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Hey, good morning, everybody. Scott Luton here with you on supply chain. Now, welcome to today's show on today's episode, we're gonna be diving into the story of a global supply chain leader, doing big things in the industry and bay right here in Georgia. And he's one heck of a guy, a musical artist, uh, very talent individual, and a friend of the show. So let's dive right in when welcome in our featured guest here today, Dennis, Flynn vice president of global logistics at Stanley black and Decker, Inc. Hey Dennis, how you doing?
I'm good, Scott. Glad we're getting a chance to do this. What and looking forward to it
I am too. It's been works for a while. I've gone through your agent a couple of times who knows? We might book an interview and a gig. We'll see, but, uh, it,
Thanks for limo by the way. Appreciate you sending that out
Uh, listeners. He's only kidding. He's only kidding. We can't afford limos. Hey, but kidding aside. Great to have you here. Uh, this has been a long time in the works and uh, it's so neat to be able to dive into the Dennis Flyn story a little bit more. Um, but before we start picking your brain on all things supply chain, let's get to know you a little better. And I wanna start with Dennis a question. I don't think I've ever asked you. So I've been looking forward to your answer. Where did you grow up and, and give some anecdote about your upbringing?
Oh, wow. Um, well I grew up in, in Northern Virginia. My dad was in the army, worked at the Pentagon for years and around my, so I kind of had that whole DC caps. You know, those were my sports teams, the bullets back when they were called the bullets, the wizards now. So very much a, a DC guy still am, uh, around my junior of high school that we moved to Florida. And so I ended up then learning how to surf and lifeguard and do all this other kind of more Floridian stuff. So kind of two different places influenced me growing up. I, I ended up at the university of Florida for undergraduate and, uh, love that. Obviously I'm a sports fan, as you know, cause we've talked about baseball before. So a big school like that and being in the OCC, uh, was awesome. You know, seeing all of the athletes we saw come through that place who went on to become hall of Famers, either in football or basketball or baseball.
So, and yeah, really quick, uh, not only, um, plenty of athletes coming through the university of Florida, but of course Tom petty, we're gonna touch on music in a minute. Tom petty, petty, I think was Gainesville. Right?
He was, yeah. Um, he act, I, it was Mike Campbell, the guitarist, I think, went to the university of Florida. I don't think Tom ever set foot in the classroom. I know we worked at the university. I think he was a landscaper, but right. Yeah. He's, he's obviously musically, uh, a huge influence and in Gainesville, he's, you know, he is the, the native son of Gainesville.
So yes. Well, Hey, I'm gonna go back to DC. That's where you grew up. I didn't know your father was an army. That is, uh, really cool. How, um, did y'all move around a lot and if you did, did it, did it, did it help train you how to kind of meet new people and build relationships regularly with regularly?
Yeah, I'm laughing. I'm laughing cuz that's exactly what it did. Um, you know, I was born in Germany and yes, moved around a lot. We lived in Louisiana, we lived in Fort Leavenworth. Um, um, my dad was in Vietnam for a period of time where I lived with my grandparents and yeah. Then on, onto, onto Virginia and what that does, uh, your questions really astute you're, you're forced to quickly adapt, you know, you're the new kid and you have to understand the, the landscape pretty quickly and, you know, determine who, who, what activities you wanna be involved in, who you wanna be friends with. So yeah, there's, there's a fair amount of that. Uh, my wife went through that too. She moved a lot. Her, her father was in academia. So we've always had that in common, that ability to be the new person and kind of quickly settle in, establish yourself, uh, kind of dip a toe in the water, you know, not, not barge in, but kind of slowly, slowly, uh, make your way into what, you know, what's gonna be your, your circle, your cl your group of friends.
Hmm. You know, that's, that is really of valuable trait to have. Cause it's so challenging. And I remember when I was a kid just not, not having moved around just how tough it was from school year to school year. And then of course I see my three kids doing it now and, and it's just, it's tougher. And I, I don't know if the, uh, the digital world is making it easier or making it tougher. Probably a little bit of both.
Yeah. Probably a little bit of both.
Yeah. Okay. I wanna transition. I wanna talk food and music and then before we talk supply chain, so food. So, um, you lived in a bunch of communities. You, you touched on of course, DC. Uh, you touched on, uh, Florida and Gainesville. Um, what is one food dish that is in inseparable from that earlier part of your journey? What's one thing you wish you could go get a, a plate of now?
