About
About Supply Chain Navigators
A structural advisory practice built from 25 years of fixing the problems most firms only diagnose.
The firm
Supply Chain Navigators Ltd is a structural alignment advisory firm specialising in capital-intensive distribution environments where automation infrastructure, WMS architecture and governance structures must remain aligned with the original investment logic across a fifteen to twenty-five year infrastructure lifecycle.
The firm was founded to address a specific, recurring problem: automated distribution environments that perform operationally while structural drift develops beneath the architecture – quietly eroding the capital assumptions that justified the original investment, until a transformation decision, a leadership change or an external pressure makes that drift suddenly visible and significantly more expensive to address.
The COMPASS Framework™, the COMPASS Index™ and the three measurement instruments (COMPASS IPI™, COMPASS GMI™ and COMPASS ROI™) are the proprietary intellectual frameworks developed by Supply Chain Navigators to make that drift visible, measurable and addressable – before it becomes critical.
Supply Chain Navigators operates across Europe and Asia-Pacific. Engagements are confidential, principal-led and technology-agnostic.
The COMPASS Framework
The intellectual foundation of Supply Chain Navigators’ advisory practice is the COMPASS Framework – a methodology developed from twenty-five years of structural assessment and recovery work across automated distribution environments on three continents.
The COMPASS Framework reframes how capital-intensive automated distribution environments should be understood, designed and governed. Rather than treating automation as an operational system to be optimised, the COMPASS Framework applies infrastructure thinking – the same principles that govern airports, data centres and port facilities – to distribution infrastructure.
The framework organises around the structural triangle: three vertices (Capital, System and Governance), each measured by a dedicated instrument, composing into the COMPASS Index as the alignment score.
The central proposition: automated distribution environments should be designed with an explicit design envelope, managed to maintain structural alignment across their investment lifecycle, and governed through a cadence that keeps pace with the complexity of what is being governed.
Simon Dahlem - Founder and Principal Advisor
I founded Supply Chain Navigators because I kept seeing the same structural problem – and I kept being called in after it had already cost the organisation significantly.
An automated distribution centre performing operationally while the architecture drifted from its original design intent. A €30M WMS programme going live into an environment whose operating model had changed since the business case was written. A governance structure that had been designed for a system that was half as complex as the one it was overseeing. In each case, the structural problem was visible before the crisis – if anyone had been looking at the right vertex.
My career has been built in capital-intensive distribution environments. I began in logistics and forwarding in Germany in the early 1990s and moved progressively into the design, governance and recovery of complex distribution systems. Over 25 years I have worked across pharmaceutical distribution, automotive aftermarket, FMCG, 3PL and industrial environments – in Europe, Asia-Pacific and Africa.
The engagements that shaped my thinking most directly were the ones that went wrong. A pharmaceutical distribution centre in Southeast Asia that came to a complete standstill following a failed WMS implementation and warehouse relocation – where delivery reliability had to be rebuilt from zero to 95% within 90 days. A global enterprise WMS rollout across 17 countries and 34 logistics operations, where maintaining structural alignment between the global template and 17 different operational realities required a governance architecture that did not yet exist when the programme began. Automated high-bay facilities where years of incremental system change had created an integration landscape that nobody had designed – and that became visible only when the capital investment decision for the next phase was on the table.
These experiences produced a consistent insight: operational failure in automated distribution environments is almost always a structural problem, not an execution problem. And structural problems identified early cost a fraction of structural problems discovered at crisis point.
The COMPASS Framework – together with its three measurement instruments – is the methodology I developed to make structural assessment systematic, quantified and board-presentable. It is not a theoretical model. It is the distillation of 25 years of structural assessment and recovery across three continents.
I lead every Supply Chain Navigators engagement personally at board and C-level. Specialist delivery teams operate under my direct oversight. The advisory and the delivery are never decoupled.
How we operate
Principal-led
Every engagement is led by Simon Dahlem at board and C-level from day one. We do not delegate the advisory relationship.
Technology-agnostic
We assess WMS, automation and ERP environments structurally and independently. We hold no commercial relationships with technology vendors or system integrators.
Confidential
All engagements are conducted under strict confidentiality. We do not reference client engagements without explicit permission.
Time-bound
Engagements are scoped, time-bound and produce defined deliverables. We do not engage in open-ended advisory relationships without a clear structural mandate.
Decision-ready
Every engagement produces outputs that can be presented at board level without translation or interpretation. The COMPASS Index, the drift register and the executive brief are designed for executive and board audiences.
Methodology-versioned
Every assessment carries the methodology version stamp. Outputs remain comparable across engagements as calibration refines through field experience.
Track record
25+ years of structural assessment and recovery across capital-intensive distribution environments.
Sector experience
Pharmaceutical and healthcare distribution. Automotive OEM and aftermarket. Consumer electronics and FMCG. Building materials and industrial. Contract logistics and 3PL. Oil and gas secondary distribution. Just-in-sequence automotive supply.
Geographic experience
Germany, Switzerland, United Kingdom, Cyprus. · Singapore, Thailand, South Korea, Japan, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Indonesia, Taiwan, China · South Africa, Namibia, Mozambique, Zimbabwe.
System environments
Complex enterprise WMS across multiple technology platforms. ERP-integrated warehouse and distribution environments. Automated high-bay systems. Conveyor and sortation automation. Voice-directed picking environments. Routing and scheduling systems. Multi-system robotics integration environments.
Scale of programmes managed
Up to €40M programme value. Up to 17 countries and 34 operations in a single programme. Up to 5,500 system users. Up to 208 direct operational reports.
Work with Supply Chain Navigators
If you are responsible for a capital-intensive distribution environment where the relationship between the original investment logic and current operational reality is a question worth asking – that is exactly where we work.