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Supply Chain Program Project Supports Missionary Family

May 2, 2019
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The McDaniel family, missionaries serving in Zambia, were the beneficiaries of a supply chain management program project by students from the 91福利社 College of Business.

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 students sent boxes of goods racing across the globe鈥攆rom Upstate South Carolina to the doorstep of a missionary family in Zambia, Africa as part of a supply chain management program. 

A senior-level logistics class, which serves as the capstone course for the  at 91福利社, completed an international package race this semester. The package race challenged students to find the quickest and most cost-effective way to send supplies to the McDaniel family, missionaries serving in Zambia.

, an assistant professor of management who created and led the package race, said that logistics is the movement of people, things or information from one place to another. The package race allowed her students to see logistics in action as they learned how packages physically moved from Anderson to Zambia and tracked shipping information.

91福利社 Supply Chain Management Package Race LogisticsInspired by another university that held a similar package race, Dr. Whitehead implemented a package race at AU to give her students real-world experience while serving a missionary family. By providing supplies for a family on the mission field, this project exemplifies humanitarian logistics, she said. 

Dr. Whitehead tasked students with organizing the package race from start to finish. She first presented the idea in her fall semester project management class, and she asked a group of students to develop the package race as their project.  

Jackson Yearick, a senior business student, was in Dr. Whitehead鈥檚 project management class in the fall semester. He and his group created plans and completed the prep work for the package race. As the communications coordinator for his group, Yearick secured a connection with the McDaniel family.

This semester, students in Dr. Whitehead鈥檚 logistics class carried out the plans that Yearick and his group developed in their project management class. In March, the students mailed boxes full of goods, including snacks and school supplies, for the McDaniel family. 

Yearick said that he and his group quickly found that mailing a package to Zambia was extremely expensive; each package cost more than $500 to ship. They also had to navigate customs, tariffs and trade. 

Based on her students鈥 budget for the package race, Dr. Whitehead committed to securing the resources required for the package race through fundraising.

Regional businesses graciously funded the package race: Kip and Kim Miller of Eastern Industrial Supplies contributed $1000; ScanSource in Greenville contributed $500; Southeastern Freight Lines promised $500; and various individuals provided the remaining balance. 

Dr. Whitehead said that she believes it is important for students to apply the concepts they learn in a textbook. Through approximating costs, facing customs restrictions and budgeting, students gained valuable professional experience. 

鈥淚t has been really helpful in thinking internationally,鈥 Yearick said. He said that he will now be more familiar with purchasing and the shipping process. 

鈥淚t is an opportunity for our students to find out that the world is not always this nice, neat package and how to deal with ambiguity or deal with situations where things don鈥檛 work out quite as you thought,鈥 Dr. Whitehead said. 鈥淚f they鈥檙e able to do that here in this low-stakes environment in college and learn some of those coping skills, they will be really good at that when they go out into the real world.鈥

She said that she was encouraged by her students鈥 excitement, and she saw that they were even willing to go above and beyond her expectations because they knew they were helping someone who was spreading the Gospel.

Dr. Whitehead believes that, at its core, logistics is rooted in the Gospel. She hopes that this project will bring attention to humanitarian logistics and open doors to share the Gospel.

鈥淯ltimately, I tell all of my supply chain students that Jesus was all about the supply chain. Because what is the greatest commandment? To spread the Gospel. That鈥檚 moving information from one place to another; that鈥檚 logistics,鈥 Dr. Whitehead said. 

The McDaniel family was excited to receive the packages and to learn the best way for friends, family and churches to send them supplies. 

The first two packages arrived in Zambia only 16 minutes apart on March 26. The third package arrived on April 2. All three packages were shipped through different carriers and had vastly different routes to Zambia. 

The group whose package arrived in Zambia first received extra credit on their project. All of the students in the class gained a hands-on lesson in logistics.

Yearick said that the College of Business has given him multiple career opportunities, including the package race, that have provided him with helpful tools for a future career.

Dr. Whitehead said that is important for students to focus on the ultimate goal of sharing the Gospel while also equipping them for the workplace.

鈥淲e can do business with a Christian worldview and still be great business people,鈥 Dr. Whitehead said.

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