Hmm. So my mom's side of the family, uh, from Jacksonville is, uh, Lebanese sincere. And so my grandmother would make all this Lebanese sincere food and Jacksonville had, I don't know if they still do, but at the time they had a lot of different kind of mom and pop Lebanese and Syrian restaurants and that, you know, Kibby and taboo Andia and Peter bread. Oh man, that stuff still, if I, if I can see, and there's a place or two in Atlanta that does that, but I, I love that, that kind of, uh, middle Eastern comfort food, I guess I'd call it that, that, that that's formative food for me. That's that's soul food for me.
I love that. I love that. Now you thanks for making me hungry. Uh, we're gonna move from food. I wanna talk about one of your other passions that I've come to appreciate. I've never had the opportunity to catch you, uh, live when your gigs, but you're, you're a big passionista when it comes to music, you're you play the guitar. I think you, you also sing and provide some acoustics. Maybe tell us about, uh, your music you love for music and any influences that you have on your music.
Yeah. So, and you, and I've had this conversation. Yeah. So I play in a band here, uh, locally. The name of the band is my favorite Baldwin. So I'm gonna ask you not to ask any follow up questions on how that name came about, but I'm super fortunate to be friends with some other guys who live here in the Sandy Springs area who are all passionate about music. And, um, you know, we all play different instruments and have a pretty similar taste in music. So the set list is a lot is pretty easy. It's all cover songs and just kind of whatever people our age are gonna like, you know, so there's gonna be some eighties, some nineties, some current stuff so that we, we don't look like we're too old, but, uh, it's a ton of fun. So you asked about influences, they're really kind of all over the board.
I'm a huge prince fan. And I think some people know, not everybody knows that he was an, an amazing musician, obviously a great showman, but an amazing guitar player, pianist, you name it. Um, when it comes to guitar, David Gilmore, you know, from P Floyd. And the reason I like him so much is because he doesn't play fast, kinda like me, but his note selection and his solos is just perfect. And so I, I follow a lot of what he does because I'm, I think that's, I'm capable of, you know, getting in the same ballpark as him. I listened to a lot of van Halen growing up, but there's no way I'm gonna be playing, you
That's more, that's more for me to, yeah. It's kind of music you listen to and you go, yep. He can play that. And I can't, Uh, and then a lot of jazz guitar players too, like west Montgomery. I love listening to him. Uh, just smooth. Um, the guy named Mark Whitfield, who's a, a jazz guitar player. Not a lot of people know about, so those are kind of my, my influences.
So, you know, one of my favorite parts of being a father is, uh, as I I've got three kids, my oldest two daughter, my, my last one, uh, is my son and my daughter. I'm not cool enough of my daughter's size, maybe for them to embrace my music for the most part. My middle child thinks I'm a little bit cool. So that's neat to see, but my son, it's really interesting to see him embrace some of the music, some of my music, right? Like I'm a big queen fan and he's become a big queen fan. He, he can Bohemian Rapsody and, and, uh, under pressure. We love David Bowie too. He can almost Satan sing those songs word for word. And that is really, is really cool to see. Cause I was, I stumbled to come. Um, I didn't listen to much radio until I was probably, you know, later in high school. So I didn't have an appreciation for, you know, the fifties and the sixties and the seventies, all the, you know, uh, the historic musical acts. So he's gonna have a lot of that appreciation, I think, at a far earlier age.
Yeah. It's funny to say that my son, um, has picked up the guitar and has become really, really good. And I, I didn't teach him. He just, I, I guess, I guess maybe saw me and said, Hey, that looks fun, but he's, he's listening to the doors and Zeppelin and all these classic bands and he's formed his own band now. And he's, it's been a again through, no, I'm not gonna give myself any credit, but to see him play and us now talk about, Hey, what scale do you play on this song? And how did you play what court? That's been a lot of fun and has been, uh, a great kind of bonding thing for him and I, and, and he has, he has surpassed me in his talent. So
That to him. How do you, you know, how do you play whole lot love by his Zeppelin? What can you show
That's awesome. That's been fun. Yeah.
All right. So I'll know, Dennis, whenever you're ready to, um, kick off a new podcast series, it's gonna be music, the love of music with Dennis. Flyn all right. I can already picture in my mind who knows in the meantime, yes. Right. In the meantime, I'm gonna make, I'm gonna circle my calendar and try to come out and see my favorite ball when in person. So we'll see. Okay.
