switching. No algorithm has learned to hold that kind of relational capital.2. Novel disruptions with no historical pattern. Agentic AI learns from past events. When something genuinely unprecedented occurs, the system has no training data to draw from. The strategist's ability to reason from first principles and make decisions under genuine uncertainty becomes a critical capability when AI is least equipped to help.3. Trade-offs that involve values, not just optimization. Should we absorb a significant cost increase to protect a key customer relationship? Should we qualify a new supplier in a region that carries political risk? These are not optimization problems with a correct answer. They are judgment calls that require contextual wisdom, organizational values and strategic intent that no model can fully encode. The strategist earns their place by navigating the decisions that define your company values.The Leadership Challenge No One Is Talking AboutThe harder problem facing supply chain leaders right now is not AI technology adoption. It is organizational redirection.Supply chain teams have been defined by their operational execution capability for decades. Their daily rhythm, professional identity and sense of contribution have been built around doing exactly the work that agentic AI is now handling faster and more consistently. The transition from operator to strategist is a fundamental shift in how experienced professionals understand and demonstrate their value, and it requires deliberate leadership to navigate the transformation.Leaders who get this wrong will make one of two mistakes. The first is resistance, which slows AI adoption to protect existing roles and workflows, falling behind as the performance gap between AI-powered and traditional operations widens. The second is over-automation. One example is deploying agentic AI without investing in developing the human strategic muscles of the humans who manage it. Optimized execution without human judgment will produce outcomes that are technically correct and strategically wrong.The leaders who get it right will treat AI capability and human capability not as substitutes but as a partnership. That intentional partnership is the organizational model that wins in this era.The Competitive Advantage No Algorithm Can ReplicateThe teams that will thrive are already asking different questions. Not "How do we use AI?" but "What does our AI need from us to perform at its best?" Not "Which tasks can we automate?" but "Where do our people create value that compounds over time?"When answered honestly and acted on with organizational courage, those questions are the foundation of a supply chain strategy built for the next era of AI.The operator role defined supply chain careers for a generation. The strategist role will define them for the next one. AI handles the execution. The strategist directs it, elevates it and steps in where wisdom matters more than speed.That is the competitive advantage no algorithm can replicate. And in 2026, it is the only one that matters.Forbes Technology Council is an invitation-only community for world-class CIOs, CTOs and technology executives. Do I qualify?
Supply Chain Leaders Have Been Firefighters For Decades—Agentic AI Just Made That Optional
The operator role defined supply chain careers for a generation. The strategist role will define them for the next one.








