According to www.supplychaindive.com, Procter & Gamble has initiated full-scale global deployment of its Supply Chain 3.0 initiative, following multi-year development of underlying platforms and capabilities.
Global Rollout Underway Since April 2026
The initiative entered large-scale rollout across P&G’s global operations in May 2026, as confirmed by CFO Andre Schulten during the company’s April 24, 2026 earnings call. Supply Chain 3.0 was originally launched in 2023 and focuses on end-to-end systems integration—from customer order receipt through production planning and material ordering. The effort deploys automation across manufacturing plants and warehouses worldwide, with only a subset involving artificial intelligence; most implementations rely on foundational automation technologies.
$1.5 Billion Gross Savings Targeted
P&G expects Supply Chain 3.0 to deliver gross savings of up to $1.5 billion in cost of goods sold (COGS), according to the source. This figure is tied directly to productivity improvements from automation and process standardization. The initiative supports P&G’s broader operational efficiency goals, which include reducing manual intervention in planning workflows and accelerating response times to demand signals.
Technology Deployment Scope
Automation under Supply Chain 3.0 is being deployed across both warehousing and manufacturing environments globally. The project does not center on generative AI or agentic systems but emphasizes scalable, proven automation—including robotic process automation (RPA) for planning tasks and programmable logic controllers (PLCs) integrated with enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems. According to the report, this approach prioritizes reliability and interoperability over experimental capabilities.
Industry Context and Peer Benchmarks
Supply chain automation at this scale aligns with industry-wide shifts: Amazon deployed over 750,000 mobile robots across its fulfillment network by 2025; DHL reported a 30% reduction in warehouse labor hours after implementing AMR-based sortation in 12 EU distribution centers between 2023–2025. Walmart’s 2025 supply chain modernization program targets $2.2 billion in cumulative logistics savings by fiscal year 2027. Unlike those retailers—whose automation focuses heavily on e-commerce fulfillment—P&G’s implementation spans complex CPG manufacturing lines, including high-speed packaging lines for brands like Crest and Tide, where changeover speed and regulatory traceability are critical.
Practitioner Implications
For supply chain professionals, P&G’s rollout underscores the importance of platform coherence over point solutions. The integration of order management, production scheduling, and procurement systems into a single data flow enables real-time constraint resolution—for example, automatically adjusting material orders when a plant’s output capacity drops due to equipment downtime. Practitioners must prioritize data governance: P&G’s architecture requires standardized master data across 70+ countries and 180+ legal entities. Additionally, the initiative highlights that ROI in automation is not solely tied to headcount reduction; P&G attributes 40% of projected savings to reduced scrap and rework from improved production planning accuracy, per internal metrics cited in the source.
“The supply chain initiative […] is driving a more complete systems integration from customer order to production planning and material ordering.” — Andre Schulten, CFO, Procter & Gamble
Source: Supply Chain Dive
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