Hold you to that. So we're having, we're having too much fun talking Fu food and mu and music and kinda your upbringing. We gotta get to, uh, our heavy lifting. Right. We gotta talk. We wanna supply chain with Dennis Flyn, but before we talk about your current role, um, at Stanley black and Decker, let's talk about a role or two that you held before your current role that really shaped your worldview, Dennis.
Sure. So I, I think the, the first role that was like that was, um, at Coca-Cola, uh, where I worked and for 16 years and loved every minute of it. And it was a role where I was working in the logistics and supply chain areas around process improvements, six Sigma projects, and, and the process got my six Sigma, my green belt certification. And I think a couple things I learned there, first of all, when you're in that kind of work and you're gathering a lot of data, you know, the data gives you the right to ask the, the, the right questions. You know, the data's not always judging jury in supply chain because that, and that leads to the second thing I learned, which is any action you take in the supply chain is gonna have an impact on some downstream action, right? So if you are select a, a different carrier, it's gonna have an impact on both the pickup and the delivery.
If you're, if you're choosing a different way to do warehousing or a different warehousing software, it's gonna have an impact on those warehouse workers and potentially on, uh, storage and production. Nothing happens in isolation. So as you're working through projects, really from demand planning and production scheduling all the way to getting it to the shelf, you have to be cognizant, uh, and very cross-functional in all that work so that you understand what the upstream and downstream stakeholders might experience as a result. Um, you've probably seen it, I've seen it where someone might their area, but then there's an impact. And so you have to be really, uh, careful there that that's, that's, uh, one of the big learnings, uh, one of the formative experiences for me, I think the other formative thing about, Hey, really
Quick, if I can, yeah, yeah. Go ahead again. It's really quick. So one of the things I'll take away from what you shared there is how you came to appreci shape, true systems level, thinking from your 16 years there at co Cola, is that right?
Yeah, totally. Um, helped to work in a plant, uh, helped to work in a warehouse. Uh, I think those experiences give you, uh, credibility and a lot of, a lot more understanding when you're making decisions say in the conference room to know what it's like to, to be in the plant, to be in the warehouse, to manage the fleet. Um, that I think that helps too.
Well, the other thing I was gonna say, and it's not supply chain related is the power of brands. The power of strong brands is a big deal. Um, and, um, I I've realized that through the rest of my, and, and been fortunate to work for other companies with really strong brands as well.
Mm. Uh, so one quick follow up question, then we're gonna get into what you're doing now. Uh, Stanley black and Decker. Talk about the culture at Coke, 16 years at, at co Cola, I've been into headquarters. Um, just a couple of times they hosted one of our events in my very first star, and it was a, a fabulous experience. Um, but what, what was one thing about the culture there at Coke that you really, you really appreciated?
Boy? Um, just one thing, huh. I, I, I think it was the, it was the focus on the brand and the, of the brand and not doing anything to compromise that, uh, and that, and, and not just the brand, but also, you know, the customers and their ability to, to portray the brand and, and display it in a way that was becoming of what it is, which really is an icon. Um, you know, here in the Southeast, the beverage decision is a big one, right? People are very passionate about their brands here, uh, for beverages in the Southeast, outside of the Southeast, maybe not so much, but the culture there at, at Coca-Cola, well, one of the many good things about the culture, there was just the focus on how important it was to protect the brand and to make it, um, what people expect, which is something they can depend on. They know they're gonna get the same flavor the same, every time they open it up, they know when they go to the store, it's gonna be right there, it's gonna be stocked. And, um, that, that to me was probably the most important cultural thing I took away.
I love it that, uh, fulfilling that brand promise is one of, one of the things I heard there. And you're right here in the Southeastern United States, you know, things Aren, um, carbonated beverages are not sodas. They're Cokes here in Southeast. I grew up, everything was a Coke now doesn't mean everything is, uh, you know, the same quality as a Coke, but if it was, if it was, uh, a soda type of beverage, it was a Coke. So you're right. Uh, uh, very important. So Dennis, we could do a whole show probably about your 16 years at co Cola, but I wanna move forward. Cause I wanna move to, um, what you're doing now as vice president of global logistics at Stanley black and Decker, which is a company that, you know, everybody and your brother and sister is probably familiar with. But if you would talk, talk about your role and nutshell talk about the company.
Sure. So my role is, uh, and it's new to me is the VP of global logistics. So I'm gonna be looking at how our product moves across the world by all modes. And so I'm really now tied very much into the, the, the global macroeconomic picture. Um, and I'm sorry, what was the second part of your question, Scott?
