Skip to main content
AWS SUPPLY CHAIN

Supply Chain Insights

Project Overview

User Story

As an AWS Supply Chain user,
I want the ability to use my ERP data to receive insights on my supply chain data,
so that I can quickly take action on recurring and upcoming issues in my supply chain.

Project Summary

The primary application AWS Supply Chain’s first release was Inventory insights. The goal for the first release at Re:Invent 2022 was to provide our customers with ML and AI-driven insights using their current supply chain data.

Most companies have a core set of data that is a resource for the companies supply chain network. Data of this magnitude is managed by an ERP, or Enterprise Resource Planning software, which is used to manage the day-to-day business activities such as procurement, risk management, supply chain operations, and more.

Every customer’s ERP helps users act on day-to-day operational goals and manage their duties on their current supply chain topology. What AWS Supply Chain provides customers is ML and AI-driven insights based on their current company’s data to help customers solve problems, measure financial impact of those problems, and provide resolution recommendations to help solve those problems quickly before they impact the bottom line.

Learning the space

Being Curious

Vision Building

Galaxy Design System

Process

Early Iterations

One of our main goals was to make sure this software didn’t look like anything else currently in the market. Supply Chain software is complex, dense, and though functional, isn’t always the most aesthetically pleasing. We wanted to make sure it was a step in a different direction as far as visual design goes. We constantly evaluated and adjusted our Design System based on feedback and requirements during the work to Re:Invent.

Sketches

Diagrams

Explorations

Mid-Project Iterations

As we started to get feedback from our Go to Market team, internal users, and Senior Executives it became clear we needed to drastically simplify the onboarding process. Our new goal was to be able to get Insights to users as quickly as possible. We then explored providing default ‘Watchlists’ to help customers get started using the product quickly and showing the user on their first time experience how to quickly create unique Watchlists depending on their work, area of responsibility, and desired granularity of the Insights to be provided.

Sketches

Delivered Designs

After countless additional iterations and executive reviews we started feeling confident on what we were going to provide at Re:Invent for Supply Chain Insights. From our previous iterations we moved our core set of release one features to the list below, with some detail.

Easy Onboarding

AWS Supply Chain Homepage + Insights Widget

Insights Manager

Insights Detail Pages

Network Map

Inventory Visibility

Follow Through

Now that we had closed in on what was above and below the line for launch at Re:Invent, we needed to move fast to get our engineering teams the final designs. Though they have been working with us closely during the entire design effort, we now needed to get them all the design guidance we could in a short amount of time to allow for a reasonable engineering runway.

The AWS Supply Chain Launch Announcement Video.

Adam Selipsky

AWS SC Demo

GM and Product Lead deliver a walk-through of AWS Supply Chain v1.

Learnings

Humans

I learned that Supply Chain users are both creatures of habit and are also searching for better and easier ways to do their job. We aimed to get AWS SC Insights out quickly so we can start getting broader sets of feedback to improve the overall functionatlity and provide better ways to work for our users.

Process

  • I have always had a very fluid process, and that has helped me be a successful designer in many different product areas, but what this launch helped me learn was the following.
  • Presenting to leadership requires very detailed attention to every word and pixel.
  • Being a Design Led organization comes with its benefits and its challenges
  • Learning from all interactions across every piece of the team is critical to success
  • Diagrams help; build, evaluate, and maintain

Myself as a Designer

  • From the time I stepped onto the team through the massive hiring effort and now leading my team I have learned so much from this work and this project.
  • I can design complex systems that scale far into the future
    Follow-through is critical, not only for design delivery but everything I was responsible for
  • My experiences over the past 18 years were critical to my success
  • Flexibility within reason helps when you support 8 tech teams

Next Steps

Fast Follows

Immediately after delivering to engineering, we needed to get working on delivering what would be our ‘fast-follow’ work. This work is a small set of features that we needed to get into the product before we open the product to the public or General Availability.

Next Steps

  • Added filtering ability
  • Inventory Detail Pages
  • Enhancements on Inventory List View
  • Segmentation filtering across the app

In Conclusion

In the end, it was pretty insane that I was able to be a part of this project. Looking way back when I was doodling buildings in San Francisco I would have never thought I would be a part of a team of this magnitude and talent. I was honored to have worked with so many talented people and customers through this project and can’t wait to use all the new things I learned.

-M