When to Hire a Supply Chain Leader (CPG)
Most CPG companies wait too long to hire supply chain leadership.
By the time they decide to bring someone in, the business is already feeling the strain—missed orders, inventory issues, margin pressure, or constant fire drills.
This usually shows up as:
- Service levels starting to slip
- Forecast accuracy becoming inconsistent
- Inventory either building up or running short
- Operations reacting instead of planning
At that point, the hire becomes reactive instead of strategic.
The better approach is knowing when to make the hire before things start breaking.
If you’re evaluating recruiters, see our breakdown of top CPG recruiters in the U.S.
The Inflection Point Most Companies Miss
In early stages, supply chain is usually handled by:
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Founders
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Operations managers
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Finance or general business leaders
That works…until it doesn’t.
There’s a clear inflection point where complexity increases:
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More SKUs
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More customers (especially retail)
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More suppliers or co-manufacturers
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Higher service level expectations
Once that happens, informal processes start to fail.
Signs It’s Time to Hire a Supply Chain Leader
Most companies don’t need a VP of Supply Chain on day one.
But they do reach a point where experienced leadership becomes critical.
1. Retail Expansion Is Creating Pressure
Moving into retailers like Target, Walmart, or regional chains changes everything:
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OTIF requirements
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Forecast accuracy expectations
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Inventory positioning
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Penalties for failure
What worked in DTC or small-scale distribution won’t hold.
2. You’re Constantly in “Fire Drill” Mode
If your team is:
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Expediting orders weekly
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Chasing suppliers
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Managing stockouts reactively
That’s not a workload issue—it’s a leadership gap.
3. Margins Are Eroding Without Clear Visibility
This shows up as:
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Rising freight costs
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Excess inventory
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Poor production planning
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Inefficient co-manufacturing
Without someone owning the full supply chain, these issues compound.
4. You’re Scaling Without Infrastructure
Growth is good—but it creates problems if not supported.
Common signs:
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No formal S&OP process
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Limited demand planning capability
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No clear ownership of procurement strategy
At this stage, execution starts to break down.
5. You’re Relying Heavily on 3PLs or Co-Manufacturers
Outsourcing doesn’t eliminate complexity—it shifts it.
You still need someone who can:
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Hold partners accountable
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Optimize costs
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Align production with demand
Without that, you’re reacting instead of managing.
What Level Should You Hire?
This is where many companies get it wrong.
They either:
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Hire too junior → can’t handle complexity
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Hire too senior → wrong fit for stage
General guideline:
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$10M–$30M revenue: Strong Director-level
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$30M–$100M: Director / Sr. Director or emerging VP
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$100M+: VP or SVP depending on structure
It’s less about title and more about:
👉 experience in scaling environments
Why Timing Matters
Hiring too late creates:
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Operational inefficiencies
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Customer issues
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Margin pressure
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Burnout across the team
Hiring at the right time creates:
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Structure
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Visibility
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Scalability
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Better decision-making
The difference is significant.
Final Thought
Most CPG companies don’t struggle because they lack demand.
They struggle because their supply chain can’t keep up with growth.
Hiring the right leader at the right time changes that.
If you’re starting to see signs of strain—even if things are still “working”—it’s usually worth taking a closer look at whether it’s time to bring in dedicated supply chain leadership.
If you want a second perspective on where your organization is or what level makes sense, feel free to reach out.
Anthony Allen
www.scmhire.com
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