So for the three people that maybe have never used one of your products, you know, across the world, you know, everyone's very familiar with the company, but just for the two or three people that may not be, what does the company make?
So we're making tools, power tools, hand, uh, outdoor equipment. We're really growing in the outdoor, uh, equipment, uh, category, um, brands like DeWalt and craftsman are, are really our big brands. A lot of people know our fat max tape measures. So, and we're available, gosh, everywhere. I mean, anywhere people shop, whether that in stores online, uh, really, really strong brands and, you know, very much like Coca-Cola in terms of brand strength, just obviously in, in a, in a different category, right. But strong focus on brands and exceptionally strong focus on quality and really a great, great company.
Love it, love it. Um, okay, so let's dive a little bit deeper. Uh, I wanna talk about kinda looking back at last year and then looking ahead this year, the rest of this year. So if you and your team were to look at 2021, what would be a couple of things that y'all really proud of that you were able to do from a, say a supply chain standpoint?
Well, I think, you know, 20, 21 was a challenge, right? And that's not news to anybody. I think keeping the supply chain going, keeping very engaged with our customers around their promotional needs, their new product needs, uh, the different seasonalities that we have and being very, um, in communication with them and transparent with them about, about what was going on on our side. High levels of collaboration with our customers is, is a big one because that, you know, flows all the way back up through our supply chain, into planning and, and sourcing and, and all those critical functions that have to happen. Um, and then, you know, working in a, in a remote world, keeping our teams engaged, you know, I'm, I'm proud of how well, not just me, but really my peers, my managers, our senior leaders did a great job. I think keeping people engaged, understanding that there can be fatigue after your 10th zoom call of the day. So I think there was a really big focus within the company on making sure the people were right. And I appreciated that cuz I, I, I hope anyway that I dispensed it, but I also know I was the recipient of it from my, from my managers and our leadership team. So I, I think those were, those were our big accomplishments last year, for sure.
There's a bunch of 'em there. Uh, so before I talk about 2022 kind of take, um, uh, picking up one of the points you just made during the latter part of your answer, it's really, it's fascinating. Yeah. I think this, these last few years are gonna be studied for a very long time, uh, from business schools, from psychology schools, from you name it. But you know, one of the things I look at as a, as a business leader and entrepreneur is for about three or four years prior to the pandemic and prior to starting up supply chain now, uh, I was part of a, a small recruiting firm, a great powerful recruiting firm, but a small business. And I think of how, um, I interacted and how I, I led, uh, and how I, um, you know, all the things I did in that remote, in that small remote business prior to the pandemic. And man, then I think about everything that we've learned the last couple of years as everyone has gone remote. Right. And you've really, you've, you've kind of figured out how to optimize that, right. And how to REL uh, build relationships and, and, you know, take care of your people remotely. And Dennis, I'll tell you, I'd go back and I'd do about a thousand things different. I don't know about you, but, um, I I've really learned a lot in this last couple years. Huh?
Yeah. I, I, I completely agree. I think as you were asking or, or making your comments, one thing that popped in my head is I've really learned a D between or, or the, the spectrum of introversion and extroversion and, and in between and how different people contribute regardless of where they are on that, on that, uh, spectrum, but adjusting your approach a little bit more for, for example, you know, when you recognize folks on your team who may be a little introverted, those zoom calls are draining, right. And they need a period of time afterwards, like to, to sit back and think and reflect and process. Um, others are much more comfortable with, with zooms and like to put them out there or the, or the video meetings, whatever your forum, your platform. But yeah, I, I, would've gone back to your point. I would've gone back and recognized that, that a little bit more around a conference room table or talking to someone in an office or a cube that to me has been some, and I've recognized it in myself. Um, the fact that after the second, third, fourth zoom in a row, I gotta have a break or I'm not
Necessarily good for the people who are depending on me to be a leader
You're right. Or my managers who are depending on me to be, you know, pretty sharp in coming into each, each of these sessions with some, some crisp, clear thought. So, yeah. I, I agree with you, Scott. It's been, um, and as we're getting back into the office now, cause I, I have started to, to actually go into the office, like a lot of people travel a little bit. Um, I can, I can start to see the, the benefits of having adjusted the approach to different people, depending on where, where I, where I believe they're most comfortable
Love that. Uh, appreciate your, your introspection there. Um, if I said that, right, introspection is that, is that I'm trying to say intro, no introspective. It was
Never awesome. A vocabulary, but I'll buy it. Yeah.
