Author: Giuseppina Schiavone

On Monday afternoon, the 11th of September 2023, my first time at the Feijenoord de Kuip Stadion and it was not for a football match but for the Topsector Logistiek Festival, organized by Topsector Logistiek and TKI DINALOG .

The festival covered several topics such as energy transition, resilience and predictability, people, society and logistics, cities and space, digitalization and circularity in logistics.

It was organized into a plenary, several parallel break-out sessions and a demonstrator area devided into three themes: games, artificial intelligence and innovations.

I participate to this festival to get to know better the status of logistics in the Netherlands and validate the current challenges I have identifed in my research, particularly with respect to the social and public impact of the sector.

I share in this post few of my notes and insights from my visit.

The plenary

The plenary was energetically chaired by Joost Hoebink who soon invited, with 3 ‘gentle’ football kicks, few professionals among the audience to introduce themselves and that was a very powerfull ice-breaker, worth to be mentioned!

A message from the Dutch Minister of Infrastructure and Water Management Mark Harbers nicely reminded us that without transport and logistics the Dutch economy cannot move on.

Interestingly recent figures from the Central Bureau of Statistics showed the increase of enterprises’ bankruptcies in this sector, attributable to various factors such rise of inflation, decrease in production, decline in international trade, slowdown of the construction industry, shortage of workforce.

Shortage of workforce was definitively a topic across the festival, mentioned also by Aad Veenman, Jan Fransoo, Roy Bolscher, Annemarie Withag-Terpstra who among other activities are making considerable efforts to attract back young talents to the sector.  

The talk of Ayca Szapora made us travel into the world of cognitive illusions, habits formation and behavior change. She provided very useful tips for change management, which is another core challenge in logistics today. I have enjoyed her talk, I am always glad to hear people able to make complex neuroscience insights available to the practice of everyone.

Did you know that our brain is lazy? It tends to execute quickly tasks that have low computational cost, while everything else (for example learning something new or adapting to undesired circumstances) causes ‘brain pain’ and resistance. So In order to change behavior one needs to facilitate that change by making it simpler to process in small steps and routines, for example by using the simple formula ‘IF…doing usual routine….THEN… introduce new routine’.

Demonstrator Area

I visited two stands and both were presenting gaming platforms for professional education.

I found both games excellent for rising awareness on sustainability aspects in the supply chain and I hope that more and more companies will use them for training their employees and improving their enviornmental footprint. As next step, I would love to see integrated in these simulators also a sustainability reporting system able to produce automatic report in line with the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS).

Break-out sessions

There were about 28 breakout sessions, running in parallel in two different timeslots, meaning that each participant could only attend two. They were all very interesting and it was an hard to choose among them.

I opted for the following two:

I was particularly intrigued by some of the audience interventions:

My Final Remarks and Food for Thoughts

I found the festival very inspiring and a good place for networking. I would have loved to have more time to explore also other break-out sessions, widen my knowledge on the local trends in the sector and hear the voice of more business owners, particularly how they are facing with the digital transformation, the transition to green economy and the loss of human capital.

With reference to human capital and looking-forward education, I leave the reader with these challenging questions:

Get in contact to share your thoughts!