construction_supply_chains
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- Pedido anticipado
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- Se espera: 30 mar 2026
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- USD 21.99
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- Pedido anticipado
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- USD 21.99
Descripción editorial
The construction industry sits at the intersection of physical reality and global complexity. Every skyscraper, highway, hospital, and home represents the culmination of thousands of supply chain decisions — from the mine where raw ore is extracted to the job site where a tradesperson installs the final fitting. For decades, most project managers treated materials procurement as a background function: order it, track it, receive it, install it. But the turbulent years of the early 2020s changed that assumption permanently.
The COVID-19 pandemic exposed catastrophic fragility in global supply networks. Lumber prices quadrupled in a matter of months. Steel and copper markets swung wildly with every shipping disruption, trade policy announcement, and production outage. Contractors who had priced fixed-cost projects six months earlier found themselves staring at cost overruns that threatened company solvency. The lesson was clear: supply chain management is not a back-office function. It is a core competency.
This book is written for construction professionals who want to move beyond reactive procurement and build genuine supply chain capability. Whether you are a project manager overseeing a single major build, a chief procurement officer managing a national contractor's material spend, or a developer structuring contracts that allocate risk fairly across parties, the frameworks and tools in this text are designed to be practical and immediately applicable.
We cover the full scope of the problem: the mechanics of global logistics, the geopolitical forces that drive price volatility, inventory management strategies, vendor contract structures, alternative sourcing approaches, and the transformative role of emerging technologies — particularly blockchain — in making supply chains more transparent and trustworthy. Each chapter concludes with key takeaways and, where appropriate, case examples drawn from real-world construction procurement experience.
The goal is not to eliminate uncertainty — that is impossible in a global economy. The goal is to build the knowledge, systems, and relationships that allow construction firms to navigate volatility with confidence rather than fear. The firms that develop this capability will not merely survive the next disruption. They will gain competitive advantage precisely because their less-prepared competitors will not.