Okay. So Dennis, um, and we're gonna revisit what the pandemic taught you in a second more formally, but, um, let's think about, uh, 20, 22, when it comes to Stanley black and Decker, Inc. What are some of your, uh, you know, prior, uh, in 2022?
Well, a lot of them carry over from 2021, right. Um, making sure that we are doing everything we can from a logistic standpoint to get, you know, to have that intersection between service and, and efficiency service being the priority. Uh, I also want to make sure, as we look at the, the carrier landscape, um, capacity rates that we are, um, smart there, that I'm talking with other peers of mine. And I do talk very frequently with peers of mine, who I've worked with in the past, who have similar positions at, at companies, you know, names that you, that you've heard of. And we are all looking at the macroeconomic environment, wondering how does spending go up or down going forward? Are we headed toward a recession? What is that gonna do the capacity what's that gonna do to rates? Um, looking at the potential for a work stoppage in Southern California at those ports, what does that mean?
And just in general, making sure that as, as spending potentially changes from goods over to services and experiences, what's that gonna do to the flow of goods? And so I, I that's, that's what I'm focused on. And again, as I talk to my peers and friends who do similar roles to other companies, they're all going through the same thing. What's gonna happen in a macroeconomic level. It's going to impact the logistics world all the way from, you know, origin to origin port and the ocean piece. And then the drayage piece from the port into the different manufacturing plants and distribution centers. Each one of those pieces is a little different, you know, COVID like, for example, right now, I think most people know that COVID is in packed, um, at port of Shanghai, right? Well really Shanghai port operations are continuing it's, it's the trucking into and out of that's the issue. And so that's where you have to focus to your attention now. And then the, you know, the, the, the potential for labor, uh, issues in Southern California. I think everybody's gotta keep on their horizon. Uh, who's who's got any kind of supply chain that extends globally in, into Asia. So those are the, those are kind of the main high level, 20, 22 things I'm looking at. And I know my peers are as well, at least the ones I I speak with.
Hmm. You know, um, I'm, I'm really hoping, uh, there's lots of different takes on anytime government kind of gets into, uh, the private sector, but I'm really hoping that the flow initiative that, um, the white house recently announced where it really focused on kind of sharing the data and visibility amongst a variety of, of shareholder. I really am hoping that we can make some progress there. Um, and then secondly, macroeconomics still to this day, some 20 plus years after my college experience still conjures up dread in my, the pit of my stomach. I was not a good economic student and my tea in my teeth. Teachers pointed it out time and time again. So, uh, a lot of good stuff there, Dennis. Um, I want to, uh, kind of shift gears. I wanna talk, you know, we just were talking a second ago kind of, because we both had kind of a, a reflect a reflection, uh, on, you know, the pandemic period and pre pandemic and what we both learned. But I wanna an ask you that question again. Cause what has, what else has the pandemic really taught you about leadership?
It's a really good question. Um, I think for me, it's, it's taught me that
You have to develop, uh, a real comfort with uncertainty. You have to be able to manage in, you know, you hear the, the acronym VUCA, right? Everybody, right. Everybody's using that. Uh, I think you have to be the, the ability to deal with ambiguity, to make decisions with the information you have, not knowing what, what event might happen tomorrow, be it a weather event or a strike, or, you know, a pandemic, um, and, and go with the, the best data you have at the time and make your decision and move forward. But to the extent you can build some flexibility into it, the, the ability to, to change or redirect a little bit down the line that, that works to your advantage. Um, you know, looking at things right now, yes, rates are going up. And I just saw today that air freight, uh, rates have gone up just this month.
Again, you know, is that the case a year from now, you know, who knows, uh, based on some of the macroeconomic things we were talking about earlier. So, uh, as you, as people are going to look in, in my conversations, as people are going to look at rates and, and contracts, you know, that's something they need to consider. Um, but in back to your question on leadership, it really, the main thing it's taught me is that you have to be willing to lead, make decisions with a, a lot of uncertainty. And, uh, to the extent you can build in flexibility to adjust those decisions as, as you, as time goes on,
Love that. Um, and you mentioned VUCA for our listeners that may not have heard it, or may not have, uh, taken the time to kind of go see what it stands for. Volatil, uh, volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity. And I believe that VUCA originated at the department of defense war college, uh, here in the states, if I'm not mistaken and now has been embraced by the supply chain community for the last couple years, for sure. Um, okay. So moving right along from things that we learned from the pandemic, uh, leadership and beyond let's broaden the scope a little bit more, you've already mentioned some of the things you're tracking and some of the things you're talking about with your peers, which is really, um, neat insights there. But if there's one other thing as, as you're surveying the global business world, the global supply chain, you name it, what else comes to mind that you may be tracking more than others?
Well, um, again, uh, consumer behavior consumption, is there gonna be a trend in spending away from goods and more toward experiences and then a, a big one? I can't believe I haven't mentioned yet is, uh, people and employees, uh, talent, um, not just capturing or Captur, that's the wrong word, attracting good talent, but then keeping it, keeping it engaged. I, I think everybody's heard about the great resignation and while I think it gets a lot of media coverage more at perhaps, uh, the, the district level and as it deserves, I think it also is important at the kind of more the office type role, uh, as well, keeping people engaged there's employees have choices. Now it is a it's a candidate's market, and you have to find ways to them feel valued. They make them feel invested in developed, show them a, a path toward career development in, in the company they're in. Um, I think most people out there would say, I I'd rather lose an employee off my team to another group internally where they go off and, and do some new, um, things for their career, for the company, then to lose them to another company or to lose them to just leaving and, and maybe exiting the workforce. So the people piece is real. It has to be addressed and it's, it requires, requires time and attention. And it, if you, if you shortchange that, it's, it will, it will come back to you
Well said, and folks never make any assumptions that your people are happy and, and content, cause that's when those assumptions that's what can lead the turnover. You gotta cons in my experience, Lee constantly keep that at figuring the pulse and, and have regular conversations and feedback and, and gather information is so important. Um,
Yeah. And, and I would just say, you know, one of the things I've enjoyed where I am is, is, is that, that level of contact and, um, like I'm not the perfect manager, uh, but I do try to make myself available for people to contact me. I know I've always got a line anytime to contact, um, my management and that means a lot, you know, that that's, I don't wanna abuse it. I don't wanna use it all the time, but it's good to know that it's, that it's there. Yeah. Also, um, making sure people know that, um, they're invested in that and you have to walk, you have to, to walk the talk there, provide the opportunities, provide the training, provide the, the cross-functional introductions, the internal networking and, um, you know, actively, uh, campaign on your people's behalf for the things that they're interested in doing in their careers, uh, ideally within, you know, within your company, right? Cause you, you want them to stay and be 20, 30 year employees who, who leave a legacy of, of value for the company.
So, um, really appreciate that. And, and one of the things you heard there folks is, is use it. You got that line, use it, you know, when you're asked for feedback, give it, and don't be, don't be scared. Don't be afraid to, to speak up and share your mind. Uh, uh, I share what you're thinking. Um, okay. There's one of the thing I was gonna ask you about based on what you there, but sometimes Dennis, it comes and goes, right. I've learned that as I, as I've gotten older, my three kids have killed my memory. Um, let's talk, oh, I know what I was gonna say. Uh, I'm so grateful that industry, uh, to your point about employees and, and the employee experience, right? It's another, another one of those X's old, old George Strait wrote that song way too early. Cause you got CX and ex and UX all that, but thankfully leadership really have, uh, seems like to me, at least gotten more serious about what is our employee experience? How can we optimize it? How can we provide, uh, uh, a safer working for our team members, all of the, you know, it's, so that's been one of the silver linings, uh, I think during this pandemic, uh, to protect the global workforce, that's, you know, kept things moving, uh, your quick follow up thoughts before I shift gears.
Um, I, I, I really don't have anything to, to add to what you just said. You're absolutely right. It, it gets a lot of talk and, you know, you can, you can YouTube any number of management, uh, gurus who will talk about people, but it, it takes time and you know, the old phrase, you have to go slow in order to go fast later,
You have to invest that time and it's time that's very well spent and it will reap benefits for you if, if you're able to discipline yourself to, to spend that time. So, you know, not canceling one on ones, not canceling staff meetings, even if it's just five minutes. Um, those, when you do those things, I've noticed, at least in my experience, both in having had it happen to me and in having unfortunately done it once, once or twice people notice, right. And that level of engagement requires that time. And that's frankly for me, you know, as I've gone further in my career, that's where I, I start to really gain more of my joy in my career or as much joy in my career as, as hitting numbers is also making connections to people and feeling like, uh, you've made a difference in their careers. And they subsequently had made a difference in, in the company's performance.
Love that those are important investment investments, whether it's five minutes or 50 minutes. Uh, so well said, they're Dennis. Um, all right. So wanted a couple of the last things we want to ask you about, um, if you would, so imagine this, Dennis, I know you've, you've keyed a lot of different places. Um, you're at the Waldorf Astoria finest hotel in New York city. You're in their largest, uh, event space. You've got thousands of, uh, students, uh, and folks looking that wanna break into industry and wanna break into supply to, and they wanna move up, uh, you know, move up the career ladder into senior roles, executive roles like you have, and you've got their captive attention. What would be a piece of advice or two that you would share with those folks?
Oh boy. Good question. And by the way I've been to the Wal story did just had a drink in the bar, but
So I never stayed there. Okay. Very cool. I dunno if it was still there or not.
It, uh, what I would say is for, uh, I would say, first of all, it's important to be good with data. But as I said earlier in following my six Sigma training data allows you to ask the right questions. It's not judge and jury. So be really good with data, how to get it, how to validate it and how to use it, to drive you toward what appear to be root causes and get you to ask the right questions. The other thing I'd say, uh, specif in supply chain is you have to be really good at cross functional work. Nothing you do happens in our isolation and supply chain. You're gonna potentially positively or negatively impact somebody, somebody else, and somebody else's function by what you do. So you have to be strong. Cross-functionally third. I would say, you know, given that a lot of places are pretty lean in terms of staffing and you don't always have a big team of people to execute.
You need to be a good influencer. You know, one of the things, uh, two of my, um, mentors at Coca-Cola were, were very big on was the power of influencing. How do you, how do you get people to cooperate with you and work with you when they don't have, when they don't report to you? You know, so if I'm here over logistics, how do I get the people at the distribution center, perhaps? So I need to change a behavior to help me, how do I get them to do that? Um, how do I get someone further upstream perhaps in, uh, the demand planning world or the purchasing world to help me accomplish a, a bigger goal. So to be a, able to paint a picture for your cross-functional partners of why it's important and why you need their help and what the overall goal is generally tied to a customer is super important because you're more often than not in supply chain, particularly in efficiency projects, uh, improvement projects, the people you're working with don't report to you.
So tho those would be the, the three things I think I would, I would, uh, say, and, and maybe if we worth one thing in supply chain, because you're, you're often touching base at multiple levels in the company, it's important to be able to know how to adjust your message and your presentation. Um, an example, maybe a five page deck with a lot of detail works when you're talking to people who are gonna execute something, but when you're presenting it, maybe to a steering committee, it's probably one page and it's just the highlights. So being able to, to adjust your communication to the audience, I think is a, a big skill, um, in, in, in supply chain, cuz you're, you're gonna be in that position where you're you're in the DC one day and the next day you're presenting it to the chief supply chain officers. So you need to be able to adjust how you communicate,
Man. Those are that's the golden four point list. It really is. Uh, I wanna, I wanna going back to your second one, I think it was about, uh, the cross training and, and be cross-functional. That is, that is a golden piece of advice, you know, if so if you go to school or if you're getting training or if in your career, if you've done one thing really well, the more you can broaden that experience, learn new things and, and bring different, um, uh, value multifaceted value to the, uh, uh, enterprise supply chain organization. You're gonna have new opportunities. And then we're going to, to that last one, uh, you know, um, knowing your audience and knowing how much time you have and perhaps most importantly, knowing what's important to them. Uh, Dennis, there was one time, uh, what brought me to Atlanta. Uh, I was working in the, the staffing and the workforce, uh, side of things.
And we had this big opportunity that, that, um, business development, sales opportunity and Dennis, to your point, uh, it's not supply chain, but it's, it's close enough. Uh, I went in there with 57 slides and I was gonna share every single one of those slides to those decision makers. And we got halfway through, I was an hour in and I had, I still had, you know, 30 slides and my, my boss at the time, good old Mike Love old Mike. He goes, he he's basically like tugging on me, you know, to get to the important stuff. We didn't win that business. And as a lesson that stood with me, I still like my slides. But man, to, as Dennis said, you gotta, you gotta tweak and adjust your communication, go deep when, when that's the right time to go deep, keep it succinct in executive level when you've got, you know, two minutes. So Dennis, this is golden advice. I'm so glad, uh, that we asked you that question. Um,
Yeah. You know, that's, that's what the, that's what the appendix is for sometimes. Right? And then you stick all that detail back there. And then, and then if you get asked the question, hopefully you have a slide for it in the appendix, but yeah, you, you've gotta be to the point with these, the, these senior executives cuz everybody's asking for their time and you just need to let, let them know what they need to know.
Yeah. Well said, love that. Okay. So we're gonna have to have you back and we're gonna, uh, to keep talking, uh, supply chain, keep talking leadership. Cause I wanna wrap on a, more of a lighthearted note here today. Uh, so baseball season is a punish than a Flint. It is a punish, uh, we're big Atlanta bras fans here. Uh, last year was in my view at least to me, completely unexpected. Uh, you know, when the Jorge is so LA hit the shot that still hadn't landed yet. I mean to go from he that thing. Yeah. Oh, he sure did. To go from a point where I think it felt like for a full month, the bra waves would win one, lose one, win one, lose one. I think they set a record major league record for, for no streaks at all. If you go from there to the point where they beat one of the best teams in all of baseball, um, and did it with just a team full of contributors that could do different things, kind of going back to your point. Um, it was an amazing season, so we'll see what's upon us, but Dennis, give us one fearless prediction for the 2022 baseball season. Thank the good Lord that it's here.
Hmm. Um, I, I think the Braves make the playoffs. I'm not sure they repeat. Um, and I'll, you know, obviously I'm, I'm a huge, brave fan, but I can't see my, my hats back there. I have another prediction that doesn't have anything to do with standings. I predict that the first game, the Dodgers play back in Atlanta, Freddy Freeman gets like a 10 minute standing ovation. Um, I, I, and I'd love, I'd love to be there for that game. I don't think there's gonna be a dry eye house, including, including Freddy Freeman's.
Mm I'm. With you. And you know, it's been really neat and heartwarming to see, you know, when, when the initial split took place, there were some, there were some really tough interviews and words chosen in those initial, um, interviews. But I read that over the weekend that Freddy Freeman spent three hours talking with, um, the brave GM and Andos and they actually, they mend, you know, they kind of had a fuller understanding and now Freddy invited AA, uh, Andos out to, uh, California when the, when the Braves visit the Dodgers and I'm not gonna get to get the quote exactly. Right, Dennis, but, uh, for Freddy was telling the reporter, yeah, I want AA to come out cause I wanna give him a hug for everything we accomplished together. And I'm like, that's a Freddy Freeman I'm talking about. So I love
Freeman. I'm with you. I'm just glad that we've got, um, one more, uh, sport that, that allows us a little bit of departure time from everything else that's going on in the world. Right. Um, uh, so we'll see, uh, how all that plays out, but I like your predictions. Thanks so much for spending some time with us today. It's been well overdue, but you're are a, you're a fountain of, of good news here and, and, and stuff that folks need to know.
Well, I, yeah, I appreciate you having me on, I I'm, um, I've really enjoyed it and you know, I love talking about supply chain. Um, I love talking with my peers and hearing, you know, there's a level of comfort sometimes and knowing that they're they're are up against some of the same struggles and I often get a lot of my best ideas from them. And I, I hope that I spread some good ideas to them. So, um, love being on it, love your podcast and have been a listener will continue to be a listener.
Awesome. Dennis, I love that. So for folks that may want to get a little bit more Dennis Flyn cuz they didn't get enough today. How can I connect with you?
Wow. Um, the best way is just through LinkedIn. Uh, Dennis Flyn D E N N I S uh, F L Y N N and uh, was Stanley black and Decker. I think I'm the only one.
Awesome. So I think you are
Too love to connect to you if you're, if you wanna talk some more supply chain.
Awesome. Love it. Uh, so Dennis, flyn's been with us vice president global logistics at Stanley, a black and Decker, big friend of the show known Dennis for quite some time and uh, keep doing, keep moving those mountains. So, uh, but thanks for joining us here today, Dennis.
You bet. All right folks, hopefully you enjoyed this great interview with Dennis Flyn as much as I, I have, uh, be sure to check out supply chain now and subscribe wherever you get your podcast from. So you don't miss conversations just like this, but whatever you do, whatever you do, folks, Scott Luton on behalf of our supply chain. Now team challenging you to do good to give forward and to be the change that's needed. And on that note, we see next time, right back here on supply chain now. Thanks everybody all.
Thanks for being a part of our supply chain. Now community check out all of our programming@supplychainnow.com and make sure you subscribe to supply chain. Now anywhere you listen to podcasts and follow us on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram. See you next time on supply chain now.